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EARLY CHURCH
Ambrose
Ambrose, Pseudo
Andreas
Arethas
Aphrahat
Athanasius
Augustine
Barnabus
BarSerapion
Baruch, Pseudo
Bede
Chrysostom
Chrysostom, Pseudo
Clement, Alexandria
Clement, Rome
Clement, Pseudo
Cyprian
Ephraem
Epiphanes
Eusebius
Gregory
Hegesippus
Hippolytus
Ignatius
Irenaeus
Isidore
James
Jerome
King Jesus
Apostle John
Lactantius
Luke
Mark
Justin Martyr
Mathetes
Matthew
Melito
Oecumenius
Origen
Apostle Paul
Apostle Peter
Maurus Rabanus
Remigius
"Solomon"
Severus
St.
Symeon
Tertullian
Theophylact
Victorinus

HISTORICAL PRETERISM
(Minor Fulfillment of Matt. 24/25 or Revelation
in Past)
Joseph Addison
Oswald T. Allis Thomas Aquinas
Karl Auberlen
Augustine
Albert Barnes
Karl Barth
G.K. Beale Beasley-Murray
John Bengel
Wilhelm Bousset
John A. Broadus
David Brown
"Haddington Brown"
F.F. Bruce
Augustin Calmut
John Calvin
B.H. Carroll
Johannes Cocceius
Vern Crisler
Thomas Dekker
Wilhelm De Wette
Philip Doddridge
Isaak Dorner
Dutch Annotators
Alfred Edersheim
Jonathan Edwards
E.B.
Elliott
Heinrich Ewald Patrick Fairbairn
Js. Farquharson
A.R. Fausset
Robert Fleming
Hermann Gebhardt
Geneva Bible
Charles Homer Giblin
John Gill
William Gilpin
W.B. Godbey
Ezra Gould
Steve Gregg
Hank Hanegraaff
Hengstenberg Matthew Henry
G.A. Henty
George Holford
Johann von Hug
William Hurte
J, F, and Brown
B.W. Johnson
John Jortin
Benjamin Keach
K.F. Keil
Henry Kett
Richard Knatchbull Johann Lange
Cornelius Lapide
Nathaniel Lardner
Jean Le Clerc
Peter Leithart
Jack P. Lewis
Abiel Livermore
John Locke
Martin Luther
James MacDonald
James MacKnight
Dave MacPherson
Keith Mathison
Philip Mauro
Thomas Manton
Heinrich Meyer
J.D. Michaelis
Johann Neander
Sir Isaac Newton
Thomas Newton
Stafford North
Dr. John Owen
Blaise Pascal
William W. Patton
Arthur Pink
Thomas Pyle
Maurus Rabanus
St. Remigius
Anne Rice
Kim Riddlebarger
J.C. Robertson
Edward Robinson
Andrew Sandlin
Johann Schabalie
Philip Schaff
Thomas Scott
C.J. Seraiah
Daniel Smith
Dr. John
Smith
C.H. Spurgeon Rudolph E. Stier
A.H. Strong St. Symeon
Theophylact
Friedrich Tholuck
George Townsend
James Ussher
Wm. Warburton
Benjamin Warfield
Noah Webster
John Wesley
B.F. Westcott William Whiston
Herman Witsius
N.T. Wright
John Wycliffe
Richard Wynne
C.F.J. Zullig

MODERN PRETERISTS
(Major Fulfillment of Matt. 24/25 or Revelation
in Past)
Firmin Abauzit
Jay Adams
Luis Alcazar
Greg Bahnsen
Beausobre, L'Enfant
Jacques Bousset
John L. Bray
David Brewster
Dr. John Brown
Thomas Brown
Newcombe Cappe
David Chilton
Adam Clarke
Henry Cowles
Ephraim Currier
R.W. Dale
Gary DeMar
P.S. Desprez
Johann Eichhorn
Heneage Elsley
F.W. Farrar
Samuel Frost
Kenneth Gentry
Hugo Grotius
Francis X. Gumerlock
Henry Hammond
Hampden-Cook
Friedrich Hartwig
Adolph Hausrath
Thomas
Hayne
J.G. Herder
Timothy Kenrick
J. Marcellus Kik
Samuel Lee
Peter Leithart
John Lightfoot
Benjamin Marshall
F.D. Maurice
Marion Morris
Ovid Need, Jr
Wm. Newcombe
N.A. Nisbett
Gary North
Randall Otto
Zachary Pearce
Andrew Perriman
Beilby Porteus
Ernst Renan
Gregory Sharpe
Fr. Spadafora
R.C. Sproul
Moses Stuart
Milton S. Terry
Herbert
Thorndike
C. Vanderwaal
Foy Wallace
Israel P.
Warren Chas Wellbeloved
J.J. Wetstein
Richard Weymouth
Daniel Whitby
George Wilkins
E.P. Woodward

FUTURISTS
(Virtually No Fulfillment of Matt. 24/25 & Revelation in 1st
C. - Types Only ; Also Included are "Higher Critics" Not Associated With Any
Particular Eschatology)
Henry Alford
G.C. Berkower
Alan Patrick Boyd
John Bradford
Wm.
Burkitt
George Caird
Conybeare/ Howson
John Crossan
John N. Darby
C.H. Dodd E.B. Elliott
G.S.
Faber
Jerry Falwell
Charles G. Finney
J.P. Green Sr.
Murray Harris
Thomas Ice
Benjamin Jowett John N.D. Kelly
Hal Lindsey
John MacArthur
William Miller
Robert Mounce Eduard Reuss
J.A.T. Robinson
George Rosenmuller
D.S. Russell
George Sandison
C.I. Scofield
Dr. John Smith
Norman Snaith
"Televangelists" Thomas Torrance
Jack/Rex VanImpe
John Walvoord
Quakers :
George Fox |
Margaret Fell (Fox) |
Isaac Penington
PRETERIST UNIVERSALISM |
PRETERIST-IDEALISM
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Ferdinand Christian Baur
Professor Of Theology In The
University OF Tubingen
Church History of the First Three Centuries
(Tubingen: 1863)
 |
THE PAROUSIA (Vol. 1, pp. 246-252)
The belief in the second coming of Christ, and the
reaction against a view of the world which had lost its hold upon this
belief, are the two leading momenta which serve to explain the origin
and character of Montanism.
What connected Christianity with Judaism most directly and most
intimately was the Jewish Messianic idea; though from it also there
arose the sharpest antithesis by which the two faiths came to be
separated from each other. It had been thought that Jesus was the
promised Messiah, who had appeared with a view to the fulfilment of the
Messianic expectations. His death seemed to leave these hopes
unfulfilled, and to destroy them for ever: the disciples, as Jews
possessed with the Messianic belief, felt that such an event made it
impossible to apply the belief to him. But the gulf lying between idea
and fact was only too soon filled up. He had not, as the living Messiah,
fulfilled what was hoped of him; but as the risen Messiah, exalted to
heaven, he might return from heaven again, now at length to accomplish
all that had not yet come about. The Parousia of Christ became a
necessary postulate of the faith of the first disciples; the old belief
had assumed a new form, but it was impossible to renounce the .substance
of it, and it seemed to be a necessity that it should be fulfilled
without delay. Many passages of the books of the New Testament show with
what power this belief reigned in the minds of the first Christians. So
much was this the case, that in this respect there was no essential
difference between the apostle of the Gentiles and the author of the
Apocalypse. If any of the first publishers of Christianity was capable
of discerning that its destiny—its exaltation into the universal
religion—was only to be fulfilled in the distant future, it was Paul.
Yet even he, as he thinks on Christ's coming, firmly believes that all
is now approaching its end, and that he will himself live to see the
great catastrophe. Such a belief, however, too surely brought its own
refutation to last long in all its strength and vividness. The longer it
remained unfulfilled, the more inevitably it tended to lose its hold on
the mind of the age. Even .within the New Testament itself, we can trace
the various modifications which it gradually underwent. Compare the two
books which vary most widely in their manner of stating it; what a
discrepancy of tone do we find between the Apocalypse, where it blazes
out in its brightest flame, and takes its most concrete form in the idea
of the millennium, and the Second Epistle of Peter. The author of the
latter speaks of scoffers who shall come in the last days, walking after
their own lusts, and saying, " Where is the promise of his coming ? for
since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the
creation;" and instead of questioning the facts on which the scoffer
proceeded, he merely seeks to refute him by substituting for the belief
itself a recognition of the general truths that lie at its base. This
shows us pretty plainly what the state of belief on the subject was at
this time. But though it had ceased, at least in its original form, to
be a universal article of Christian faith, still there could not fail to
be some, who in contrast to the increasing worldliness of the Christian
mind which was manifested in the decay of this belief, quickened it in
themselves even to a stronger life, and held it fast with fresh
enthusiasm. Such were the Montanists; and this is one of their most
prominent traits. Even though it be admitted that millenarianism was at
the time a universal Christian belief, still the Montanists were the
most pronounced of all millenarians. It was this doctrine that
especially kindled their enthusiasm : their prophets announced, in
language like that of men inspired, the judgments which were impending
with the coming of Christ, the reign of a thousand years, and the end of
the world, and depicted all that was coming in the most vivid colours.
How much they were occupied with the thought of the immediate end of the
world, and how real the thought was to them, is shown by the saying of
the prophetess Maximilla, "After me comes nothing but the end of the
world I"1 Soon as the consummation might come, it could not approach too
quickly for their millenarian spirit. In their daily prayer, to ask that
God's kingdom might come was to give utterance to their millenarian view
of the world; the kingdom of God and the end of the world were with them
the same idea.1 Even then, though the whole generation for which the
coming of Christ was supposed to have been promised, had but looked for
it in vain, still the belief itself that in the immediate future Christ
would appear, and the kingdom of God begin, was not abandoned. The
Montanists knew the spot where the heavenly Jerusalem would descend;
they had even had a vision foreshadowing the descent from heaven. With
other Christians, coldness and lukewarmness had laid hold of millen-
arianism; but for that very reason it became all the stronger and
livelier with them. And this shows us how close was the connection
between the millenarian belief of the Montanists and another no less
characteristic part of their system, ecstatic prophecy. If they were
living entirely in the thought of Christ's coming and of the future, and
saw close at hand the events that were to introduce and accompany the
impending catastrophe, this contemplation of the future in the present
inevitably gave rise to prophecy. Prophecy with the Montanists assumed
the form of ecstasy; a fact very characteristic of the sect, though
ecstasy itself was by no means an uncommon thing. Ecstasy is merely
prophecy intensified. By a natural analogy, as millenarianism among the
Montanists advanced to fresh energy, prophecy also, as the expression of
their millenarian inspiration, soared with a loftier flight, and became
ecstasy. Here the finite subject became absolutely passive under the
divine principle. Hence the saying of Montanus, in which he compares man
to the lyre, the Paraclete to the plectrum, and calls the former a
sleeper, the latter a watcher; and the belief that the special organs of
the Holy Spirit were women, prophetesses such as Maximilla and
Priscilla. The one belief naturally gained
1 Compare Tertullian, De Orat. c. 5 ; where he says of the^emai regnum
tmtm ; Itaque si ad Dei voluntatem et ad nostram suspensionem pertinet
regni dominici representatio, quomodo quidam pertractum quendam in
seculo postulant (how can so many ask, that the kingdom of God should
further prolong itself into secular time ? millenarianism was then no
longer a universal belief) ; quum regnum Dei quod, ut adveniat, oramus,
ad consummationem seculi tendat; optamus maturius regnare et non diutius
servire. Etiam si praefinitum in oratioue non esset, de postulando regni
adventu, ultro eam voccm postulassemus, festinantes ad spei nostrae com-
plexum.
strength together with the other. The believers in Christ's coming did
not feel their belief disturbed by the long lapse of time to which they
had now to look back. On the contrary, the longer the past period, the
nearer they thought they must be to the great catastrophe. For the same
reason, since everything was now in its last stage, in the Kaipos (rwetrraX/ievo?,
the spirit too, the irvevfia ayiov, the principle of the Christian
consciousness, must gather its energies more powerfully together, must
give forth more immediate, more unequivocal utterances. Both beliefs
were involved in the consciousness of living in the dies novissimi.
