y» *• *' '1^ ^.'/ ■^'■ y^ y:,^ i hs' ^«tt, "^^ > .-O ^'o K Cv^- if \ 7 cr^y 'y LECTURES HISTORY OF PREACHING. { , FEB 1 195t LECTURES V£,^,^^^^^,, ON THE HISTORY OF PREACHING BY THE LATE REV. JOHN KER, D.D., Professor of Practical Training in the United Presbyterian ClnircJu Author of ''Sermons ;" " TJie Psalms in History and Biogi-afhy ;'' 6^c. EDITED BY REV. A. R. MACEWEN, M.A., Balliol, B.D., Gi.asgdw. HODDER AND STOUGHTON, 27, PATERNOSTER ROW. MDCCCLXXXVIII. All rt^-hts reserird. EDINBURGH : PRINTED BY LORIMER AND GILLIES, 31 ST. ANDREW SQUARE. EDITORIAL PREFACE. A FEW words of preface are required to ■'■ *■ explain the relation of these Lectures to Dr. Ker's other work, since his own request — the one act of his life which his friends regret — prevents the publication of any memoir or biography. In the year 1875, among other changes in the Theological Hall, the United Presbyterian Church resolved to institute a professorship, which should not be tied down to any one department of theology, but should attend to the training of students in its more practical aspects, with special regard to preaching and pastoral work. Such a Chair exists under some name in every complete Theological College, although in some churches, as had previously been the case in EDITORIAL PREFACE. the United Presbyterian Church, it is combined with the charge of a departmental subject. The title chosen was the Chair of Practical Training for the Work of the Ministry; and, in 1876, Dr. Kcr was elected by the Synod as its first occupant. For some years he had been laid aside from his Glasgow pastorate, and, although he could not now refuse duties so congenial to him, he declined to be called a " professor," and accepted the appointment on the understanding that he should have such freedom as his health required, in regard to the amount and the duration of his work. Through God's kindness, however, he was enabled, with short interruptions, to discharge the full duties of the Chair for ten years ; and when he died on the 4th of October, 1886, he was preparing for the work of another session. It was left to a large extent in Dr. Ker's own hands to determine the scope and even the subjects of his lectures. He had no precedent to guide him, nor an}' rule beyond the understanding that his work was to bear directly on the actual duties of the pastorate. While always careful to observe this limit, he so exercised his freedom as to secure constant variety. At one time he lectured upon the Public Worship of the Church, upon Prayer and EDITORIAL PREFACE. Praise and the relation of these to the Sermon. At another time he lectured upon Family Visit- ation and Family Prayer, upon the Care of the Young, and upon general Pastoral Superintendence. He discussed the different conceptions of the Church of Christ as a Society, contrasting the Roman Catholic and the Protestant conceptions, indicating the faults of each, and showing the bearing of such points upon the minister's relation to the work of his own and other denominations. Again, he reviewed the Principles of the United Presbyterian Church, the Forms of Process, and the business of Sessions and other congregational agencies. He occupied several lectures in show- ing the bearing of University studies upon the minister's work, and the advantage to which a preacher may turn his reading in general litera- ture. Indeed, each year seemed to open out to him some new aspect of his office ; he was constantly planning and writing new lectures ; so that very few of his lectures were repeated more than twice or thrice. It will thus be seen that the Lectures on the History of Preaching represent only a fragment of his work, and that they consider the subject with a distinctly practical aim. The selection of them EDITORIAL PREFACE. from his manuscripts is due to the fact that owing to the nature of the subject they were more closely reduced to writing than the others, and that they deal with a subject of interest to the general Christian public. Besides lecturing upon such topics as we have mentioned, Dr. Ker occupied alternate lecture- hours in instruction of a less formal and more con- versational kind. Prescribing texts and topics to the students, he asked them to prepare skeletons of sermons, or sermons, and discussed such exercises in the class. Sometimes he asked them to suggest divisions or plans on the spur of the moment, or after quarter of an hour's reflection ; and he carried out a similar method with regard to other ministerial duties. These are the hours which have left the most lasting impress upon his pupils ; for while he never failed to show his rare combination of critical acumen with appreciation of the freshness and independence of younger minds, it was then that he gave freest scope to his own genial intellect, and revealed most plainly his unfailing spirituality and elevation of tone. Such work, although it leaves the deepest mark on men, cannot be preserved except in living characters. With regard to the twenty-one Lectures which EDITORIAL PREFACE. are included in this volume, readers will find that the first seven of them form part of a larger plan than is carried out in those which follow. They deal with the general history of the Church prior to the Reformation, while Lectures IX.-XXI. are occupied exclusively with the history of German Protestantism. In the first lecture, Dr. Ker indicates his intention of dealing with the preach- ing of the other branches of the Reformed Church ; and, as a matter of fact, he partially carried out this intention. He lectured upon several of the English Puritan preachers, upon some of the Scottish preachers, and still more fully upon French preaching, both Roman Catholic and Protestant. It is specially to be regretted that his lectures upon the last-mentioned were not written in a form which will permit publication. His own tone of mind had perhaps more affinity to the French than to the German ; his students remem- ber with admiration his sagacious insight into the strength and weakness of Du Moulin, Bossuet, Pierre Du Bosc, and other French orators ; and his manuscript notes testify to the minute study which he had made of their sermons. One other word of explanation should be given to readers who will expect to find reference to the EDITORIAL PREFACE. influence of Tertullian and Jerome, to those who would fain have had some fuller account from Dr. Ker's pen of Bernard of Clairvaux and John Tauler, and to those who know the direct or in- direct influence of Dorner, Harless, and Ahlfeld upon the modern German pulpit. The lectures now printed were supplemented, in conversation- hours, by discussions of men and of epochs that have influenced the history of preaching — discus- sions which included the above names, with many others. Of these, however, we have no written record. The references in the foot-notes are as a rule indicated, if not expressly given, in Dr. Ker's manuscript ; some of them and some of the dates have been added by the editor for the con- venience of students. It should be said that Rothe's GeschicJite der Predigt (also a posthumous publication) was issued in 1881, after these lectures had been written, and that the references to that valuable work were inserted by Dr. Ker, to mark some coincidences of opinion and even of expression, of which he once spoke to the editor with amused satisfaction. The special thanks of readers are due to the Rev. James Kidd, B.D., of St. Andrews, for the care EDITORIAL PREFACE. with which he has read the proof-sheets, and for other valuable assistance. The index has been prepared by the loving hands of those to whom the editor owes the honourable trust which has been placed in him in the preparation of the volume. It is not easy for one who revered Dr. Ker to judge how far this reproduction of his words will guide and help those to whom he was personally a stranger ; but the words themselves are wise and true, with a clear message for our day, and by God's help they will not fail to reach the heart. A. R. M. December, 1S87. CONTENTS. EDITORIAL PREFACE, LECTURE I. PREACHERS AND PREACHING — ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY, II. ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN THE OLD TESTAMENT, III. THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING, Note A. — " hutruciio7ies Saiicti Cohnnbani" lY. ORIENTAL CHURCH PREACHING, V. THE LATER ORIENTAL CHURCH, YI. WESTERN CHURCH PREACHING, 2OO-430 A.D. VII. WESTERN CHURCH PREACHING— MIDDLE AGES, Note B, — U?nversittes in the ijth Century, YIII. PREACHING IMMEDIATELY BEFORE THE REFORMATION, xiii TAGE V I 14 32 53 54 11 91 no 131 133 CONTENTS. LECTURE IX. HISTORY OF GERMAN PREACHING FROM THE REFORMA- TION—LUTHER, Note C. — Sketch of one of Lttther''s Homilies, X. THE PERIOD FROM LUTHER TO SPENER, . XI. SPENER : HIS WORK AND PREACHING, Note D.—Jean de Labadie, XII. PIETISM : ITS HISTORY AND LESSONS, Note E. — Controversy between Pietists and Orthodo. Note F. — Sketch of Sermon by A. H. Francke, Note G.— The Bible., the Church., and the Individual, XIII. THE OFFSHOOTS OF PIETISM : BENGEL AND ZINZENDORF, Note H. — Bengefs Cotijectures on Religiotis Life., XIV. THE PREACHING OF THE ILLUMINISM, Note I. — Sketch of a Sermon by Sf aiding. Note f. — Sketch of a Sermoti by Zollikofer. ■ Note K. — Sketch of a Sermon by Reinhard, XV. HIDDEN LIFE IN THE ILLUMINISM, . Note L. — The Prevalence of the Ilhiminisin, XVI. TRANSITION PERIOD : SCHLEIERMACHER, . Note M, — Schleierinacher' s Appearance, . Note N. — Sketch of one of Schlcicrmacher's Scrmotis, XVIL MEDIATING SCHOOL: NITZSCH AND THOLUCK, . Note O. — Plans of Tholuck''s Sermons : Extracts from " Guido atid fulius^' .... 147 166 168 183 199 200 218 219 22 1 223 239 241 260 260 262 264 286 288 304 305 308 326 CONTEXTS. LECTURE XVIII. THE UNBROKEN TESTIMONY : HOFACKER AND HARMS, Note P. — Skeleton of Sermon by Ho/acker, Note Q.^ Skeleton of Sermon by Harms, . XIX. BIBLICAL PREACHERS : STIER AND KRUMMACHER. Note R.—f. F. Meyer and G. H. V. Schubert, Note S. — Kritmmachet^s Preaching, . XX. RECENT AND PRESENT GERMAN PREACHING, XX [. LESSONS FOR OUR PREACHING. . 528 346 348 366 369 389 403 LECTURE I. PREACHERS AND PREACHING — ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. ^1 TE intend to trace the course of Preaching in *• the history of the Church, and to turn attention to some of the most remarkable and successful preachers. To-day we may briefly sketch the field of survey, and suggest the advan- tages of the study. The work of the preacher may first be looked at A sketch of as it is related to the Old and the New Testaments, "^ ^ ^ • with the view of noting what we may learn from them as to the spirit and the form of preaching, the question of material being meanwhile left out of account. There is then the preaching of the early Church, beginning with the apostles, and going on till the time when Christianity became an acknowledged power in the world of thought. LECTURES ON PREACHING. Thereafter we have two great branches — the Eastern Church represented by Origen, Chryso- stom, and others ; and the Western or Latin Church represented by men like Ambrose and Augustine. Then follows the long period of the Middle Ages, when preaching sank to a great extent under the weight of ceremonial, or was influenced by the opposite systems of Scholasticism and Mysticism, with many bright examples, however, of a clearer and simpler kind. The Reformation marks the commencement of the modern period of preaching, the use of the principle of individuality separating us from the old world as by an ocean. We have now, not only distinct nationalities in preaching, as French, German, English, Scottish, American, but the preaching of different Churches — Roman Catholic, Anglican, Nonconformist ; and this last might even be sub-divided, for the Wesleyan preaching is different from the Congregationalist, and that again to some extent from the Presbyterian. There is a division, also, since the Reformation, into several epochs ; the immediate post-Reformation period — that of the great doctrinal preachers called in our country Puritan ; the period of moral preach- ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. ing, of Tillotson and the Moderates ; that of the revival, called in Germany, Pietism, and in our country, Evangelicalism ; and the various forms which preaching takes in our own time. It is evident that we have a field which might Difference - , , r , • 1,1-1 hom ordinary occupy US for any length of time, and at which we church can for the present do little more than glance, iiistory. We may meantime point out, in advance, the difference of such a study from the study of Church History as usually given. The outward events with which some Church historians deal are often reflected in it ; it bears the impress of those varying forms of thought which are known to us as philosophies ; the prevailing heresies affect it either in the way of attraction or of repulsion. But besides all this, it leads us into many lines of Christian life which are rarely, if ever, considered in general Church History. I shall mention some of them, and point out certain practical advantages Advantages to which we may derive from tracing them. ^^^ derived. As a mere matter of instruction, we cannot take General even the slightest view of it without becoming acquainted uath the most interesting and important men and events and trains of thought, that have been prominent among the ruling races of man- kind since the Christian era began. It is like LECTURES ON PREACHING. sailing down a river, standing in the part of the ship which commands the most characteristic views, and landing to visit the temples, cities, churches, homes of varied races of men that line the banks. It carries us from Jerusalem to Antioch, to Alexandria, to Constantinople, to Rome. We must visit cities on the confines of the great tropical desert, and the lone islands of our own western ocean. The Court of Charlemagne, the forests of Germany, the camp-like settlement of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms had, nearly at one time, their Alcuin, their Boniface, their Bede. The long period of the middle ages, though brightened by many an oasis, is, as a whole, a barren desert, till we reach the time when the fountains are unsealed after the Reformation and the waters break out in France, in Germany, in Britain, and in America, parting, like the primitive river of Eden, into four streams to revive the whole face of the earth. As to distinc- In such a survey we meet with what is most lion of distinguished in the Christian Church ; for while preachers. we have had thinkers such as Melancthon and Pascal and Milton, whose work was done chiefly or entirely by the pen, the great majority of Christ- ian teachers have been men who were drawn ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. irresistibly to use the living voice, and to use it in the great congregation. We have an array of instructors and orators, spread through the ages and over the countries, compared with which the schools of Greece and Rome were but a small handful, — an exceeding great army of men, such as the prophet saw in his vision ; the select and chosen of whom might be compared to the company which John saw in the Apocal)-pse, standing on Mount Zion with the Great Name written on their foreheads. No one will talk lightly or flippantly of sermons and preachers, who thinks of the thousands upon thousands of men, who, in all the countries of Europe and in all the churches, with the most varied ability, but many of them with the very highest, have devoted themselves to God's work in speaking for Him to their fellow-men. What a different Europe this would have been, poor as in many respects it is, and what a different country ours would have been, but for the seeds of truth and freedom and devotion that, among many weeds, have been sown by these preachers of the Word ! When we consider the character of preaching, As to state of and the subjects with which it deals in different ^^^ Church, periods, it casts the most instructive light upon the LECTURES ON PREACHING. times, and upon the condition of the Christian Church. The manners of the old nations of Europe come before us, when we find — e.g., Chrysostom and Basil denouncing strongly and repeatedly the sin of drunkenness, and Augustine afraid to shut the guilty out of communion, lest he should lose all influence over so numerous a class. We thus gain a view of the time which does not perhaps comfort us, but which keeps us from say- ing that the " former days were better than these." If you read Gibbon's or even Mosheim's account of sects and heresies, you are ready to think that these old preachers were dry dogmatists, bitter polemical anathematisers, " blowing about a dust and noise of creeds." But when you come to their sermons, and find that with many things alien to our mode of thought they had such a hatred of sin, such an ideal of a high and divine life, you sec what slowly raised a new world from the corruption and ruin of the old. To estimate these men from Gibbon, would be like estimating our own Churches from the reports of them in sceptical newspapers. If you would know their influence on their time, you must go to their sermons. At the same time, the faults of the Christian Church and ministry will come into vievv', and we may see the inherent ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. power of the pulpit, that in spite of all faults, it, or rather God's truth, held its ground and conquered. We shall find the sensational school which sought the applause and the clapping of hands which Chrysostom condemned — men contented to beat the drum and draw a crowd. We shall find the mystic allegorisers who discovered wonders of philosophy in abstruse passages, and preferred obscurity to light. We shall find the pedantic and scholastic who turned the great doctrines of the Bible into a wrangling place for logic. The senses, the fancy, the subtlety of dialectics, have in their turn invaded the sphere of preaching, and yet it has recovered and done its work. It has come back to simplicity and power, and by the foolish- ness of preaching it has pleased God to save them that believe. Further, in such a survey there is stimulus to be stimulus gained from the greatest masters of speech dealing with the greatest of all themes — God, the soul, eternity, sin, Christ, salvation. There is in the high- est sense no such roll of orators, and certainly there are no such themes as are presented in the history of Christian preaching. No similar movement in the life of man has ever been effected by the power of speech — so wide, so deep, so continuous. It may LECTURES ON PREACHING. fill US with a high and just ambition, with a noble enthusiasm to share in it and to do our best, with God's help, to prove ourselves not unworthy. Guidance. There is much to be learned from these men in a directly practical way — from their themes and methods ; from the way in which they addressed themselves to the spirit of their times, sharing and guiding it, or seeking to correct it ; from their sagacity or their fearlessness as reprovers. The greatest of them were all men of their time and j'et above their time. Warning. We may even learn from their faults, for though we may be smaller men in every way, history will teach us to avoid paths that led them astray. We may learn from the allegorical tendency of Origen, and the excesses of fancy to which it led, to keep to a wise and sober interpre- tation of Scripture. From the extreme self-inspec- tion of Jonathan Edwards, which led to the morbid analytic preaching of his school, we may learn to give a large attention to the objective doctrines and duties of the Bible — the heart as well as the Bible but the Bible as well as the heart. From the con- stant moral-essay preaching of the Tillotson school, which ended in a practical ignoring of all that is distinctive in Christianity, we may learn how vitally ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. important it is to breathe into all duties the life and the moving power of the person and work of Christ, to remember that Christianity is a plan, not of moral teaching, but first of all of redemption and reconciliation ; birth before life, and life before work. From the narrowness and the limited view of the power and range of the Gospel exhibited by some good men of the Evangelical school of last century — a narrowness and a limitation which have filled the ranks of Ritualism and Broad-churchism — we may learn, while we hold the central truths of the Cross of Christ, to aim at giving them the widest application to the lives and wa}'s of men, to show t!iat Christianity is consistent with every pure taste and every high position. We may learn to avoid " the falsehood of extremes." For we shall see that one excess leads to another, and when an excess which we deplore manifests itself among men whose sincerity we admit, we shall consider how we can meet it, with loyalty to what we believe to be the truth of God ; not by scolding nor by barren pole- mics, but by putting that into our preaching for the want of which, it may be, men are turning aside to seek satisfaction elsewhere. If some turn to what is called the Broad School, may it not be because Evangelical preachers have not been showing how lo LECTURES ON PREACHING. Encourage- ment — From the advance of preaching. the Gospel touches all that is human and gives to common life a tenderness and beauty and meaning which Broad-church doctrine has not in itself? If others are turning to confessionals and spiritual directions and the corporeal presence of Christ in the sacraments, is it not because we have not shown clearly and warmly enough the human- ity of Christ brought close as a guide and a friend, always and everywhere ? "VVe may have preached Him as the Son of God in heaven, as the Resur- rection and Eternal Hope; we may have pressed the word, "Believe and thou shalt be saved;" but have we shown Him to men who are thirsting for a friend, in the light of His promise, " I will not leave }'OU comfortless ; I will come to you ? " So let us stud)" the preaching of past times that we may add to it that which was wanting ; and while we maintain the unchanged centre, Jesus Christ, we shall bring into the circumference a richer and fuller provision, that, as He himself says, the sheep may go in and out and find pasture. I shall mention now, in closing, one or two grounds for encouragement, which we may hope to gain from such a survey. One comfort is that, as a whole, errors in preach- insf have tended to correct themselves ; that the ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. II ministry of the Word has not been retrograding in the history of the Church ; that, on the contrary, its tendency has been onward. I do not mean that we have now names equal to those great stars in the firmament — men Hke Paul, Chrysostom, Augustine, Luther, Knox, Howe, who subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, stopped the mouths of lions. These rise rarely, and belong to all time. Neither do I mean to say that there are not little retrogressions, and differences in different places, but that, as a whole, the pulpit has brought home more of Christian truth to the circumstances and wants of men, during the last fifty years, than in any half-centur\' since the be- ginning of Christianity. Another ground of comfort is that wherever From iis vital Christian truth has been presented, with any continued '■ attractiveness measure of adaptation to human wants, men have been found ready to listen. There are men who preach the Gospel with so little regard for the circumstances and trials of those around them, with so little life and warmth, that it has no attrac- tions. And there are those who deal with circum- stances and subjects of passing interest, yet show so little of the power of Gospel truth that they only attract the curious, and do not keep them LECTURES ON PREACHING. very long. But where the heaUng and helping truth of Christ is brought home to the wounds and weariness of sinful and suffering human nature, there will always be a power of attraction in it. As God has promised, His blessing and His Spirit attend it. All great revivals, all true advances in the Church, have come from the simple, earnest preaching of the Gospel of Christ. Let us never be allured from this or scoffed out of it. It has shown itself, age after age, the power of God to build up the Church, to convince the gainsaying, and to gather men within the fold of Christ. If wc do not succeed, the fault will not be in the weapon, but in our way of handling it. FromUie And then we may learn this from our survey: variety of ^^^^ ^j, kinds of men maybe useful as Christian men required. ^ ministers, provided they are true and earnest and willing to learn, with ordinary capacity for learn- ing. The preacher must be " apt to teach," — i.e. able to think, to arrange his thoughts, and to express them ; but with this, if the heart is right, there may be the greatest variety in the character of mind. This is seen in the past, both in sermons that remain to us and in preaching of which we only read. Each true Christian minister has had his place and circle, and he may have still. He ADVANTAGES OF THE STUDY. 