Thus, Tertullian's theory of the various periods of development is, that
as first the plant arises from the grain of seed, and lastly the fruit
from the blossom, so justitia was first in the state of nature, then
advanced to childhood under the guidance of the Law and the Prophets,
next through the Gospel blossomed into youth, and now is brought to
maturity by the Paraclete.1 All this is but an analysis of the idea of
the novissima. What is sought to be done is to bring out what is the
last in the last things, by striking out of them all that is not the
last, but must at once be followed by the last. But according to the
Montanist opinion, the more nearly everything approached its end, the
more everything converged in the novissimi dies, the more concentrated
and intense, the more filled with compressed energy did everything
become. Everywhere, says Tertullian, the later forms the conclusion, and
that which goes before is outweighed by that which comes after. This is
a universal law alike of the human and the divine order of things; and
especially of the novissimi dies,2 in which the prophecy of Joel (often
cited by Tertullian), that the spirit should be poured out on all flesh,
was to be fulfilled. In this period, when tempus est in collecto, when
every force gathers itself together and prepares all its keenness, the
spirit likewise enters into the mind of the Christian with unwonted
power, and fills it with its own divine all-
1 De virg. vel. o. 1.
2 De Bapt. c. 13. Compare the Praef. Act. Felic. et Perp., and
Epiphanius Haer. 48, 8, in Schwegler's Montan., p. 39.
illumining essence. The Apocalypse gives virtually the same account of
the relation between the novissima and the working of the spirit in
connection with it. The several stages of the great catastrophe of the
world are the subject of the book; the author is merely the instrument
of the divine inspiration that has come upon him; he too is ev
irvevfiaTi, i.e., in a state of ecstasy (i. 10). Prophecies and visions
form the whole contents of the Apocalypse; prophecy and vision were the
shapes assumed by the ecstatic condition of the Montanists. The spirit
which from the first was the animating principle of the Christians, and
awoke their prophetic inspiration and ecstasy, is also the principle of
Montanism. At this time it was generally termed Paraclete, perhaps
because in the distress and affliction of the last days it was to be not
only the guide that should lead into all truth, but the intercessor, the
support and comfort of all those whom it swayed with its rich and
abundant power; in any case, this particular name, as applied to the
Holy Spirit, was intended to mark its special and peculiar function
during that last period, in which the Montanist saw everything pressing
towards its end.
It is in the moral sphere that the Paraclete carries on his actual
operations. He speaks with his full energy in prophetic ecstasy in order
that the secrets of the future may be searched, and all the obscurities
of consciousness made light. But he also insists emphatically on the
moral requirements of practical Christianity. As the spiritus sanctus,
ipsius disciplinae determinator, institutor novae disciplinae, he is the
strict spirit of moral severity, the declared foe of all laxity and
indifference in moral things. What he is, he is for one end only, viz.,
that he may in the field of morals realise that which he is; thus
Tertullian, when he sums up all the features which belong to the idea of
the Paraclete, gives the first place to his practical task. He opens the
Scriptures, purges the understanding, raises the Christian to a higher
stage of perfection, but above all, his practical aim is to give
discipline its right direction.1 The Montanists increased the severity
of Chris-
1 De virg. vel. c. 1.
tian discipline by several ordinances peculiar to themselves, as by the
xerophagiae, by the extension of the dies stationum to the evening, and
by their requirements with regard to marriage and martyrdom. But their
fundamental idea, the source of all these regulations, was that the
Christian lived in the last times, and stood at the end of the whole
course of the world. This thought filled the Montanist's mind as a
belief, and could not but determine his behaviour. He lived in the one
thought that the end of the world was at hand, and discerned in all
around him nothing but the signs of the advancing catastrophe. It was
necessary then, that inwardly as well as outwardly he should have
completely broken with the world; and his outward actions could have no
other aim than that of carrying out this breach with the world in every
direction, and wholly sundering the bonds by which his flesh still
joined him to the world. It has been very correctly observed,1 that in
its moral requirements Montanism set up nothing new; that it was only
new in so far as it was reactionary; that the only question between the
Montanists and their adversaries in the Church concerned an increase of
strictness in enforcing an old ordinance which was on the point of
becoming obsolete; that their laws upon marriage and fasting merely
aimed at the carrying out in practice of that which they recognised as a
divine and eternal command, the old law laid down in both Testaments.
Still the cause of this reactionary tendency was the Montanist's belief
that he understood better than others the time in which the Christian
was living, that he recognised it for what it was, for the last time.
Further, how much must that original Christian frame of mind, resting on
the belief in Christ's immediate coming, have changed and degenerated,
when the duty of martyrdom was so little thought of, that whole churches
purchased exemption from persecution with money and wholesale, and when
bishops and clergy gave their sanction to the cowardice, and encouraged
it by their example.2 We may well conclude that in other respects
1 Hitschi, Enstehung der Altkath. Kirche, Isted., p. 513 j 2d ed., p.
4.97, aq.
2 Tert. de fuga in persec., cap. ii. 13.
THE APOCALYPSE (Vol. 2, pp. 74-76)
The Christology of the Apocalypse comes next in time
to that of Paul. Here, too, the same canon holds good; for, the mightier
the expected catastrophe is which is to accompany Christ's coming, the
higher must be the idea formed of the person of him who is to introduce
it. With this writer, as with Paul, it is through his death and
resurrection that Christ arrives at the highest divine power and glory.
In the apviov ecr<j>ay^evov that stands before the throne of God, the
greatest and the least, the contraries of life and death, of heaven and
earth, are united and beheld in one and the same contemplation. Not only
does Christ, in the immediate presence of God, share a like power, and
dominion, and adoration with God, but predicates are given him which
seem to leave no essential distinction between him and God. He is termed
Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, in the same sense in which
God, the ruler of all, is called o <ov ical 6 rjv Koi 6 ep^o^evos. The
new name (iii. 12) given to the Messiah, the same name of which it is
said that no man knew it but he himself (xix. 12), is the unspeakable
name of Jehovah. Indeed, not only are the seven spirits of God, in whom
the power of the divine government that watches and rules over all is
individualised, attributed to Christ (iii. 1); but he is also the afXn
T7?<> KTicretas Tov Qeov, and the Xoyo? Tov Qeov (iii. 14 ; xix. 13).
But all these predicates bear a mere external relation to the person of
the Messiah. He- is certainly called Jehovah, or God in the highest
sense; but he is merely called so,—we are not justified in inferring
from the name that a truly divine nature is ascribed to him. Nor does
this follow from the designation of the Messiah as the \dyos Tov Qeov.
The Xoyo? Tov Qeov furnishes the point of view from which the writer
regards Xo'yo? Rov Qeov (i. 9); all that composes the apocalyptic
visions is the \oyoi d\r)divoi Tov Qeov (xix. 9). It is Jesus who
reveals the counsel of God, and who also executes it. What has been once
spoken as the counsel of God must be brought to pass : here, too, Jesus
is the Xoyo? Tov Qeov. To this refers the comparison of the agency of
Jesus to a sharp sword going out of his mouth (xix. 15). When this sword
is spoken of as going out of his mouth, it is clearly indicated that the
comparison is between the sword and the word that goes out of the mouth
of Jesus, the Xoyo? Tov Qeov, which he reveals; and it is a sharp sword,
that is, the whole counsel of God is accomplished by him as a stern
judgment with irresistible power. Accordingly, he first receives this
name, the Word of God, in this passage (xix. 13), where he descends from
heaven to earth as a chastising judge. The fundamental conception is the
word of God, or the will and counsel of God, accomplished in the
strictness of the divine judgment. The expression, then, contains
nothing metaphysical, conveys nothing concerning any relation that
belongs essentially to the nature of the subject in question. From this
we can at once discover the sense in which we should take the further
and especially noticeable predicate given to Jesus when the Apocalypse
styles him the a-PXn T'7? Kricrecos Tov Qeov (iii. 14). Although, as the
beginning of the creation, he is only the first created, this expression
seems clearly enough to contain the conception of pre-existence. But if
we consider, on the other hand, that immediately above (iii. 12) the
name of the Messiah is called a new name, and that the pre-existence of
the Messiah is not declared in plain words anywhere else in the whole
book, we shall think it probable that this title is no dogmatic
definition, but a mere name of honour, an enhanced expression of the
idea that the Messiah is the highest creature, who was an object of
attention even from the beginning, at the creation.
The peculiarity of the Christology of the Apocalypse therefore is, that
though the highest predicates are applied to Jesus, as the Messiah, they
are all names given to him merely externally, not yet joined to his
person with any intrinsic and essential unity. There is no intrinsic
connection as yet between the divine predicates and the historical
individual who is to receive them.1 Although therefore we must not omit
to notice the striking way in which the Christian consciousness felt
urged, even at this period, to place the person of Jesus as high as
possible, we must not the less remember that these predicates, in their
whole extent, are a mere transcendental form, which still lacks a
concrete matter based on the personality of Jesus himself. They are not
yet indwelling features of his nature, rising out of the substantial
essence of his person itself. Nothing more is implied than that Christ
must have a position adequate to the great expectations concerning the
last things, of which he is the chief subject. The Apocalypse embraces
nothing metaphysical within its circle of vision ; it takes its point of
view altogether from below, and only transfers to the Messiah after his
death all that gives him his divine majesty. Compare v. 12.
A further stage of development is formed by the Epistle to the Hebrews
and the lesser Epistles of Paul. In their Christology Christ has come to
be regarded as a being divine in himself.
The fundamental conception of the Christology of the Epistle to the
Hebrews is that of the Son. It is as the Son of God, in the specific
sense, that Christ receives all the predicates which are here given to
him. As the Son, he is the image, the immediate reflection of the glory
of God, who bears the impress of the divine essence in the concrete
reality of his personal existence (i. 3). He is thus, as the Son of God,
placed simply above the world : he is a being essentially divine and
distinct from the world. Though he has so much iu common with the world
that, like all things, he came forth from God, and on this account he is
called (i. 6), still it is he who upholds all things by the word
1 Cf. Zeller, Beitrage zur Eiuleitung in. die Apocalypse — Theol. Jahrb.
1842 p. 709 sq.
WHAT OTHERS HAVE SAID
Edward Everett Hale (1858)
Art. I — DR. FERDINAND CHRISTIAN BAUR.
1. Geschichte des Christenthums und der Kirche in den ersten drei
Jahrhunderten. Von Dr. Ferdinand Christian Baur. Tubingen. 1853.
2. Das Marcm-Evangelium nebst einem Anhange ilber das Evan- ffelium
Martian's. Von Dr. Ferdinand Christian Baur. Tubingen. 1851.
3. J&itische Untersuchungen tiber die Canonischen EvangeKen. Von Db.
Ferdinand Christian Baur. Tubingen. 1847.
Dr. Baur, the distinguished head of the Tubingen school of theology, is
fairly entitled to be called a representative man. Professor Schwarz, an
appreciative, but not too sympathetic judge, believes him to hold at the
present time, since the death of Schleiermacher, the first place in
theological science ; and they who are not prepared to say as much as
this cordially rank him as the peer of Rothe and Ewald. He has lived
through all those convulsions of theology and philosophy which have
given to German literature such welcome or dreaded fame on this side of
the water. He has seen systems rise and fall, epochs bloom and pass
away, "epoch- making books " appear, reign, and disappear. When
Schleiermacher came finally to Berlin, in 1806, and breathed an
animation unknown before into every department of theology, reviving
orthodoxy, inspiring rationalism, quickening pietism,
VOL. LXIV. 5TH S. VOL. II. NO. I. 1
pressing into the existing body of thought at all its pores, Baur was
fourteen years old; when Hegel came thither, in 1818, he was twenty-six,
fully prepared to sympathize with the glow of exultation which greeted
that philosopher's concrete formulas and vast generalizations. From
Baur's pupilage in Tiibingen, Strauss, the young " referent," repaired
to Berlin to attend the lectures of Schleiermacher; and sitting at his
study-window, the master watched the storm that was raised by the " Life
of Jesus " ; saw Tholuck, Neander, Ull- man, and a host of minor
thunderers, pour their wrath upon the devoted book; heard the pelting
rain of the " Kirchenzeitung," and calmly watched the clear heavens when
the tempest was over. The whole Straussian literature sprung into
existence and went out of existence while he was in the prime of life,
and the fruits of it, such as they were, dropped into his lap ; nor does
any marked phase of thought seem to have been missed by him.