13 may be a man of genius — there is room for him — or of the plainest, most reaHstic understanding. He may be as learned as the library of Alexandria, or " a man of one book," provided it be the true Book. He may be a philosopher of the schools, or a scholar of common life. He may be original to the verge of eccentricity, or a traveller in well- worn paths. Let him only be resolved to make his gifts the property of his fellow-men in loyal obedience to his Master. Let his genius be tem- pered with humility, his originality not worm-eaten by affectation, his doctrine and duty pervaded by the living Christ ; and there is work for him. Let no one covet or grieve at the gift of his neighbour, but let each diligently cultivate his own. He will have those who draw to him, because in the wide variety of the human mind he meets their need ; and whether his name finds a permanent place in the records of the Church below or not, he will receive the approval, Well done, good and faithful servant. LECTURE II. ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN THE OLD TESTAMENT. Preaching peculiar to Christianity. IT may be said that preaching, or regular religious instruction, is peculiar to Christianity. So far as we know the ancient religions, there was nothing in them resembling it. The priests of Egypt and Chaldea and Greece had their mys- teries, but they were for the initiated. The philosophers had their schools, but they were for the select. No one thought of going out to instruct the masses in moral and religious truth. The orators addressed the people, but it was on political topics for political ends. When Paul began his work in Athens, the philosophers were surprised, not only at the contents of his message, but at the manner of it. He seemed to be " a setter forth (KarayryeXev^) of strange gods, because he preached unto them (evijyyeXi^ero) Jesus and the 14 ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 15 Resurrection." He proclaimed those truths, making a Gospel of them. This was novel to the Greek mind, and novel to the Greek language. Among the religions of the present day, preach- ing is almost as little known. Hindooism cannot be said to have it at all. Buddhism and Mahomet- anism have had their missions, but they have no regular method of instruction for their adhe- rents ; indeed, their preaching, of the early kind at least, has long since ceased. This is scarcely to be wondered at. If you take their sacred books, the Koran for example, you will see how ill adapted they are for continued teaching, how utterh' im- possible it would be to deal with them as we do with the Bible, and to gather from them texts, subjects, and illustrations for the work of preach- ing. Christianity has this field specially, we may say almost solely, to itself But while preaching belongs specially to Christi- its ancestry, anity, it has an ancestry which can be traced, and that ancestry is in the Old Testament. Our work to-day is to define what we mean when we say this, to trace the line of descent, to look at the place assigned to the prophetic Word. When we say that the office of the preacher has an ancestry in the Old Testament, we mean that i6 LEC7URES ON PREACHING. the Old Testament had in it the germ and many features of this office ; that it set apart a special class of men, as does the Christian Church, to learn and to declare the will of God to the people. Prophetic, not This class was the order not of the priests but of pries y. ^j^^ prophets. There is one great High Priest ; but all Christians are priests ; this honour have all His saints. The prophets indeed are, so far, represented by all Christians without distinction, as all should in some way be teachers ; but the work of teaching, as fulfilled by ministers in the Church of Christ, follows specially in the line of the prophets. It is true that in many cases the Hebrew prophet had some special function. He had a message direct from God which frequently came with supernatural knowledge in the power of prediction. But it was not always so. The mission of the prophet was often to declare present truth alone, and the great majority of those who bore the name were merely instructors of the people, not foretellers of the future. Taking God's message as it had been already given, they unfolded and enforced it. The Greek word, 7rpo(f)7)Tr]<;, though it strictly means " one who speaks or interprets for another," came to mean a foreteller, and has thus narrowed the meaning of ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 17 the Hebrew N*n3, which might as accurately be rendered " the speaker," the man of the word, corresponding to the Greek K^pv^. It has some- times the passive shade of meaning (as though from the NipJial, S33), denoting a man under Divine influence, and so impelled and guided to speak ; but sometimes the active shade (as though from the Hiphil, I?"?!!!), suggesting one who uses the human faculty. And is not a preacher of Christ, when he uses his human power, still entitled and urged to look for Divine help ? Thus, with deduction of the super- natural gift, the prophet of the Old Testament is the ancestor and prototype of the Christian preacher. Let us then briefly trace the line of this class of The eariiesi religious teachers — the men of the Word of God. ^''^^^'^^*^'^'" Of their existence in the earlier part of the Old Testament we find little more than an indication ; and this through the New Testament, as when we read of Enoch that he " prophesied," and of Noah that he was a " preacher of righteousness." But this is all. There was no order of men set apart ; the nation had not yet been selected in which the Word of God was to be formed for the world. The patriarchal system is a very beautiful and instructive part of Divine history. It shows us religion in the family, scattered here and there 1 8 LECTURES ON PREACHING. through the ungodly world, and it has for its watchword the saying of Joshua, " As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord." It has also its peculiar revelation, the Theophany, the appearance of God to the individual and the family as a guardian and friend. This corresponds to the appearance of Christ in His human nature among men. Both of them are at the foundation of all the teaching and preaching that follow, but the command to publish the Divine Word has not yet been received. As in the New Testament this comes when Christ goes forth in His Church, so in the Old Testament it comes when the family goes into the nation. Then the prophet — the preacher — appears with a distinct commission. Moses. This distinct commission begins with Moses. When he is charged to go to Pharaoh with God's message, he shrinks back because he is not eloquent, and pleads that he cannot speak as he ought. He is met by the response, " See, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh, and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet."* Encouraged thereby he fulfils his task, and ultimately holds the office that had been assigned to Aaron. So it often happens ; the man who has most facility at first, falls back if he has AiVCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 19 not the higher tone and spirit, and the man who is slow of speech may be kindled into the high- est eloquence. Moses becomes himself a prophet, and there are no words in the Old Testament more full of penetrating power and sublimity than those which he utters. He becomes the guide of Israel, not by his rod only but by his word. He speaks for God to them, and for them to God. But in this Moses is not alone ; there is evidence that he was assisted by a body of prophets or preachers. It could scarcely be otherwise. The Israelites had come out of Egypt ignorant and debased, and they needed instruction about God, and about the mission for which He was preparing them. It was impossible for Moses to do this work- alone, and we read that " the Spirit rested upon the seventy elders, so that they prophesied and did not cease." This episode brought out that memorable saying of Moses, " Would God that all the Lord's people were prophets ! " Before Moses died, the promise was given that God would raise up for Israel a prophet from among their brethren like unto him. While this promise is perfectly fulfilled only in Christ, there is a long line of prophets indicated — a chain of many links, ending in one link of sfold. LECTURES ON PREACHING. It is in every way likely that after Moses there was a continuous class of religious teachers, whose work it was to instruct and warn. We have indications of this in the case of Joshua, in the history of Deborah and Barak, and in the days of solemn assembly, which could not be observed without men being led to speak and listen. Samuel. It is, howcver, in the time of Samuel that we find the first great advance in the place and work of the prophets. The circumstances of Israel led to it, and were overruled by God for this very end. The ark, which was the centre of religious worship, was captured and carried away by the Philistines. It fell into temporary oblivion, and the people were in danger of losing their religion and their unity. It was then that Samuel was raised up as a great teacher and reformer, as was most necessary. The ark and the Mosaic ritual were divinely ordained for instruction, but the people had turned them into idols and charms in place of the living God, and gross immorality had invaded their life. And so the ark must be removed, the priesthood set aside for a while, and the nation instructed in spiritual truth. This accounts for Samuel's offering the sacrifice without restraint of place, and for his pressing on the people the ANCESTHY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 21 great truths of obedience and righteousness as the substance of reh'gion. It was a step toward the spirit of the Psalm, " The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit ; " and of that saying of Christ, " Neither in this mountain nor yet in Jerusalem shall ye worship the Father." This is not a violation, as some seem to think, of the unity of the religious worship of the nation. A man was raised by God to restore that unity by giving it spirit and life. The unity of worship around the ark admits the very same exception as the law of the Sabbath, — necessity and mercy. It is in the time of Samuel that we first read of Tiie Prophetic companies of prophets under a director, of music "^ °°^" as forming an accompaniment of their prophecies, and of the Spirit of God falling upon them as in the New Testament Church. But doubtless teaching was the chief part of their duty, and it is at this stage that we find the beginning of that great advance in spirituality of view which appears in the Psalms and later prophets, when ritual was seen to be a lower thing than mercy and truth and righteousness. This was so great a step in the prophetic position that Samuel is spoken of in the ninety-ninth Psalm, as occupying a marked place : " Moses and Aaron among His priests, and Samuel LECTURES ON PREACHING. among them that call upon His name." And he is put in the book of Acts at the head of the prophet-roll : " Yea, and all the prophets from Samuel and those that follow after." The Prophetic We have again a period when the prophetic office. -_ . , . , , oHice IS to some extent hidden. A new power has risen in the land, that of the king, which brings danger to religious truth and purity. We read of Gad the seer and Nathan the prophet, who reproved David, of Ahijah and Iddo and others ; but the next notable period is that of Elijah and Elisha. The kingdom of David is rent in twain ; In Israel, two tribcs follow his dynasty ; the others, moved by political jealousy and political indifference, take Jeroboam as their king. It is remarkable that the first great outbreak of zeal in prophecy and preaching occurred among the tribes that revolted. And yet this was natural, for there the need was greatest, and the Spirit of God raised up the standard. The history of Elijah and Elisha, the two witnesses in the kingdom of Israel, is one of wonderful interest and picturesqueness and beaut}' and grandeur. Elijah, Ahab, Jezebel, Carmel, Horeb, Elisha, Naaman, the widow of Sarepta, the Shunammite — how we turn to them and read of them, and find meanings second only to those in ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 23 the life of Christ ! It strikes us sometimes as strange that no lengthened discourse from this period is preserved. But the words of these men were thunderbolts; they struck, and struck but once; and the place given to Elijah is seen in this, that the forerunner of Christ is named from him, and that he stands beside Moses on the Mount of Transfiguration to represent the prophets. We have abundant evidence that, at this time, the pro- phetic office had become a fixed institution, even among the ten tribes. We hear of "schools of the prophets " at Bethel and Jericho and Gilgal, the very seats of idolatry ; of the place where some of them met becoming too narrow for them ; and of their going forth to form new schools. These seem to have been gatherings of disciples round noted teachers, and, no doubt, the theme of instruc- tion was the character of the worship of Jehovah, as opposed to the Baal-worship against which they met to protest. In some cases they lived together ; in others they had homes and families of their own. Perhaps, if we were to look for a later analogy, we should find it in the " families of lona," as they called themselves, or the Moravian settlements, or communities of missionaries which form stations like Livingstonia. The position 24 LEC TUKES ON PRE A CHING. which they assumed towards the apostate kingly- power reminds us sometimes of the Huguenots of France after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, or of our own forefathers in the time of Charles II. and James — confronting kings, and not afraid. It was by no far-fetched reference that the Camerons and Cargills among our wild mountains made their frequent appeals to the Lord God of Elijah, injudah. In the kingdom of Judah the work of the prophet took a somewhat different form. There were there, no doubt, also teachers and scholars, and frequent protests against the defection of the times. But the temple at Jerusalem, the service of Jehovah there, the line of kingly descent from David, kept the persecution of the prophets from becoming as fierce and sanguinary as it was in the northern kingdom. There was more opportunity for full speech, and God's message to us comes through words spoken there which are still pre- served. Such were Isaiah and Jeremiah and Micah. If we learn from the prophets of the ten tribes to dare and do, to jeopardise our lives even unto death, we learn from those of the two tribes how to be kindled with a high and noble enthusiasm of speech, to ask from God the tongue of the learned, and to speak the word in season. ANCES'rJiV OF PRE ACHING IX OLD TESTA. MEI\'T. 25 With some points of difference, it is like the distinction between Scotland and England in the dark days of the Stuart reign. The hand of perse- cution did not fall so heavily in the south, and England had its Howe and Baxter and Bunyan, who, when they could not speak, could write though it were in the prison. But our forefathers were among those who "wandered in deserts and on mountains ; " they had a short passage from the prison to the scaffold, and their history is that of their devotion to the death. If we had then the fewer prophets, we had the greater martyrs. There is one period of prophetic work to which During the we can refer only briefly, though it is of great ^^P^'^'^y- importance. It is that of the prophets of the Captivit}' — Ezekiel and Daniel, and of the return — Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. These men had a double duty ; first, to be watchers over the rem- nant, and to keep it steadfast as the world's religious hope ; and, next, to represent in some measure to the outside world the great light which was yet to visit it. They were what may be called the " missionary prophets," and after Isaiah, who towers above all, there are none who so dis- tinctly bring out the design of God for the whole race of man, or so prepare the heart of Jew Return. 