The range of Baur's intellectual gifts is as remarkable as the
comprehensiveness of his intellectual experience. He combines mental
qualities that are not commonly found together. To erudition wonderfully
varied, vast, and massive, he unites a prophetic sagacity which lightly
and tirelessly follows its own scent, unencumbered by ponderous folios.
With a power of abstruse speculation, which enables him to dwell as if
at home in the thinnest atmosphere of Hegelian thought, he possesses an
amazing capacity for hard, dry, protracted work in the study. His
patience and accuracy in the minutite of criticism and the details of
historical investigation would alone secure to him a distinguished place
in the departments he has chosen; but these qualities do not appear to
fetter the action of a genius for generalization which loves to
comprehend and weave together all the literary facts of an epoch to make
an harmonious and perfect piece. In the last-mentioned quality Baur has
no equal among theological scholars. Nothing is too small to escape his
eye. Nothing is too remote to be insignificant. He examines every scrap
of paper for himself, scrutinizes every letter upon it, and assigns to
the fragment its place in the development of thought, with a skill that,
at first sight, appears to be unerring. The
obscure line of Greek or Latin, which meant nothing to others, is a clew
that leads him through the most intricate ways of ancient speculation.
Give him a single leaf, and out of it he will construct a literature.
The bare list of his writings is suggestive of his intellectual
character. His first work, " Symbolik und Mythologie," was published in
1824 - 5. In 1831 came from him " Das Manichaische Religions-System," an
essay on Ebionitism and Essenism, and an article in the Tubinger
Zeitschrift on " The Christ Party at Corinth." The next year appeared
the " Apollonius of Tyana and Christ," a small volume; and in 1833, the
famous defence of Protestantism against Mbhler's " Symbolik " gave
evidence of his industry and vigor in an entirely new field. 1834
produced nothing for the press; but in 1835 was published the "
Christian Gnosis," one thick volume, and a dissertation upon " The
Pastoral Letters, so called, of the Apostle Paul " ; two books
strikingly illustrating, the one his power of abstruse speculation, the
other his critical acumen. These were followed, in 1836, by an essay in
the Tubinger Zeitschrift on " The Purpose and Occasion of the Epistle to
the Romans "; and this was succeeded, in 1837, by a companion to the "
Apollonius," entitled " Socrates and Christ." " The Origin of the
Episcopate " (1838) was written in opposition to Rothe's " Beginnings of
the Christian Church," and the genuineness of the Ignatian Epistles; "
The History of the Doctrine of Atonement " was published the same year.
A rest of two years prepared the public for his greatest work, " The
History of the Doctrine of the Trinity and Incarnation," in three stout
volumes, almost any other man's life-labor. In 1842 was issued the first
number of the " Theologische Jahrbiicher," * to which
* The following ore titles of some of the more noteworthy articles in
the Jahrbiicher, by Dr. Baur:—"The John Gospel." — "Contributions to the
Earliest Christian History." — " The John Question." —" The Doctrine of
the Reformed Church as distinguished from the Lutheran." — " Critical
Studies on the Essence of Protestantism." — " Character and Significance
of the Calistine Syncretism." — " The John Gospel and the Passover." — "
The Johannic Epistles." — " The Principle of the Reformed Doctrine."—
"Towards the Study of Protestant Mysticism." — " Contributions to N. T.
Criticism." — " Towards the Explanation of the Epistles to the
Corinthians." — " The Introduction to the N. T. as a Department of
Theological Science," four long articles.—" The Essence of Montanism." —
"A Defence of Calvin against a Catholic Reproach." — " Towards an
Explanation of Corinthians."— "Philippians ii. 6."—"Criticism on the
Latest Explanations of the Apocalypse."—"Review of the Latest Researches
on the Mark-Gospel." — "The Philosophoumena of Origen."—"Bunsen's
Hippolytns Theory."—"The John Question and its Recent Answers " (1854).
— "Cajus and Hippolytus."—"The Principle of Protestantism and its
Historical Development." — " The Epistles to the Thessalonians.'1—"The
Historical Method of Conceiving the Apocalypse." — " The System of the
Gnostic Basilidcs." — " The First Epistle of Peter." — " The Purport and
Course of Thought in Romans " —" The John Question."
he has been the largest contributor, and in which, during the year 1844,
he published his three great articles on the Gospel of John. After this,
for several years, Baur's labors were mostly critical. The " Paulus," a
masterly book, written in a clear and finished style, set forth, in
1845, the results of study on the life, times, and writings of the
Apostle to the Gentiles. The " Canonical Gospels " (1847) contained his
articles on John's Gospel, with an analysis of Matthew and Luke. In 1851
these labors were closed for a time by a similar study of the "
Mark-Gospel." These isolated essays having prepared him for a more
extended historical work, he published, in 1852, in one volume, his "
Epochs in Church History," a prelude to his " History of Christianity
and the Christian Church in the First Three Centuries," which appeared
in 1853. The books above mentioned represent more than one phase of
religious thought. At the commencement of his authorship Baur
entertained Orthodox opinions, and shared in the enthusiasm which hailed
the advent of Schleiermacher. In the Preface to his " Symbolik und
Mythologie," he says: " Mythology has presented itself to me as the
opposite of Christianity, and as this, from the fact that it is no human
system, but a divine revelation, can be worthily stationed only at the
highest point of the world's history, Mythology, or the religion of
nature, can only be understood when it is placed in its proper relation
to Christianity." He then pays a grateful tribute to Schleiermacher's "
Christliche Glaube," as a work which beyond any other makes an epoch in
the history of theology, — a work which, by its profound exhibition of
the character of Christianity, has made easy the task of measuring other
systems by it. The book on " Manichansm " opens with the statement,
that, although superficially and externally related to Christianity, it
stands upon an entirely different ground. " Separating essentials from
non-essentials, and going back to great principles, Manichffiism is
heathenish, for we must ascribe to it the character of a
nature-religion, which is foreign to the ethical genius of
Christianity." The monograph on Apollonius of Tyana, the author tells
us, " connects itself in many ways with the exposition of the Manichasan
system. Here, as there, the purpose is to grasp and present the mighty
impression which Christianity, at that early age, made at the two
opposite points of its even then extensive sphere of influence, — there
in the remote East, here in the centre of Western culture, — upon the
heathen world, already attracted, but not yet penetrated, by its divine
power." These writings are animated by a positive Christian faith, by no
means " Evangelical" indeed, yet as much so as other writings of the
same class, proceeding from the school of Schleier- macher. But in the
book against Mohler, the negative character of the Hegelian philosophy
begins to appear. At least Philip Schaffdetects it there, and remarks,
bitterly, that "the Protestantism which Baur protects from Mohler's
earnest and keen assault is not at all the Reformers' system of faith,
but is distorted by modern pantheistic and fatalistic elements, so that
an Evangelical Christian believer must constantly decline such a
vindication, and feels often tempted to extend his hand of brotherhood
to the pious Catholic, in hearty league against modern unbelief and
half-belief, which attaches only a negative significance to the
Reformation, as the beginning of man's deliverance from all and every
authority."
The " Christian Gnosis, or Christian Philosophy of Religion," — a work
which presents Gnosticism under an entirely new aspect, as the beginning
of a line of speculation that originated in Judaism, assumed three
distinct forms as related to Christianity and Heathenism, was further
developed by the conflict with Neo-Platonism and the Fathers, passed
over from the ancient religious philosophy to the new, reappeared in the
Theosophy of Jakob Bohme, in the Nature Philosophy of Schelling, in the
" Glaubens-Lehre" of Schleiermacher, and finally culminated in Hegel's "
Religions-Philosophic," — is distinctly Hegelian in its character.
Gnosticism was an at tempt to give a philosophical statement of
Christianity; Hegelianism is the successful accomplishment of that task,
and is the only philosophy which fully comprehends the Christian
religion. But according to Hegel, God is not a conscious person. The
Absolute in itself is nothing. Deity comes to consciousness in man, his
existence being an endless process of evolving thought. " The import of
Religion," says Baur (Gnosis, pp. 674,675), "is the self-consciousness
of God. God comes to know himself in a consciousness which is
differenced from him (i. e. the outgoing of his thought),— a
consciousness which is His own, but whose identity — for it recognizes
its identity with God — is effected by the negation of the Finite." " We
need not remark," he continues (pp. 709, 710), " how intimately this
philosophy is connected with Christianity, how eagerly it transfers to
itself its entire import; indeed, in its whole purpose it will be
nothing else than the scientific exposition of historical Christianity."
And further on (p. 711): " The doctrine respecting the person of Christ
seems to present the most obvious proof of the earnestness with which
this philosophy of religion appropriated the full substance of the
Christian faith, and would lose nothing of its deep significance. It
does not talk of an ideal of blessed humanity floating in the dim
distance, nor of a Prototype that only raises the human to the divine,
nor of a consciousness of God become the being of God; it affirms, with
all the emphasis of the Church formulas, that Christ was the God-Man,
God become man, manifest in the flesh, the essential unity of the divine
and human nature objectively exhibited to the world in a single
individual. But, of course, all depends upon the sense in which Christ
is held to be the God-Man. If we consider the doctrine of Christ nearer,
three distinct points of thought present themselves. The merely outward,
the bald historical view, sees in Christ only a common man, a martyr to
the truth, like Socrates. Upon this first point, at which the person of
Christ is still an object of unbelief, follows, as the second process,
faith, which contemplates Christ no longer as a common man, but as
God-Man, as the person in whom the Divine nature is manifested, in whom
the Godhead is seen. If we ask in what way the first position is
connected with the second, — how unbelief passes into faith, — we are
reminded that the origin of faith is the outpouring of the Spirit, which
consists herein, that the immediate becomes spiritually determined, the
sensible is spiritually taken up; with the man Jesus as a human,
sensuous phenomenon, the consciousness of a spiritual essence was
united. The death of Christ, then, makes this transition-point into the
sphere of religion. For Christ is the God-Man only because he has
vanquished death, abolished the grave, set his denial upon negation, and
thus annihilated the finite, evil, as something abhorrent to him, and
reconciled the world with God. Everything hangs upon the apprehension of
his death, — it is the touchstone by which faith must be tried;
therefore the spirit could not come until Christ had been snatched from
the flesh, and his immediate sensuous presence was withdrawn. In one
word, Christ is God-Man only through the mediation of faith. What lies
behind faith, as the historical, outward reality which must be supposed
in order that the bare, eternal, circumstantial apprehension may become
faith, remains shrouded in a mystery which we shall not penetrate, for
the question is not whether Christ was himself, in his objective,
historical form, the God-man ; the only matter of concern to us is that
he became the God-Man to faith."