26 LECTURES ON PREACHING. and Gentile for the coming of Christ. If we find throughout the world at the time of our Saviour Httle bands of Jews and proselytes to whom the apostles first addressed themselves, and who became hearths for the sacred fire, we owe it through God's guidance to the men who lifted the thoughts and hopes of the chosen people above the natural limits of their land and race into the atmosphere of those grand truths which express the needs and meet the wants of all mankind. After the This closes the line of divinely inspired teachers whom we call, in the highest sense, prophets. But, as we have already said, the word prophet has a far wider meaning, as applied to all teachers of religious truth. In this sense we find men in the time of Jehoshaphat and Josiah reading and explaining the Word of God, and not less in the time of Ezra and Nehemiah. These were evidently epochs of great religious revival and reformation under what we call "the ordinary teaching of the Word." Such teaching continued down to the time of our Lord, with many a turn of the tide, but exciting desires and giving knowledge which made the world more ready for Him and for the Gospel. If the survey we have taken be at all a just one, then the prophetic office grew in importance all ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 27 through the Old Testament till it took the leading place. You will not understand me as depreciating the history or the divinely appointed symbolism. The prophet accepts these as the basis of all his teaching, but more and more does he penetrate to the heart of them, show the symbol to be nothing without its inner meaning, and turn away to the great reality, to Christ before and to God above. Moses, Isaiah, Christ — the law, the prophets, the Son of God — that is the ascending scale, and then the Son of God becomes the centre of the law and the prophets, and sends us forth again as His messengers of truth and grace. If we follow this ascending scale, we shall be The teaching , 1 • . 1 of this survey guarded agamst several errors. ^ ° as to — Some critics tell us that the more minute develop- (i) Course of ment of Jewish ritual was superimposed long after -^^^^^^^ ^'^*°'^'' the time of David ; that Judaism was simpler in its elements as it came from Moses, but became more detailed and elaborate in its later history. We could understand this if it were a merely _ human growth ; for it would resemble the addition of ceremonialism to the simplicity of the New Testament by the Romish Church. But if the Old Testament be, as we believe, a Divine education, then to put the law in its full form after the 28 LECTUEES ON PKEACIIING. prophets, is to misapprehend and invert the whole course of Jewish history. The mission of the prophets was to pass from form to substance, from symbol to reality, from ritual to righteous- ness and truth, God's path is from the dark to the clear and ever clearer, shining more and more unto the perfect day. (2) The place We shall also be warned against giving ritual preac ing. ^j. symbolism a higher place than preaching in the Christian Church. Even under the Old Testament, the whole course of progress was towards presenting Divine truth in its simplicity and power by bring- ing it close to the understanding. God gradually sets aside the mere form, and it is not for us to reimpose it. (3) The mater- We" may also learn something as to the matter las or preac i-Q^ ^^^ preaching. In some respects the work of the Old Testament prophets was very different from ours, and yet in many respects it was the same, since they too had to instruct the people. We find that their teaching was occupied with three great spheres, {a) It laid its basis in the past, in the facts of a Divine history — what God had done in His great interpositions. Nothing moves men like this. He who does not care for the past is doomed to mental and spiritual poverty. ANCESTRY OF f REACHING IN OLD 7ESTAMENT. 29 {b) Further, they faithfully brought the past to bear on the present — present sin, present duty ; without this the past is dead, {c) And still more they pointed to the future, for without the future the present cannot be understood ; unless we know the end how can we know the way ? Now the Christian preacher has still these three spheres. He has tJieir past, but a greater added to it in the history of Christ and of what God has done through Him. Yet this will be dead — mere orthodox doctrine, unless you bring it to bear on present life, on the wants and duties that are here and now. And you have also a future to point to, a greater future, when Christ shall return to make all things new. Whatever may be said about the magnanimity of thinking only of the present life, and the grand unselfishness of letting the future alone, we must take our teaching from the apostle's maxim, " If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable," and from Christ's saying, " I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice." I could not believe in a Christ who excited desires which He could not satisfy. I should as soon think of taking the pole-star from the sky, and the haven from the voyage, to make the sailor safe and happy. Men may call it magnanimity to 30 LECTURES ON PREACHING. be willing to die and think no more of God, but it is the magnanimity of indifference. Fill your preach- ing with the past, the present, and the future, and let Him to whom prophets looked beautify them all. (4)Thespiritof Lastly, acquaintance with them and with their our preaching. ^^^^^^^ ^^,^1 g^j-^.g ^q enkindle our spirit and ennoble our life. To enkindle our spirit, let us study the apostles not less, but the prophets more. The greatest preachers have risen by their inspiration — the deep spirituality of the Psalms, the majesty of Isaiah, the tender pathos of Jeremiah, the dusky grandeur of Ezekiel, and the twelve Lesser Prophets, if we can call them less, who shine with a lustre each his own. And to ennoble our life, we may well follow them. There has seldom been a time when we more needed their singleness of purpose, their steadfastness, their courage, their trust in the living God, who is the God of truth and right. When we look at the materialistic Baal-worship, at the sensu- alism of the Phoenician Ashtaroth, with its gilded corruptions, its hatred of appeals to conscience and righteousness, we seem brought face to face with real dangers of the present day — materialism, the worship of pleasure more or less refined, a religion that shall not stir the conscience nor command the life, a charge of puritanism or fanaticism against ANCESTRY OF PREACHING IN OLD TESTAMENT. 31 those who are earnest in any moral or spiritual purpose. Do we not have it in too much of our literature, our press, our society talk ? It is the same old battle between the world and the living God, and we may learn from these men how to bear ourselves. Often it must have seemed to them as if all were going to ruin, as if God Himself had gone up and left them to fight the battle alone. But they stood firm, and they have gained the day. Ahab and Jezebel and the abomination of the Zidonians — where are they beside those men whose names are among the cloud of witnesses, and shine out through the troubled skies as a guide and hope to us ? Science is good, and literature, and art, and beauty, but separate them from conscience and God and eternal life, and they will lower the world to the abyss into which the Baals and Ashtaroths have long since gone down. If there be any power under God to save the world, it is a living Church with faithful ministers who shall fearlessly witness for the living God. Let us thank Him that we have many true men in all depart- ments of life and thought, but the ministers of God must show the courage of these old prophets, if they are to share in the joy of the victory which shall surely come, though it may not come through us. LECTURE III. THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. npHE earliest Christian preaching, as we all ■'■ know, is found in the New Testament, but the preaching to be found there is very different from that which prevails among us — 1 mean in shape and form. Even the Sermon on the Mount, the longest sermon in the New Testament, is not meant to serve us for a model of construction. If The preach- the New Testament had given us sermons elabor- ing of the ately and artistically framed like the orations of New 1 esta- ment. Dcmostheues and Cicero, it would not have been so suitable for the work of the Christian ministry. In instructing men in physical science one does not go to the product as it is wrought up into artificial shapes, but as it is seen in nature — gold in the ore, not in the finest vase that workmanship can form. The object of the New Testament is to give us religious truth i/! situ, in the original field, THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. 33 and then to leave successive generations to put it into all the shapes that are needed for the wants of men. Had the Bible given us truth wrought out into all the fitting forms, it would have required to be a very different book as to size — a book which would not have met the daily necessities of the great body of men ; and then, with those fixed forms, it would have led us into uniformity and stagnation. Therefore the Bible, and specially the New Testament, gives prhnordia, first materials and principles and guiding lines, and sets us forth to the work of preaching in a more free and natural way, with the fresh movement of our own minds, and the help of God's Spirit. Still, we may gain from the New Testament, not only materials, but definite suggestions of the highest value ; and in search for these we shall to-day briefly consider the preaching of Christ and His apostles, and then, leaving the New Testament, glance at the preaching of the early Christian Church. With regard to the preaching of Christ, we can name only a few points. The great work of Christ during His life was Christ's preaching. His testimony about Himself is, that ^''^^^^""^ He came " to bear witness to the truth." The works 34 LECTURES ON PREACHING. which He performed in heahng men were simply preaching put into visible and palpable form. His miracles are parables clothed in acts. But the spoken word is His great power in life. And this is natural. The word, language, is the highest out- come of human nature, that by which man under- stands himself, holds fellowship with other men, and even communes with God. So Christ, through- out His life, was above all things a preacher. Nicodemus spoke the truth when he said, " no man can do these miracles that thou doest except God be with him ; " but Peter had reached higher ground when he said, " Lord, to whom shall we go ? Thou hast the words of eternal life." Its aim. Is there, then, nothing greater than Christ's preaching ? Yes, certainly, there is Christ himself, Christ in His own person, living, dying, rising, and becoming the mediator between man and God. According!)', His own preaching constantly leads us to Himself: "Come unto Me, all ye that labour ; " "' I am the good Shepherd ; " " I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto Me ; " "I am the Resurrection and the Life." This would be egotism in any one else than Christ ; but for Him to refrain from it would be to be untrue to His mission. The sun enlightens by shining. THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. 35 and Christ saves by showing Himself. Here, then, are two things to remember: preaching is the great Christian work, and in preaching we have to preach Christ. When we come to the characteristics of Christ's Its character- preaching, we name these as among them. ''^"^'" There \s great simplicity and yet tJiere is a never- fatJionied depth. Tlie words and figures are within the comprehension of the most unlettered, and even of children ; while the thoughtful student feels that he cannot exhaust them. If we aimed at this way of preaching, we should suit every capacity. There is great variety and yet there is one consta7it aim. His illustrations are as wide as nature and as human life, but they all bear on God and our relation to Him. This combination reminds us of the two-fold plan of the apostle, who " determined not to know anything save Jesus Christ and Him crucified," yet " was made all things to all men." There is great sympathy and yet great faithfulness. He may justly be said to "speak the truth in love ; " piercing to the conscience, bringing it into the presence of the holy law and character of God, and yet appealing so tenderly to the heart. This is, indeed, the meeting together of righteousness 36 LECTURES ON PREACHING. and mere}'. If we could unite these character- istics, how powerful we should be as preachers ! Different Then we may learn something from the different spheres of , r /^i • . > i • .., ■ ,, spheres ot Christ s prcachmo;. Christ s i 1 fc> Preaching. (i,) There is what may be called His stated preaching. We read again and again that He taught in the synagogue ; "as His custom was He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day." An example is given us of His method. He read the Scripture, explained it, and applied it to the audience : " This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears." This corresponds to our regular work among those who know the Bible ; and we learn from it what we have to do, — to take the Bible in its meaning, above all about Christ, and bring it to bear on the hearers. (2.) Another sphere was his occasional preach- ing, — on the mountains, by the sea shore, in the city, wherever men gathered round Him. In this He seems to have spent the greater part of His ministry, and though such work falls more rarely to us. His method in it is instructive, specially for the Christian missionary. To begin without a text, from something in God's world, or man's life, that arrests the hearers at the time, is the best way to approach an outside multitude ; and any THE EARLIEST CHRISTTAN PREACHING. 37 one who wishes to do this should try to make himself acquainted with nature and life in all their variety, and to learn how to express their spiritual significance. They are adapted to such use. Nature is a parable, and we find God to be the subject of it when we learn the handwriting. The sooth-sayers and astrologers cannot read it, but it is ours to find out the hidden inter- pretation. It would give even our ordinary preach- ing great freshness and interest, if we could bring the voice of the days and seasons into the pulpit. Christ meant to teach all preachers this ; to make us speak as men who in one sense or another have not only God's Word but God's world in view. (3.) The third sphere of Christ's preaching was to the individual, when he spoke to single persons, who touched Him or were touched by Him in the house and by the way. This should still be in- cluded in our work, when we visit Christian families and in the intercourse of life. It may seem like a paradox to say that we shall learn here not to preach at all. Notice how Christ does. He drops a saying, sometimes little more than a word — " Go and sin no more," " Oh, thou of little faith," " One thing is needful ; " and He sends them away with this, to think of it and to preach about it to them- 38 LECTURES ON PREACHING. selves. See that you follow His example. You can preach to men gathered together, but when you have a person, do not preach, do not lecture him, whether young or old ; but be a friend, saying no more than the " word in season " : by your very silence you will show that Christ has been your teacher. The Preaching We come now to the preaching of the apostles. ^ ^ ^, We have no complete report of any one sermon, apostles. ^ ^ The longest, perhaps, is that of Peter's sermon on the Day of Pentecost, but it is evidently only a summary, for we read at the end that " with many other words did he testify and exhort." But when we look at the book of Acts and the epistles as a whole, we learn some general truths. They had two kinds of preaching. The one was " missionary," for bringing men to a knowledge of Christ ; the other was " ministerial," for building them up in the faith and in the practice of it. The first of these we have in the book of Acts ; the second we have in the epistles. Missionary. In their missionary sermons, whether to Jews or to Gentiles, their chief aim seems to have been to make men acquainted first with the person and history of Christ. This is the foundation of all Christian knowledge and preaching. God's way of saving the world is by an interposition in time, THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. 