This is a fair example of the way in which this philosophy of religion,
this Christian Gnosis, or Hegelianism, interpreted and reproduced the
Evangelical doctrines. By the same scholastic process it restored the
other orthodox dogmas, then fallen into much disrepute. Many an
old-fashioned believer ranked himself among the disciples of Hegel, and
rejoiced in the new teacher, who, by reconciling faith and knowledge,
speculation and dogma, history and revelation, science and'
supernaturalism, had allowed them to dwell comfortably in their own
belief. The " Gospel according to Hegel " became the accepted gospel
among the enlightened and conservative. Its grave judicial tone, its
calm temper, its large charity towards differing systems, its freedom
from everything controversial and disorganizing, caused it to be honored
greatly in the state. It really seemed as if, at last, the unity of
spirit had been attained, and the bond of peace knit, by the latest
apostle. But Hegel was hardly quiet in his grave, when Strauss, himself
a thorough master of the grand philosophy, in the same year that Baur's
"Gnosis" appeared, flung his " Leben Jesu," like a firebrand, into the
tranquil circle. The effect was astonishing. Such an abandonment of the
orthodox pretensions of the school, such an exposure of destructive
tendencies in the system which had set itself forth as the universal
reconciler, excited in all quarters the utmost alarm, but nowhere more
than among the Hegelians themselves. The body of the disciples fell
asunder. The larger portion, including some eminent names, repudiated
Strauss and his book, said that he was no true Hegelian, and undertook
to vindicate the school and the master from all responsibility for the
new heresies. Strauss himself, in a dissertation entitled " The
Transient and the Permanent," — the substance of which was incorporated
into the third edition of the " Leben Jesu,"—attempted to restore
dogmatically what he had destroyed critically, to save the philosophical
Christ when the literal Jesus had been resolved away; and, in his
endeavor to become reconciled once more with Christianity, allowed
himself to make concessions which consistency could hardly justify. In
the fourth edition, this " too much of compliance " was corrected; and,
to use his own language, his labor consisted chiefly " in whetting his
good sword to free it from the notches made in it, rather by his own
grinding than by the blows of enemies." Amid all this uproar in the
school, Baur maintained a dignified silence. He was neither terrified
nor surprised. Understanding himself too-well to be confused, and being
too powerful to be shaken, he labored on, producing works which plainly
indicated his position at the extreme left of the Hegelians, and drew
about him a band of theologians who were prepared to acknowledge an open
breach between philosophy and faith, and to make any sacrifices of faith
to philosophy. His two great histories of the Atonement and the Trinity
assume throughout, and boldly, the principles of his master Hegel.
The history of doctrines was, and is, with Baur, the history of God.
For, in his view, God exists only in the process of evolving thought.
Ideas are facts. The course of history is no play of chance or human
caprice, no long tangle of arbitrary notions, crossing and recrossing
each other; it is the movement of the inevitable and eternal laws of
Spirit. It is the being of God unfolding and realizing itself. Every
thought is actual; and everything that has a true ground of reality is
of the reason. The development of every century is the necessary
proceeding of the absolute Spirit; and revelation is an eternal,
continuous outgoing of the Divine life in and through humanity. This
central principle of Hegel's philosophy explains the fact that so many
of his disciples have devoted themselves to the study of history, and
especially to the .history of opinion. They seem to have made it their
sacred task to revise the creeds of mankind; to recover and fix in its
proper place every fragment of thought that may possibly indicate a
passage in the autobiography of Deity. In this work, Dr. Baur has no
equal. All his extraordinary powers of analysis and synthesis, of
patient research, of logical divination, his rapidity, grasp, tenacity,
are inspired by his philosophical formula. His mind is calm, even, and
religiously conscientious. Partisanship, in his estimation, is crime. To
be a controversialist in theology is to be a sinner. Every doctrine must
have exact justice done to it, and every shade of doctrine must be
rendered truly, for it was necessary in its time and place. Baur has no
preferences of one dogma above another; he never takes a side. There are
no sides. Each position is a link in the eternal process of thought. The
business of the historian is to report what is. It is all right: it is
all true. The works on the Trinity and the Atonement have, therefore,
the singular merit of absolute logical impartiality ; an impartiality
which, combined with their exhaustive thoroughness, must secure for them
a permanent fame. And yet, we may say, it is this same logical
impartiality that constitutes their chief defect. They are pale from the
intensity of rarefied thought. This is partly to be explained by the
fact that Baur has no personal faith in any of the special doctrines he
describes, and consequently infuses no warmth of personal interest or
feeling into his delineation. He works like an anatomist, — if possible,
even more passionless when his knife is busy in the neighborhood of
vital parts. Faith in individual dogmas would, in his view, be
infidelity to all the rest, which had an equal claim upon his
preference. Faith presents to him only its intellectual aspect; the
spiritual aspect he does not recognize. Several years ago, two American
scholars called upon Dr. Baur, in Tubingen. In the course of
conversation mention was made of Mr. Norton's book on the " Genuineness
of the Gospels," which this omnivorous professor had never heard of; one
of the young men, alluding to a note upon Baur in the second volume,
said: " Mr. Norton calls you an atheist." Instantly the great heavy head
was lifted up, and the emphatic reply broke forth: " Nicht wahr: Ich bin
kein Atheist," —" False : I am no atheist." We would give the
philosopher credit for his disclaimer, and allow him all the benefit of
his reserved definition. The notion of God is too subtile to be confined
in any single form of phraseology. It is not for us to judge of the
sincere meaning that may lie deep in the mind of one who ponders this
matter profoundly, by any interpretation that we may be able to put upon
his words; nor have we a right to presume that the language in which the
philosopher seeks expression for his inmost thought must convey that
thought fully to our casual reading. Still, when we have stretched our
intellectual charity to its utmost limits, we must admit that Baur does
not believe in God as Christians do. Whatever he may mean by his "
Ansichsein," " Fiirsichsein," and " Anundfiirsichscin," his "
Indifferenz," " Differenz," and " Einheit der Differenz und Indifferenz,"
his " Objectivitat," " Subjectivitat," and " Einheit der Objectivitiit
und Subjec- tivitat," it is evident he means nothing that makes him a
partaker in the spiritual consciousness of Christendom.
Whatever substance may be beneath the formulas which seem to teach that
God comes to consciousness in mankind, it is safe to say that it is not
the substance that fills out the Christian belief in the Trinity,
Incarnation, and Atonement. His grand panorama of Church theology is
imposing in more senses than one. The process of development is not
conceived of as ordered and directed by the Holy Spirit, which is ever
guiding believers by devious ways to the perfect truth.
It is a process, and only a process. The working forces have no
vitality, but are naked formulas, abstract categories, playing, like
fatal engines, in an atmosphere which no living creature could breathe.
The whole history of doctrines is nothing but a mechanical working of
the abstract laws of thought, a clashing of dialectics, producing, by
its endless rattle and whirl, the identity of the finite and the
infinite,— of the object and the subject.
And if these histories of doctrine are cold because the author lacks the
hearty interest of a personal faith in the beliefs he describes, the
failure to recognize their intimate connection with Christian experience
in the different periods of the Church imparts to his pictures a look
almost of ghast- liness. That the Christian faith, in its several
phases, grew out of the Christian heart as it was exercised by
providential trials of hope and fear, is a fact which receives no
proportion of its due consideration. The effect which moral and
spiritual culture has exerted on speculation is almost entirely ignored.
The part which human passion, hot with demonic or glowing with celestial
fire, has played in this august procession of the Absolute, is not
indicated. We do not hear resounding through his pages the holy songs of
St. Ambrose or the penitential cries of St. Augustine, the challenge of
apologists or the death-groans of martyrs. We do not see stalking along
his episodes the gigantic forms of Origen and Tertullian, of Cyril and
Athanasius, of Constantino and Julian, of Leo and Hildebrand; — the
agency of war and peace, of persecution and tolerance, of changing
dynasties and moving thrones, of the fortunes of an emperor or the
caprice of an empress, of the obstinacy of a confessor or the wiles of a
eunuch, — for these no allowance is made. We move across the dreary
track of the tenth century like men in a trance, unaware of the terrific
throes which convulse the soul of Christendom, as the time appointed for
the end of all things drew nigh. That the Christian world, in all the
formative epochs of faith, was filled with living men, hoping, fearing,
confessing, praying, suffering, and sorrowing unto death, believing and
burning for their belief, sitting all scarred and mutilated on council
benches, wrestling with demons and embracing angels, — all this intense
stir in the heart of the Church passes by as noiselessly as a tempest
traverses the empty spaces of the upper air. Great as these books of
Baur are, — unapproachably great in some respects, — a work like
Bb"hringer's " Biographical Church History " is not only more
interesting, but is even more valuable; for it shows us belief, not as
resulting from the inevitable evolution of logic, but as springing out
of the spiritual needs of men, — not as an abstract process of "
becoming," but as living and working in human souls.
The critical labors which have made Dr. Baur so famous — or, as some
would say, so infamous — in England and in this country, seem to have
been suggested by his researches into the history of thought. The study
of Christian theology from, his point of view led, of course, to the
study of the earliest Christian literature, and to a fresh analysis of
primitive documents. In his treatment of the New Testament Scriptures,
and of the Apostolic and post-Apostolic age, Baur is not to be ranked
with the ordinary rationalists of any school. His name is not to be
mentioned in company with Semler, Paulus, or Strauss. Schaff
distinguishes the former phases of rationalism from the latter, by
saying that those adopted a simple, dry, and spiritless mode of stating
their views, while these clothe their ideas in the pomp of philosophical
lanr guage; that those were deistic, while these are pantheistic; that
those were Ebionitic in their cast, while these have more affinity with
Gnosticism; that those accepted the truths of natural religion, held
fast to the belief in God, freedom, and immortality, and wished to make
their peace with the Bible, while these confess to no faith in a
personal God or a conscious immortality, deny the Apostolical origin of
nearly all the New Testament books, and resolve the solidest facts of
history into mythological fictions or deliberate frauds. To discriminate
in this way is only to confound. In the first place, Schaff introduces
points of difference which are entirely irrelevant to "the critical
question in hand. In the next place, he would seem to put Strauss and
Baur in the same category, whereas Baur, as a student of the New
Testament, is more widely separated from Strauss than Strauss is from
Paulus, Semler, or Hencke. There is, in fact, a broad chasm between Baur
and all his predecessors. The rationalism of the last century and the
early portion of this, had little breadth of philosophical or historical
view. Its aim was short-sighted; its method extremely defective. Its
much-boasted instrument was " common sense," and this it turned upon
everything which transcended the scope of the ordinary understanding, or
was beyond the reach of sensible evidence. Its criticism was especially
directed against the miraculous in the Bible; the whole of which, as
being absurd or legendary, was denied, without any attempt at an
explanation. A miraculous revelation was its stone of stumbling; and it
was never weary of objecting to the Immaculate Conception, and the
resurrection of Jesus, and the wonderful works of Christ. The
naturalists, with Paulus at their head, followed in the same general
track, though with broader trail and more carefully arranged march. They
bad a theory for the explanation of the miracles; and vast was the
ingenuity they expended in attempts to resolve them into natural events,
which only seemed miraculous in the telling. Even Strauss,
notwithstanding his scientific and philosophical pretensions, the
completeness of his method, the thoroughness of his analysis, the
breadth of his theory, the calm, judicial, literary tone of his work,
belongs really to the same school, and by his mythical explanation
simply brought that line of forced and partial and experimental
criticism to a close. The predecessors of Baur, one and all, laid out
their strength upon a few problems thrown up by the New Testament. They
discussed the evidences for and against the genuineness of the Gospels,
the want of harmony between the narratives, the improbability of the
accounts, and so forth. The literary composition and organic structure
of the writings themselves, their connection with each other, their
relation to other literatures of the same age, or of previous and
succeeding periods, they were not prepared to contemplate. In one word,
they were critics of details, and not historians of literature and of
thought. Now this is precisely what Ferdinand Christian Baur claims, and
proves himself, to be. He does not confine his attention to details of
criticism; nor does he raise secondary and incidental questions into
supreme importance. Instead of stationing himself within the enclosure
of the New Testament, and exploring here and there a section of its
territory, he takes a stand outside of it, entirely embraces its whole
contents as one department in the world's literature, brings lights from
all quarters to bear upon each document, and endeavors to grasp the
principle which produced the entire series as it has come down to us.
Opponents have spoken jestingly of the Tiibingen " romance." But Baur is
no friend to fictions; he is not a man to be possessed by a mere fancy
or to be governed by a dream. His purpose is to deal impartially and on
a liberal scale with the facts of literature: he is an historian who,
with vast powers of generalization, includes the Apostolic age as an
episode in the epic flow of human beliefs. His attitude, therefore, is
not that of an opponent of Christianity; and in this again he is to be
distinguished from the rationalists. Whatever may be the results of his
investigation, he is never actuated by sentiments of hostility to the
popular religion. He would simply, as a scholar, know what these books
are; by what intellectual impulse they were brought into being; how they
stand related to each other, and what information they give respecting
their own age. In Baur's writings, one meets with none of the
old-fashioned polemics: the vexed questions that have so tormented the
apologists are dismissed briefly enough; the supernatural problem is
left so completely untouched, that a reader would never suspect its
theological importance. He meets these books in his path, as he comes
marching down the. highway of human opinion: he takes them up, examines
them as if they had never been examined before, tells us what they
indicate, and where they belong. As Schwarz says, " Baur's place in New
Testament criticism has been compared, and fairly, with that of Niebuhr
and Wolf in the department of classical literature. As Niebhnr, with
unsparing criticism, demolished Livy's representation of Roman history,
in order to reconstruct, by skilful combinations, the genuine history of
Rome, — as Wolf declared that the Homeric songs grew gradually, and by
natural laws, out of the life and poetry of the Grecian people, — so
Baur first made the attempt to discover and comprehend the historical
origin of the Canonical Scriptures, and to assign their place in the
record of the development of Christianity. And this indicates, beyond
all question, a great advance, — nothing less, in fact, than the
transition from a dogmatic to a truly historic treatment of the canon."
Baur's first significant essay in New Testament criticism was the
article on " The Christ Party at Corinth." Here he suggested, and most
ingeniously unfolded, the idea that this " Christ party " was identical
with the party of Cephas. It was composed of all who set themselves
against Paul's Gospel and Apostleship. These people called themselves
"disciples of Cephas," because Peter held the chief place among the
Jewish Apostles, and " disciples of Christ," because they regarded
immediate association with Christ as the prime condition of genuine
Apostolic rank. The party revered all the Apostles who had enjoyed
personal intercourse with Jesus, more especially those who stood in the
nearer relation of kindred to him, the " Lord's brethren," but
peculiarly Peter, to whom Jesus had shown a preference above the rest.
Paul was rejected, as an outsider, who came into the brotherhood late,
and by a private door. This opposition between Peter and Paul, as
representing the Jewish and the Gentile tendencies in the primitive
Church, is the key to all Baur's later and more extended discoveries.
This is his clew to the whole history of the Apostolic age, and the two
generations succeeding it: the root of bitterness from which the whole
Christian literature of a century sprung. Four years after the
publication of this essay, the significance of which was not at the time
suspected, appeared another from the same hand," on " The so-called
Pastoral Letters of the Apostle Paul." In this a much bolder position
was taken ; the believing public was startled by the announcement that
these Epistles were written with polemical intent against the Gnostics
of the school of Marcion, which flourished about the middle of the
second century ; that, moreover, they are devoted to the ecclesiastical
or hierarchical interest in the Church, which was gaining ground at that
period, and which the Gnostics vehemently resisted ; that they could
not, therefore, be received as productions of the Apostolic age, and, of
course, could not have been written by Paul, who lived half a century
earlier, and who, if he had written, would probably have advocated the
opposite side in the existing controversies. The dissertation on the "
Pastoral Letters " was followed the next year by an article in the
Tiibinger Zeitschrift on the design and motive of the Epistle to the
Romans, in which the posture of Judaism and Gentilism towards each other
was more sharply denned, and the broad, practical significance of Paul's
mission was powerfully presented to the consideration of those who have
been in the habit of reading the letter to the Romans as a calm,
theological treatise, containing a formal and systematic exposition of
the Apostle's Christian belief. We do not hesitate to say that the
perusal of this paper, which was afterwards incorporated in the " Paulus,"
gave us an altogether fresh conception of Paul's purpose in writing as
he did; taught us to see that the missive came from the Apostle's heart,
and not from his head, — that its intent was not speculative, but
vital,— that what we had read as metaphysics was not meant as
metaphysics, but as close argument urged in the interest of very deep
practical truths, — and that the chapters which theologians have taken
up as the pith of the whole composition, and have pored over, commented
upon, wrestled with, as containing the hidden mysteries of faith, are
after all of subordinate moment, and have no value save as they bear up
the great, crowning proposition, that Christianity is not a mere
supplement to Judaism, but a spiritual, world-embracing religion.
The leaning of Baur's criticism was by this time apparent to all
discerning minds, although his conclusions hitherto had not menaced
directly the strong-holds of Scriptural belief. For a time his critical
labors seemed to be suspended, and the production of such colossal works
as the History of the Atonement, and of the Trinity, might well afford
grounds for surmising that they had altogether ceased. But the forces
were gathering for a fresh demonstration, which was soon made against
the citadel itself, — that citadel before which even Strauss had paused.
The first number of the Theologische Jahrbucher for 1844 was occupied
(with the exception of three or four literary notices) by a dissertation
from the pen of Dr. Baur, " On the Composition and Character of the
Johannean Gospel." In the third number the subject was continued, and
the conclusion, of eighty-five pages, appeared in the fourth. This essay
has occasioned more discussion than any single work of its author, and
furnishes us with a perfect example of his method.
Taking up the book as a literary composition, and subjecting its
contents to analysis, Baur finds that it is an elaborate production,
carefully wrought upon an ideal plan. At the outset it is assumed that
Christ was the Logos, the absolute principle of all existence,
pre-existent as a person from eternity ; and this conception offers the
key to the entire book, which, on examination, proves to be an account
of the manifestation of this Divine Logos to the world, for the purpose
of confronting the powers of darkness, and drawing men away from its
abyss into the blessedness of his light and life. The Logos appears, —
is not born, not even miraculously, — does not become a man, but only
assumes a mask of flesh by which he is made visible to men, and is
enabled to act-upon those who are receptive of his spirit.
The result of Baur's analysis is, that a Gospel which assumes a theory
lying out of the domain of history, which holds this theory fast from
beginning to end, and stamps its mark upon every section, is not, in any
strict sense, an historical Gospel. Examining this point more closely,
and comparing the book with the Synoptical Gospels, it looks as if the
author had borrowed his material from them, and worked it over in
accordance with his general plan. His leading theory is, of course, his
own ; his chronological arrangement is his own ; his historical
incidents are often peculiar to himself, and cannot be reconciled with
the other Evangelists ; but the traces of his having consulted them are
everywhere manifest. The sick man at Bethesda stands, once for all, for
the numerous invalids of the other narratives, which together contribute
the several features of the case. The curing of the blind man, chapter
ix., represents a whole class of similar healings related in the
Synoptics, and makes amends for its solitariness by the emphasis that is
laid upon it, and the boldness of its details.
Even the resurrection of Lazarus, which the other three biographers do
not mention, and could not have known, is evidently constructed, says
Baur, from materials which they furnish. It is the superlative of their
positive and comparative. Matthew tells simply of the daughter of a
Jewish archon whom Christ raised from the dead. Luke instances a young
man of Nain, the only son of his mother, and she a widow, adding that
Jesus was touched with compassion. The author of the fourth Gospel
colors his picture more highly still. The deceased Lazarus is not only
the brother of two sisters, the favorite of a household united by
tenderest ties; he is also the deeply beloved friend of Jesus himself,
who betrays much emotion in the presence of the sisters, and weeps at
the grave. To heighten the interest of the scene, other circumstances
are introduced, — the message, the delay, the four days' burial, the
grief, the concourse of people. The domestic scene may have been
borrowed from Luke x. 38 - 42; but where was the brother Lazarus found ?
Where, but in the parable of Dives, in which Lazarus, the image of the
truthful, pure, and meek believer, has his name associated with death
and resurrection. Dives requests that Lazarus may be permitted to
revisit the earth to convert his unbelieving brethren, and Abraham
replies, " If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be
persuaded though one rose from the dead." The hypothesis has become a
fact. Lazarus is actually called from the grave ; the Jews have seen him
and have not believed. (!)
Passing by other incidents, his account of the Last Supper deserves
especial notice. The entire scene of the Supper is omitted by this
writer, and in place of it is substituted an ablution of the disciples'
feet. Yet the Supper must have been in his mind, for it is suggested in
chapter xiii., and one cannot read chapter vi. without having it
recalled to him. Why was it left out ? Partly, says Baur, because its
import had already been exhausted in discourses of Jesus, and partly
because Jesus, being plainly described as the paschal lamb, could not,
like the Christ of Matthew, sit down to the paschal feast at which he
himself was the sacrifice. That conspicuous fact is therefore passed by
in silence; and while the genera! features of the scene are retained,
another incident is composed from materials at hand in Matthew xx. 26
and Luke xxii. 25-28, the sentiments of the Synoptics becoming history
in John.
Having thus compared the narrative portions of the Gospel with the
Synoptics, the keen Professor returns to consider the internal
probability of John's historical representations, and is strengthened in
the persuasion that the groundwork of literal fact is very slight
indeed, that the composition has a purely ideal or doctrinal purpose.
The entire arrangement of scene and incident he finds to be arbitrary
and artificial; the field of Christ's ministry is substantially
different from that assigned to him by his other biographers, being
confined almost to Judaea ; and in consequence of this change, all the
relations of time are confused: what should come last is placed first;
the crisis arrives at the commencement, — it is all crisis; the
narrative lacks movement and development; the incidents do not grow
together; the whole catastrophe stands exposed on the first page; the
complete drama is played in the first act; at the raising of the curtain
we see a blow about descending upon the head of Jesus, and we wonder why
it does not fall. Our wonder is not diminished when we detect the forced
expedient by which the narrator extricates himself from the dilemma. The
Logos has no body, but only a phantom form, which appears and disappears
at will; consequently, when the people offer to seize him, or take up
stones to cast at him, he is not there. This happens repeatedly, and
thus the career of Christ is continued from stage to stage until " his
hour had come." An ingenious device, but one not consistent with the
historical mode of treatment.
The larger portion of the Gospel consists of long discourses, which, for
several reasons, must be judged unauthentic. They are, in almost every
instance, connected with historical data that will not bear the test of
criticism; they lack point and pertinency ; they are mystical,
enigmatical, and dark ; they are often incompatible with the character
of Jesus as portrayed by the other Evangelists; they are mainly
expositions of the Logos theory, and abound in phrases which that theory
suggested and alone can explain; in no single feature do they resemble
the recorded words of Jesus in Matthew or Luke. In fact, the speeches as
well as the deeds of the Logos-Christ compel one to believe that the
composition is rather a theological romance than an authentic history.
Baur next proceeds to consider the relation of the Gospel to the thought
of the age. The cast of the book is so peculiar, that this examination
is conducted with much confidence. The type of Christology indicates a
stage of speculation on the nature of Christ far in advance of the
Apostolic period, many degrees removed from that of any other New
Testament writer. The contest between Judaism and Paganism is described
as ended for ever ; the heathen are not only freely admitted into the
Church, but, in point of spirituality, are ranked infinitely above the
Jews; even Pilate is represented as doing his best to rescue Jesus from
the clutches of the chief priests; the Jews in a body are counted as
enemies of Christ. All these are signs of a development of thought that
was not reached till - long after the close of the first century. The
subordinate position assigned to Peter is another hint that the party of
which he had been the leader was on the decline. One or two less
conspicuous marks help the conclusion, that the book had a Greek and not
a Jewish origin, and was produced not before the middle of the second
century.