39 through the Hfe and death of a person, through the Son of God becoming the son of man, and so making men again the sons of God. It is for this reason that the gospels go before the epistles, and the order suggests a valuable lesson for missionaries either at home or abroad. Give the life, doings, . death, resurrection of Christ as clearly and warmly as you can, and with all that variety which the gospels put in your power. To point to Christ as He walks and say, " Behold the Lamb of God ! " is an appeal which reaches men even without argu- ment. No doubt we must tell something of the meaning of His life, but at first the life itself should have the foremost place. I think that even in Home Mission work, and in our ordinary preaching, this should be borne in mind. There are always children, there are always half-instructed people for whom vicv^'S of the Gospel history are the very best of all preaching, and these may be given in a way that will make them profitable to the most advanced intelligence. Therefore preach a great deal from the gospels. But the apostles had another kind of preaching. Ministerial, which followed their missionary labours. We have little of this in the book of Acts, only a glimpse in Paul's address to the elders of Ephesus; but it is 40 LECTURES ON PREACHING. fully represented by the epistles. These are really examples of the kind of teaching that must often have been given orally to Christians who were more advanced in knowledge ; and it is a great testimony to the new intelligence that had been called out among the slaves and freedmen of Its character. Rome, that they could have such letters read and such sermons preached to them. You may be sure that Paul measured his audience ; think then of the natural powers of reasoning, of the spiritual insight, of the lofty and sanctified imagination that would be needed to follow the first eight chapters of the Letter to the Romans. Preaching There are some who say that we should not ^, °" \ f enter into such subjects as these in Christian doctrinal. •' preaching, that we should keep simply to the history of Christ and not meddle with doctrine. The life of Christ, the}^ say, is sufficient in itself without these mysterious and metaphysical deduc- tions from it. Doctrine in But if you Consider the gospels b}' themselves, you t le gobpe b. ^^.ju ^^^ ^j^^j. ^j-^gy could never be understood with- without some doctrine — i.e., instruction about their meaning. When Christ sa}'s, " Dost thou believe on the Son of God ? " the hearer naturally asks, "Who is He, Lord?" Christ himself presses the THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. 41 question — " Whom say ye that I am ? " The answer given is doctrine. He tells them the mean- ing of His death, that it is "a ransom for many ; " and He promises the Spirit of truth to guide them into all truth, to testify of Him, to take of the things that are His, and show them unto them. This, which is the teaching of the epistles, is thus implied in Christ's own plan. Now, when we look at the epistles, one or two How pre- things may guide us in dealing with Christian ^^^}^^ ^" ^'^^ ^ ■> ^ t> epistles. doctrine, so as to make it intelligible and inter- esting. First, all their teaching starts from and returns to Christ. I need not prove this ; you can verify it for yourselves. His life and death and resurrection penetrate ever}'where, and are the roots of Christ- ian faith and hope and practice. They are the river of life, by the side of which trees grow and blossom and fructify. If you can connect doctrine in this way with Christ Himself, it will be clear and fresh to everyone. Further, the\' [jreach doctrine with an eye to the lives of men. It is varied according to the different churches, their circumstances, their faults, their temptations. The Romans, the Corinthians, the Galatians, the Hebrews, have their practical differ- 42 LECTURES ON PREACHING. ences dealt with, and this holds not only in the case of the churches, but in that of individuals. Our preaching should be so adapted — close, discriminating, individual, without being personal. This, also, will give interest to doctrine. Notice, again, how each writer or preacher has his own bent, and yet the preaching is all the while Christian. Christ Himself has all the elements ; the different preachers take their parts. Of the Sermon on the Mount, the practical side is reproduced by James ; the warm, vehement appeal, which is found in the address to the multitudes, is taken up by Peter, both in the Acts and his epistles ; the teaching about redemption and the ransom is specially the work of Paul ; and the spiritual insight belongs to John. Christ and Christ crucified are in all of them, but each has his own manner. We, too, should be true to our own view, provided we are making Christ and His Cross our centre. So the breadth of preaching comes out, and every true Christian minister secures his sphere. Lastly, we learn that we must study and think if we are ever to preach well. This is made clear specially in the Pastoral Epistles, which are indeed the Homiletics of the New Testament, and THE EARLIEST CHRISTIAN PREACHING. 43 deserve the minute attention of every minister. If there is any enthusiast who thinks he will be able to preach by trusting simply to the inspiration of the Spirit, or any genius who thinks it will come to him by intuition, or any sluggard who is waiting for something to occur, he may be undeceived by read- ing these letters of the great preacher Paul. The preacher may expect Divine help, but only in the use of all proper means. He is to stir up the gift that is in him ; to give himself to reading and to meditation ; to be nourished in the words of faith and sound doctrine ; to make himself acquainted ever more with the Holy Scriptures, though he has learned them from a child ; to distinguish all the relationships of life so that he may touch them with discretion ; and in all things to study to show himself approved unto God — "a workman that necdeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth." So good preachers were made at first under apostolic guidance, and so good preachers must be made to the end of the world. Oratio, nieditatio, tentatio. We shall now glance at the preaching of the The Post- early Church immediately after the time of the^^°^^°^'^ apostles. The period may be said to extend to the time of Origen, who was born in the year 185 44 LECTURES ON PREACHING. A.D., and with whom a new epoch in preaching commenced. Our information about the preaching of this period is somewhat scanty. It was a busy time ; the disciples spread the knowledge of the Gospel, organised communities, met persecution ; but they left few written records. The best account of Christian worship, and of the part preaching takes, is given by Justin Martyr, who was put to death at Rome in 165 A.D. It is our chief authority : — • The form of " On the day which is called Sunday, all the worship. Christians inhabiting the towns or country assemble in the same place. The memorials iaTTo^vrniovev- fjLaTa) of the apostles and the writings of the prophets are read as time permits. When the reader has finished, the president of the assembly delivers an exhortation and charges his hearers to imitate those holy examples. Then we all rise together and offer up prayers. After the prayer, bread is brought forward, and wine and water ; the president then in his turn presents prayers and praises to God, according to his ability {oar} Svva/jit