Having searched the Gospel through, and estimated its character from its
contents, Baur approaches, finally, the question of genuineness, leaving
until the last the inquiry that is commonly entered upon first . General
considerations adverse to its Johannean claim he adduces as follows :—
1. In Galatians, and by primitive tradition, John is described as an
antagonist of Paul, opposed to the preaching of the Gospel to the
Gentiles; how, then, could he have written a book which is even more
Pauline than Paul himself? 2. The author, by several expressions,
betrays the fact that he is not a native Jew, as the Apostle John
undoubtedly was. 3. Midway in the second century there was a great
controversy respecting the time of observing the Lord's Supper. The
churches of Asia Minor held their celebration according to the Jewish
custom, on the 14th of Nisan, and appealed to Philip, John, Polycarp,
and others. Now the fourth Gospel, herein differ ing from the others,
states decidedly that Jesus sat down with his disciples on the 13th of
Nisan. How, then, could John have written the fourth Gospel ? Moreover,
this Gospel was not once quoted during that whole controversy. Even the
opponents of the Jewish custom, to whom its authority would have been of
such vast importance, never mention it as favoring their side. This
surely could not have happened if the Gospel had been in existence, or,
being in existence, had been regarded as the work of an Apostle. If it
was not in existence, of course John could not have composed it; if it
was in existence, and was not received as the work of an Apostle, it is
hard to believe that John was its author. This is a point elaborated by
Dr. Baur with the utmost care. 4. The fourth Gospel and the Apocalypse
must be regarded as productions of different hands. Now, there is strong
reason for thinking that John the Apostle did write the Apocalypse ; if
he did, it is all but certain that he did not write the Gospel. 5. In
conclusion, the evidence in favor of the genuineness is sifted and found
unsatisfactory. The earliest distinct testimony to the Johannean origin
of the work is given by writers that flourished towards the end of the
second century, Irenaeus, Ter- tnllian, and others ; the author who
first speaks of it by name is Theophilus of Antioch, A. D. 181; the
first unequivocal reference to the book is as late as the year 170.
This is a very meagre outline of the course pursued by Dr. Baur in this
famous treatise. It is a striking specimen of the historical style of
treatment as distinguished from the dogmatical, exemplified by
Augustine, Bengel, and Storr; from the abstract-critical, or literary,
illustrated by Eichhorn, Hug, Gieseler, Schleiermacher, De Wette, and
Credner; and from the dialectical, or negative critical, as Baur terms
it, pursued by Strauss and his opponents.
It is now time to give some account of the celebrated theory with which
Dr. Baur's name, as the head of the Tubingen school, is especially
associated. The fundamental positions for this theory are found in the
four Epistles of Paul, (the only ones whose genuineness Baur allows,)
Romans, the two Corinthians, and Galatians. The conclusion to which he
was led by his study of the letters to the Corinthians has already been
mentioned. This conclusion was confirmed by the letter to the Romans.
But the Epistle to the Galatians is more deeply significant than these,—
especially a single passage in the second chapter, which alludes to a
meeting of the Apostles at Jerusalem, and to a sharp.rencounter that
Paul had with Peter at Antioch. He went to Jerusalem, he tells us, for
the sake of an interview with James, Peter, and John, "who seemed to be
pillars," unfolded to them his revelation, and announced his calling as
the divinely commissioned bearer of Christianity to the Gentiles. They,
perceiving the grace that was given to him, privately offered the right
hand of fellowship to him and his companion, thus recognizing his
authority, but declined participating in his work, on the ground that
their errand was to Jews only. The two parties, widely divergent in aims
and opinions, are represented as standing face to face on terms of cool
but polite toleration. There is clearly no sympathy of feeling between
them. Paul speaks disrespectfully, not to say contemptuously, of the "
pillars," and they look upon him as ah interloper, whose title to preach
they cannot plausibly discredit, but towards whom they bear no love.
That the fellowship was merely courteous, is evident from the fact — of
which there can be no doubt, since Paul asserts it himself—that Peter
some time afterwards came to Antioch, where Paul had a church, and while
alone there, under his powerful influence and eye, treated the
uncircumcised converts precisely as if they had been good orthodox
Christians, who had come by the proper Jewish gate into the Church.
Presently, however, some of James's disciples appear, and Peter, ashamed
to be seen by them countenancing Paul's heresy and holding communion
with Gentiles, withdraws from the uncircumcised believers, recedes from
his liberal position, and persuades others, Barnabas among them, to
return to the old conservative side. " Whereupon," says Paul, " I
withstood him to the face." This dispute cuts into the very heart of the
age. The grounds of it were radical: it indicates two widely separated
and openly hostile sections in the Church. These Apostles, James, Peter,
and John, who " were of reputation, and seemed to be somewhat," — these
personal friends and disciples of Christ, heads of the primitive Church,
representatives of primitive Christianity,—were Jews in sentiment and
opinion. Their Christ was the Jewish Messiah; their Christianity was
Judaism completed and glorified by the advent of the Son of Man, the
belief in whom was the single point that distinguished them from other
Jews; and it never had occurred to them that any coold enter the kingdom
without first, by the rite of circumcision, joining the Hebrew Church.
This position Baur and his friends sustain by abundant historical
evidence, as they interpret history. They appeal to Hegesippus, who
describes James as a veritable Jewish ascetic, a Nazarite, himself a
high-priest, daily kneeling in the temple making intercession for the
people, honored by the priests and scribes, and summing up his
Christianity in the single article, " Jesus Christ was the Messiah."
They appeal to the early traditions respecting John, which report him as
a Chiliast, a priest wearing the mitre in the Ephesian church, as if he
were a member of the Hebrew hierarchy, — a man quoted by the churches of
Asia Minor as authority for their Jewish observance of the Passover, —
the reputed author, likewise, of the Apocalypse. As to Peter, it is
enough that he was the fast friend and ally of these two zealots for the
Law, and that Paul mentions him as the head of a Jewish party at
Corinth. Add to this testimony numerous facts such as these, — that the
seat of primitive Christianity was Jerusalem, where Christians of Paul's
stamp could not have lived in peace; that the Palestine Christians
continued in full communion with the Jewish synagogue; that Josephus
speaks of the Christians as belonging to the Jewish fraternity; that the
original communities, according to Sulpitius Severus, down to the time
of Hadrian, had none but circumcised bishops, and held generally to the
observance of the Law; that Hegesippus, himself an Ebion- ite, rejoices
in Christianity as the true orthodoxy; that the early Christian
literature — the Apocalypse, the Epistle of James, so called, the
Apology of Melito, the Clementine Homilies and Recognitions, the "
Shepherd" of Hermas — makes open profession of the same principle; that
writers like Justin Martyr, and even' TertuUian, confess it; — let these
points, to add no more, be fairly weighed, and it must be considered as
established that the primitive Christians regarded themselves as a
portion still of the Jewish Church, as the true Judaism, fresh in its
second youth.
It was Paul who rescued the religion of Jesus from this bondage to the
ancient Law. It was Paul who, claiming to have received an independent
message, proclaimed that Christianity was not Judaism at all, but a new
principle of spiritual life, freely offered to all mankind on the single
condition of faith. With his new Gospel, he broke out of the old Hebrew
temple, and went away, on his private responsibility, as a missionary to
the Gentiles. For this, according to his own story, he was bitterly
persecuted by the Jewish Christians; his whole life was a struggle to
maintain his authority as an Apostle, to defend himself from aspersions,
to assert and establish his principles. His person was ridiculed, his
views denounced, his plans thwarted at every step. The opposition must,
indeed, have been fierce to have wrung from him such drops of gall as
blot the second chapter of Galatians and almost every page of 2
Corinthians. The author of the Apocalypse has no place for him among the
Apostles; spies dog his footsteps; up to the hour of his death the
hostility burns and after his death it continues to rage. The Ebionites,
representing primitive Christianity in the second century, rejected all
his Epistles, and heaped all manner of reproach upon his memory. The
churches of Antioch, Corinth, and Rome — his own children — dishonored
him by holding Peter in equal reverence with himself. The Clementine
Homilies, with the utmost violence of polemics, vented their wrath upon
the false teacher, the seducer of the people, the Apostolical parvenu,
the apostate, the herald of a new heathenism. Justin Martyr never quoted
his writings, and vehemently opposed his views; and even poor Papias
valiantly bestowed his kick upon the dead lion.
This controversy between Petrinism and Paulinism is the distinguishing
feature of the Apostolic and post-Apostolic age. Its furrow, ploughed
deep into the generation which succeeded the destruction of Jerusalem,
is traceable as far as the middle of the second century. At first the
Jewish party had the ascendency; but, in the course of time, the
necessity of union against outside enemies, the Gnostics especially,
caused the long animosity to decline, and when the idea of one Church
was entertained and effectually adopted, the two hostile tendencies lay
down peacefully side by side in final reconciliation.
Baur, reading the literature of that whole considerable period by the
torch-flames of this controversy, finds that every page is colored by
it. The character and age of every fragment of manuscript is indicated
by its attitude towards these opposing parties. The writings of the New
Testament constitute a portion of this literature; of course the key to
their interpretation is here. Cross-questioned by this tribunal, they
confess at once their date, purpose, and motive. We can do no more than
mention the most general results in criticism which Baur and his school
have reached from these premises. Paul gives his own views in their
purity. The only book that represents exclusively the opinions of the
opposite party is the Apocalypse. The other writings have a mixed
character. Their tendency is irenic. Produced at a period when the idea
of harmonizing the hitherto discordant sects was freely considered,
their aim is to assist the process of reconciliation. The Gospel of
Matthew speaks more decidedly for the primitive Jewish Christianity than
any book except the Apocalypse. Some of its features are obviously
Hebrew. It asserts the binding authority of the Mosaic dispensation, and
its everlasting significance for the people of God. It assumes the
perpetuity of the Mosaic cultus. It adopts the national conception of
the plan and purposes of Christianity, frequently and directly teaching
that its privileges are vouchsafed to the Jews alone. It looks for an
immediate coming of the Messiah, and accepts the Chris- tology of those
who regarded Jesus as a Hebrew king. The writer, by his ingenious
citation of Old Testament passages, seems anxious to make it appear that
Christ satisfied all the conditions of ancient prophecy. And yet, side
by side with statements like these, lie others of an entirely different
character. The new wine must be put into new bottles ; the temple of
Jerusalem is doomed to fall; parables are inserted teaching that the
kingdom may be taken from the Jews and given to other nations; other
parables contain the thought that Christianity is to develop itself by a
gradual process in history; Pauline views in respect to asceticism are
openly admitted. On the whole, the Gospel, though strongly marked by
Hebrew peculiarities, cannot be said to represent the opinions of the
earliest disciples. Its attitude is that of mediation between the
opposing tendencies. But, of course, this attitude could not have been
assumed by any Christian writer during the Apostolic age. It could
hardly have been taken during the first quarter of the second century.
If, as Baur infers from a searching criticism of its contents, and a
fresh historical comparison of its details, the twenty-fourth chapter
depicts, not the first destruction of Jerusalem, but events in the
Jewish war under the Emperor Hadrian, the Gospel must be assigned to a
period not far from the years 130 -134; a date which, in Dr. Baur's
judgment, is rather confirmed than contradicted by external evidence.
Tradition reports that Matthew composed a Gospel in Hebrew; but our
Gospel is in Greek, and no one knows who translated it. A Hebrew Gospel
there was, and Jerome rendered it into Greek and Latin, doubting all the
while whether it could be Matthew's work, because it corresponded so
faintly with the manuscript upon his table. Papias testifies fhat the
Hebrew Gospel was early translated into Greek, but was altered in the
version. Here are two or three links belonging to the same chain. Put
them together. Matthew wrote a Hebrew Gospel reflecting the primitive
form of Christianity; this book was translated into Greek, but this
early version was not our present one. What more likely, then than that
this version underwent various modifications, each new transcript adding
something to whatever of Pauline liberalism it may have contained,
until, finally, it assumed the form of our canonical Matthew ? Such is
Baur's judgment, the grounds for and against which cannot be argued
here.
The Gospel of Mark is pronounced by the great head of the school (though
in this his disciples do not all agree with him) to be destitute of
individuality, historical or dogmatic. Its author is supposed to occupy
a position of complete neutrality; having Matthew and Luke before him,
he sits down in the spirit of a compiler, and makes an epitome, adding
nothing of his own, save literary embellishments of a superficial and
meagre kind. This of itself would prove that his composition belonged to
a late period, (for books of the negative cast are not written during
the epochs of creative thought,) even if the faintest shade of docetism
did not betray a view of Christ such as had not obtained currency in the
first generation of the Church.
The Gospel of Luke, Baur thinks, is no more entitled than that of
Matthew to be regarded as an historical composition originally produced
in the form in which it lies before us. This, too, has undergone its
series of transformations. The soil from which its root, the Gospel of
Marcion, sprung, was Pauline Christianity; but upon this stem another
slip, the original Luke Gospel, was supposed to have been grafted. The
basis of the work is decidedly Pauline. Conspicuous on its surface are
discourses and parables which contain the germs of the theology peculiar
to the Apostle to the Gentiles ; — parables of the King's Feast, — the
Fig-Tree, — the Lost Coin, — the Pharisee and the Publican ; the story
of Zac- cheus, and the anointing of Jesus by the woman who was a sinner,
and the Converted Thief on the Cross; declarations like those contained
in chapters xvi. 16, xvii. 10, 20, 21. More broadly still the character
of the Gospel is marked by Christ's treatment of the Samaritans, — those
quasi-Gentiles, whom Mark never mentions at all, and Matthew only once,
— when the disciples are forbidden to go near them; and by the
commission of seventy Apostles instead of twelve, — a sign that the
Gospel was intended for all the world, and not for the Jewish tribes
alone. The parable of the Prodigal Son sets forth the Pauline doctrine
of God's free grace in the most unqualified manner. A dignity is
ascribed to the person of Christ which far transcends that of Matthew's
Messiah, and reminds us of the " Heavenly Lord " of the great Epistles.
Over against these and other prevailing elements of liberalism, the
writer inserts a few traits barely sufficient to present the opposite
side. The opening chapters are a concession to Hebrew thought. The
entrance of Christ into Jerusalem is a remnant of the old Messianic
idea. Two or three references to ancient predictions, one or two
features of asceticism, give a faint Ebionitic coloring; but such
fragments do not stamp a character upon the composition. The author
inserts these few passages for the edification of Jewish readers, and to
guard his work against the charge of being partial. His aim, partly
polemical, is mainly conciliatory. A firm disciple of Paul, he is
willing to compromise a little for his master's sake. The chief argument
against the early date of the Gospel is, that its aim is so evidently
speculative ; that it represents the facts in the life of Jesus as they
never could have occurred, but as one might represent them who stood at
a distance from actual events, and was deeply engaged in the theories
current in his generation. He wrote, probably, later than Matthew.
The Book of Acts Baur has touched incidentally, but not made the subject
of thorough research. In his studies on Paul's Epistles, his attention
was called to the difference, amounting to contradiction, between the
statements of the Apostles and those of the historian; * especially to
the two conflicting representations of the convention at Jerusalem,
Galatians ii. 7 — 11, Acts xv. Schneckenburger opened the investigation
into the character of the book, and suggested that its purpose was to
run a parallel between Peter and Paul. In 1846 Schwegler devoted a
section of his " Nach- apostolisches Zeitalter" to the Acts, and made
the most of his brief space to destroy its historical reputation. In
1849 Zeller commenced a series of articles in the " Theologische
Jahrbiicher," which have since been collected into a volume, and
represent the verdict of the Tubingen school on the composition. That
verdict, in brief, is as follows : that the book has, strictly speaking,
no claim to be called a history. It is a " Tendenz-Schrift" from
beginning to end. The purpose of its author is manifest in an endeavor
to establish a complete parallel between Paul and Peter as the heads of
the two opposing factions. Their miracles, the proofs of their
Apostolical calling and dignity, the exhibition of their endowments and
capacities, the principles that governed their conduct,both personal and
official, are skilfully balanced. Paul is converted by the author into a
zealous Jew, fulfilling all the righteousness of the law, taking upon
himself the Nazarite's ascetic vow at the suggestion of James, and, in
deference to Jewish prejudices, leaving his post in order to present
himself dutifully at Jerusalem on the grand feast-days, circumcising
Timothy so as not to give offence to the Jews by taking about with him
an uncircumcised companion, representing himself to the church at
Jerusalem as a good Hebrew, and diligently collecting alms-money for its
poor, associating cordially with the men of whom he had spoken so
slightingly in Galatians, paying to all Jews the compliment of offering
them the refusal of the Gospel, and at all times adopting the theology
of Judaism as the correct form of belief. In a guise like this, the
Apostle is an utter stranger to us. Nothing is left by which he can be
recognized. There is profound silence about that quarrel in Antioch ;
not a word do we hear of Christian attacks made upon his person, his
dignity, or his authority, his chosen field of action, or his peculiar
theology. His characteristic ideas are so completely omitted, that it
would be impossible to gather from the Acts alone that his doctrine was
in anywise distinguished from that of James or John.
The garments which this author has stripped from Paul, he, with equal
disdain of ceremony, hangs upon Peter, who, according to his story, was
the first Apostle to the Gentiles, divinely called to that office, and
recognized in it by the brethren, long before Paul's conversion. He is
the hero of Pentecost Day, which inaugurated Christianity as a religion
for all nations. He baptizes the eminent Pagans, discourses of the
necessity of faith and the worthlessness of legal observances,
altogether after the manner of his great antagonist; he even speaks of
the law as a yoke. Neither of these portraits, say Baur and his friends,
can be drawn from the life. We have here neither the historical Paul nor
the historical Apostles, — nothing like the historical Peter. Surely the
author knew he was not writing history, and had no intention of writing
it. He wished not to narrate facts, but to reconcile parties. An earnest
disciple of Paul, interested in the fate of his doctrines, he lived in
an age that sympathized with his opponents, and, rather than not
recommend the Pauline uni- versalism, was willing to deprive his master
of a portion of his glory, that it might shine the more conspicuously
though in the person of his rival. He loved his master's principles more
than his fame, and, so the truth was spoken and accepted, did not
hesitate to represent it as proceeding from hostile, but more persuasive
lips. Such a theological romance might have been written any time from
the year 110 to 130.
The same merciless criticism which thus brings to judgment every phrase
in the historical books, holds its " bloody assize " in all the other
departments. Four only of the Pauline letters are spared; the rest are
condemned by their own confession, and thrust into the outer darkness of
the second century. They are flat, colorless, insipid; they read like
feeble imitations ; they are too weak in doctrine, and too strong in
homi- letics ; they believe too much in good works ; they are guilty of
sympathizing with Montanism, or of holding secret correspondence with
the Gnostics; their Christology is not in accordance with Apostolic
authority ; their eschatology is more pronounced than it is orthodox.
Some of them, as the Pastoral Letters, are convicted of hierarchical
tendencies, of an inclination to suppress heresies, and of opinions
favoring a closer organization in the Church,—crimes which merit
transportation into the limbo of the post-Apostolic age. Even the
unobtrusive little note to Philemon stands charged with a teleological
offence, and must be doomed to the same exile for presuming to inculcate
Christian ideas under the form of fiction.
But, with all this " historical criticism," what, we must ask, has
become of historical Christianity ? Has it been swallowed up in the vast
whirlpool of controversy ? Must we say, with SchafF, that Christianity,
according to Baur, is a " product of the Catholic Church of the middle
of the second century, the result of a long conflict between Ebionitic
and Gnostic heresies, so that the truth was begotten of a lie, the day
from the womb of old mother Night" ? Must we say, that in the mind of
Jesus it existed merely as a more inward arjd^exalted Judaism, and was
essentially the same thing with the Ebionitism which was afterwards
condemned as a heresy ?
This, upon a superficial view, would seem to be the authorized
inference. If Christianity was apprehended by the personal disciples of
Jesus as the old Jewish system, completed by the advent of the predicted
Messiah, how are we to know that it was apprehended differently by the
Master ? Was not " primitive Christianity " the religion of Christ
himself? Schaff, consulting sentiment, says, " Yes," without hesitation.
Baur, consulting criticism, answers, " No." Primitive Christianity, that
is, the Christianity of the disciples, was not the Christianity of
Christ. This Dr. Baur affirms, if not laboriously and at length, yet
often enough and explicitly enough to be understood. Speaking, for
example, of the Sermon on the Mount, he says, " The discourse, as a
whole, bears upon it the stamp of originality, and that portion of it
which is animated by such an earnest spirit of hostility to Pharisaism
belongs unquestionably to the most genuine speech that fell from the
lips of Jesus." Treating of the Hebrew Gospel which was the root of our
canonical Matthew, he asks if it is not " altogether probable that it
contained purer elements than those of 'primitive Christianity,' seeing
that it was the oldest record of the teaching of Christ." In the first
section of his " History of Christianity and the Christian Church, for
the First Three Centuries," he contends that Jesus engrafted upon
Judaism an entirely new principle, both moral and spiritual, offering a
fresh view of man and God, and the relations subsisting between them. In
fact, he indicates unmistakably that Jesus held and promulgated the
ideas which were afterwards peculiar to Paul. Nor is this conclusion
adopted capriciously ; it is rather forced upon an honest member of the
" historical school." For, leaving the genuineness of this or that
passage out of view, if the Gospel of Jesus were nothing more than
Judaism completed by the coming of the Messiah, how can we explain the
presence of broad anti-Hebraistic thoughts in those earliest records
penned by Hebrew hands ? Why did Paul so revere and glorify the Christ,
at the same time that he repudiated the doctrine of his immediate
disciples ? This man, who would borrow nothing from the original
Apostles, and even joined issue with them on the ground of their
narrowness, — this man, who said, " Though an angel from heaven preach
any other Gospel unto you than that which I have preached unto you, let
him be accursed," — has no language strong enough to express his feeling
of veneration for Jesus, and his Gospel calls him the " heavenly man,"
the " heavenly Lord," who has broken down the veil of the ancient
dispensation, and united all nations in a common bond of spiritual life.
This man, so jealous of his authority, so strenuous in asserting his
equal dignity with the other Apostles, is humbled into the very dust
when he thinks of Christ, and cries out in the humiliation of his soul
that he is not worthy to be called an Apostle. This can be explained
only by a conviction in Paul's mind that the doctrines of Jesus were
substantially identical with his own, and that he was but the privileged
interpreter of them. And if this was Paul's conviction, there is strong
presumption that it was founded upon historical facts. Nay, Paul makes
use of the very language of Christ in a way which convinces us that he
was indebted to him for his original ideas. The Epistle to the Romans
furnishes an interesting example of this. The last verses of the twelfth
chapter read as if they were copied almost word for word from the Sermon
on the Mount. But the thoughts of Jesus are so great, that Paul cannot
borrow them without adding some qualification suggested by his Hebrew
temper. " If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably
with all men." " Avenge not yourselves; for it is written, ' Vengeance
is mine'; I will repay, saith the Lord." " If thine enemy hunger, feed
him; if he thirst, give him drink; because" says the Apostle,
apologetically, "in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head
"; which means, " Practise the loving-kindness of the Gospel, as the
most effective mode of punishing your foe." Can we doubt, then, that the
Gospel of Jesus was at least as heavenly as Paul's ? Must we not believe
that it was even larger and deeper ?
We do not deny that Baur has done grievous harm to historical
Christianity, as we have always been accustomed to regard it, by driving
it out of three Gospels, and by compelling us to search for it, with the
help of microscopic criticism, in a fourth. We cannot feel so sure of
it, now that its character is left for us to guess at, or to construct
from a few scattered hints dropped here and there by unknown recorders.
Its authoritative character as a miraculous revelation is entirely lost;
for upon such very slender threads of probability it would be impossible
to suspend the heavy weights of dogmatism. We do not quarrel with Dr.
Baur for making us face a difficulty that has never ceased to haunt us,
however uncomfortable that duty may be ; but we cannot forgive him for
leaving out of his original Christianity, such as it is, the person of
Christ. His picture of the Apostolic age is vitiated by the same defect
that mars so seriously his panoramic views of dogmatic history. There
are no living souls at work in it. The Apostles are phantoms. Even Paul,
his hero, who seems to have had passions at least, rushes before us more
like a stormy engine, driven by a superhuman power, than like a man ;
and as for Jesus, we do not see him at all. The Professor apparently
adopts the theory of the fourth Gospel, and would have us suppose that
Christ was not a human being of flesh and blood, suffering, hoping,
praying, believing, transmuting sentiments into principles and worship
into life; but a Word, looking impassively through a mask, which can be
dropped without in the least affecting it. That Jesus, setting aside his
special actions and views, was a spiritual person, whose religious
qualities made him a miracle among men, whose character was a
regenerating force in humanity, whose soul shed a virtue upon the moral
world which healed all who came in contact with it; that through the
attractive power of his inward being he drew around him disciples who
believed more in him than they knew, and surrendered more to him than
they suspected; that by this same mysterious might of influence he
searched, converted, inspired, and made his own, the fiery but noble-
minded Saul, the persecutor; that a heavenly life, an incarnate
holiness, truth, purity, love, was actually manifested there in Judsea,
and did contain in itself, fully matured in an individual, all those
practical energies of sentiment, feeling, faith, principle, which,
seizing upon heroes, made them ministers of truth, which organized
churches in every Gentile city, which united by fraternal bonds men of
diverse races and opposite social conditions, and, like a host of
angels, wrought upon the cruelty, the sensuality, the materialism and
atheism, of the decaying civilization of Greece and Rome; that the
noblest beliefs of Christendom were but an attempt to give coherent
expression to the felt experiences of aspiration, fear, hope,
devoutness, longing, love, which had been awakened by the living Jesus;
— of all this we find no suggestion in the pages of Dr. Baur. And the
omission is a radical and fatal defect in his sketch of original
Christianity. We can believe that Christianity might be born and grow to
maturity, and establish itself in the world, without complete authentic
records; but a Christianity without a spiritual personality as its root,
without a Christ, is utterly inconceivable. That Baur allows no more
significance to this fact, is to be explained, not by his critical
method, nor by his critical results, for they do not affect directly the
historical reality of Christ's character, but by the leading principle
of his Hegelian philosophy, which, by affirming that the evolution of
thought is the self-revelation of God, makes great account of ideas, but
none whatever of persons, — represents doctrines as if they were living
beings, and resolves living beings into stepping- stones of doctrine.
Schleiermacher, if he had lived, might perhaps have been a disciple of
the " historical school" ; but Schleiermacher would never have consented
to the sacrifice of the spiritual Christ.
Of Baur's opponents little can be said here. They have been numerous,
powerful, and persevering. Men like Nean- der, Dorner, Thiersch, Lechler,
Baumgarten, Schaff, Luthardt, Wieseler, Bleek, Hase, Bunsen, Ewald, have
bent all their forces against him, and followed him over the whole field
of the New Testament, contesting the ground inch by inch. Yet Schwarz
says that most of the refutations and rejoinders have proceeded from
theologians who were predetermined to meet all critical conclusions that
were unpalatable to them with a stiff " No." Baur, he declares, has
never found a peer in an adversary. And even Schaff admits that,
hitherto, no work has appeared giving a satisfactory account of the
primitive Church, in answer to these modern errors.
The chief modifications in the results of the Tubingen criticism have
thus far been suggested by members of the school, who, adopting their
master's method, but not slavishly accepting his results, have been
industrious gleaners in the field over which he sometimes walked too
hastily. By the efforts of these men, Georgii, Ritschl, Hilgenfeld, and
others, the controversy between Petrinism and Paulinism has been
compressed into smaller compass, thus carrying back the dates of the
Gospel compositions to the very limits of the Apostolic period. Matthew,
in its completed form, is brought to the year 70 or 80. Mark is left
somewhere between 80 and 100, and Luke is placed later, instead of
earlier, than Mark, by ten or twenty years. The master's verdict upon
the minor Epistles of Paul has been greatly, though variously,
qualified, without coming to fixed or consenting results. On the other
hand, his judgment respecting the Pastoral Epistles is unanimously
acquiesced in; and the members of the school stand fast together -in
their opinion of the Acts of the Apostles and the Gospel of John. The
controversy between Petrinism and Paulinism has not only been reduced
within a moderate space of time; some of its features have also been
softened. There has been a considerable transference of points from the
Ebionitic to the liberal side, giving a preponderance to the " Pauline
element," and altering, in some respects, the position in which the
elder Apostles stood to Paul. As a consequence of this, the historical
character of the Gospels has gained upon the doctrinal; they are
relieved a little from the imputation of being " Tendenz-Schriften," or
controversial treatises; and it is allowed that their authors may have
confined themselves more closely than was at first conjectured to the
actual materials that lay before them. In short, whenever these scholars
have found a position untenable, they have at once receded from it, like
men who, loving the truth better than their theory, were not ashamed to
retract an error as soon as discovered.
In this noble and rare quality of candor we must admit that the master
is no whit inferior to his disciples. He too has made concessions. With
little or none of the jealousy for his private renown which usually
marks the discoverer, he stands prepared, at any honest man's
invitation, to revise his charts. Some points he has abandoned, after
careful consid eration; others he has ceased to regard as important. He
insists less than he did at first upon the application of his theory to
all the Gospel details. But by his main conclusions he still abides
unshaken. His antagonists are always sure of receiving honorable and
courteous treatment at his hands; but equally sure are they of meeting
hard blows, as from a man who cannot afford to trifle with the matter in
hand. The Chevalier Bunsen's confident assault in the " Hippolytus," is
parried with an ease which intimates that there is no occasion for
putting forth full strength. Bleek's " Beitrage," the work which by some
is believed to have established beyond all reasonable doubt the
genuineness of the fourth Gospel, is reviewed with the dignified but
half-impatient air of one who is tired of giving the same old answers to
the same old questions, and vexed at being thrust at by arguments that
have been parried a score of times. He meets all the points which merit
his attention, and thus, in language of severe rebuke, closes his
critique. " The argument of Bleek borrows its sharpest point from the
assurance, often and emphatically repeated, that the fourth Gospel is
Johannic, and must come out at last victorious from all the attacks upon
its genuineness. This is the Alpha and Omega of his school of criticism,
and with this abiding assurance it expects, if not to break in pieces,
yet to blunt, the weapons of adversaries, and to conduct all the
rivulets that have sprung from a fresh fountain of investigation back
into the standing water of vague, indefinite assertion and
long-exhausted opinions, instead of letting
them follow their free course If Dr. Bleek has any
desire to engage again ' the latest critical school,' let him reflect
that it will be prudent, for his own sake, and a duty, if self-knowledge
be a duty, to enter the field with somewhat less of self-conceit and
somewhat more of dignity."
What the final result of Baur's New Testament criticism may be, it is
impossible to predict. How much will remain, at the close of the next
generation, as his contribution to the study of the Apostolic age, can
hardly be surmised. At present, his influence does not appear to be on
the wane, nor does his school perceptibly abate its pretensions. It is
the confident belief, evidently, both of himself and his faithful co-workers,that
they have established their main conclusions upon a firm foundation, and
finished, nearly, their critical work. Baur still writes articles in the
party organ, reviewing the latest books of importance in New Testament
literature, or re- examining secondary points for himself; but his chief
labor is bestowed on wider themes. Zeller suspends his studies on the "
Philosophy of the Greeks," to treat, in an occasional paper, some
special topic in the history of dogmatics. Other members of the sect
have dispersed themselves over a broad field of critical and historical
investigation, and are industriously working up, by the aid of their new
method, the old materials which lie abundantly about them. Kostlin
inquires into the Gnostic system of the " Pistis Sophia," and the origin
of the book of Enoch. Hilgenfeld deals with the pseudo-Clementine
Homilies, and the system of Basilides. Schweizer devotes himself to an
exposition of the Lutheran and Reformed doctrines. Ritschl's last paper
was on Hip- polytus, written three years ago. The Jahrbiicher for 1856
contained but one article of a strictly critical stamp, and that one a
paper by Baur on the First Epistle of Peter, called out by Dr. Bernhard
Weiss's book on the Petrine Theology. The once exciting magazine is now
comparatively uninteresting, and we should not be surprised at any time
to hear of its decease. If that intelligence comes, we shall infer that,
in the opinion of its supporters, the magazine has fairly completed its
course, and faithfully discharged its function, which was to inaugurate,
explain, unfold, and defend the " historical method " in New Testament
criticism.
The confidence of these gentlemen in the final triumph of their school
may be well grounded. It is possible that their conclusions respecting
the composition and character of the Gospels may bear the test of time
and study, and remain essentially unchanged. We hope not. But hope does
not answer critical questions, nor will fear stay the progress of
scholarship. Of this we are satisfied, that the discussion has been, and
is, in the ablest hands; and whatever may be its results, we must accept
them as providential; and instead of impotently bewailing the downfall
of historical Christianity, and casting reproach upon the men who have
occasioned it, we must revive the spirit of our faith, and resolutely
set about the task of readjusting our religion to the new order of
literary facts. That this can be done, we have never doubted; that it
has been done, successfully, by at least one great theologian, James
Martineau, we honestly believe and gratefully acknowledge ; that such an
adjustment will have the effect to ennoble and spiritualize the faith of
many, we should certainly anticipate. It will, surely, be an advantage
to us if we can, by any means, learn to base our Christian assurance
more upon the personal character of Christ, and less upon the
biographical details of the Evangelists. Though it should be proved that
the Gospel which bears the name of Matthew came from an unknown hand,
and is unreliable as a narrative of events, still its thoughts are
living and authoritative as ever, and we see all over its surface
footprints which declare that one greater than the sons of men has trod
the earth. Though the book which we received so gladly from the beloved
disciple should be shown to contain, after all, no authentic story of
his Master's life, but only the idea that was entertained respecting him
by some philosophic believer of another nation and a distant age, still
its deep spiritual truths would come to us like holy oracles, if not
from the lips of Jesus himself, yet from the heart of one whom he had
filled with his inspiration; and we should feel that he must have been
indeed divine who could have reproduced his image thus in the mind of a
speculative Greek, a full century after his death. So long as we have
the soul of Christ, we have Christianity; even as Paul had it, who never
saw Jesus, nor cultivated the acquaintance of those that had seen him,—
who had no patience with men that clung with tenacious memory to the
terrestrial Messiah, and shut their he ms to the revelations of the
Heavenly Lord.
The " Ordinary Professor of Evangelical Theology " is now sixty-five
years old, a man of large frame, above the middle height, with heavy
features, and a massy head covered with grayish hair. The wide and
intense enthusiasm that greeted the first disclosure of his critical
views has passed away. Personally, he excites, as might be expected,
very little interest; his manner in the lecture-room is not attractive.
But even his opponents concede his ability and his worth ; Oesler, the
Lutheran, who is in the same faculty, speaks of him with great respect,
and his books carry as much weight as they ever did. It is some years
since he preached his last sermon, exhorting his hearers to abandon the
letter which killeth for the spirit which giveth life; and in narrowing
the sphere of his public duties, he has narrowed also the circle of his
sympathies. Baur sits alone, surrounded by piled-up folios, in an
uncarpeted study, toiling fourteen hours a day, in vacation time, upon
the crowning labor of his life, the History of the Church, only
interrupting his labor in term time to lecture before his classes; and
still he finds leisure to write articles for his magazine, and to keep
up an acquaintance with the popular literature of the day. His wife is
dead. His daughter, married to Dr. Zeller, is, of course, separated from
her father. " He has no satisfaction in life, now, but to work." May the
night not come upon the lonely man till his work is done. (The Christian
Examiner, Jan. 1858, pp. 1-39)
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