Chapter 13
It Is Shown that Scripture Teaches Only Very
Simple Doctrines,
Such as Suffice for Right Conduct
In the second chapter of this treatise we pointed out that the prophets
were gifted with extraordinary powers of imagination, but not of understanding; also that God only revealed to them such
things as are very simple - not philosophic mysteries, - and that He adapted His
communications to their previous opinions. We further showed in Chap. 5. that
Scripture only transmits and teaches truths which can readily be comprehended by
all; not deducing and concatenating its conclusions from definitions and axioms,
but narrating quite simply, and confirming its statements, with a view to
inspiring belief, by an appeal to experience as exemplified in miracles and
history, and setting forth its truths in the style and phraseology which would
most appeal to the popular mind (cf. Chap. 6., third division).
Lastly, we demonstrated in Chap. 8. that the
difficulty of understanding Scripture lies in the language only, and not in the
abstruseness of the argument.
To these considerations we may add that the Prophets
did not preach only to the learned, but to all Jews, without exception, while
the Apostles were wont to teach the gospel doctrine in churches where there were
public meetings; whence it follows that Scriptural doctrine contains no lofty
speculations nor philosophic reasoning, but only very simple matters, such as could
be understood by the slowest intelligence.
I am consequently lost in wonder at the ingenuity of
those whom I have already mentioned, who detect in the Bible mysteries so
profound that they cannot be explained in human language, and who have
introduced so many philosophic speculations into religion that the Church seems
like an academy, and religion like a science, or rather a dispute.
It is not to be wondered at that men, who boast of
possessing supernatural intelligence, should be unwilling to yield the palm of
knowledge to philosophers who have only their ordinary, faculties;
still I should be surprised if I found them teaching any new speculative
doctrine, which was not a commonplace to those Gentile philosophers whom, in
spite of all, they stigmatize as blind; for, if one inquires what these
mysteries lurking in Scripture may be, one is confronted with nothing but the
reflections of Plato or Aristotle, or the like, which it would often be easier
for an ignorant man to dream than for the most accomplished scholar to wrest out
of the Bible.
However, I do not wish to affirm absolutely that
Scripture contains no doctrines in the sphere of philosophy, for in the last chapter I pointed out some
of the kind, as fundamental principles; but I go so far as to say that such
doctrines are very few and very simple. Their precise nature and definition I
will now set forth. The task will be easy, for we know that Scripture does not
aim at imparting scientific knowledge, and, therefore, it demands from men
nothing but obedience, and censures obstinacy, but not ignorance.
Furthermore, as obedience to God consists solely in
love to our neighbour - for whosoever loveth his neighbour, as a means of
obeying God, hath, as St. Paul says (Rom. xiii:8), fulfilled the law, - it
follows that no knowledge is commended in the Bible save that which is necessary
for enabling all men to obey God in the manner stated, and without which they
would become rebellious, or without the discipline of obedience.
Other speculative questions, which have no direct
bearing on this object, or are concerned with the knowledge of natural events,
do not affect Scripture, and should be entirely separated from religion.
Now, though everyone, as we have said, is now quite
able to see this truth for himself, I should nevertheless wish, considering that
the whole of Religion depends thereon, to explain the entire question more
accurately and clearly. To this end I must first prove that the intellectual or accurate knowledge of God is not a
gift, bestowed upon all good men like obedience; and, further, that the
knowledge of God, required by Him through His prophets from everyone without
exception, as needful to be known, is simply a knowledge of His Divine justice
and charity. Both these points are easily proved from Scripture. The first
plainly follows from Exodus vi:2, where God, in order to show the singular grace
bestowed upon Moses, says to him: "And I appeared unto Abraham, unto
Isaac, and unto Jacob by the name of El Sadai (A. V. God Almighty); but by my
name Jehovah was I not known to them" - for the better understanding of which
passage I may remark that El Sadai, in Hebrew, signifies the God who suffices,
in that He gives to every man that which suffices for him; and, although Sadai
is often used by itself, to signify God, we cannot doubt that the word El (God)
is everywhere understood. Furthermore, we must note that Jehovah is the only
word found in Scripture with the meaning of the absolute essence of God, without
reference to created things. The Jews maintain, for this reason, that this is,
strictly speaking, the only name of God; that the rest of the words used are
merely titles; and, in truth, the other names of God, whether they be
substantives or adjectives, are merely attributive, and belong to Him, in so far
as He is conceived of in relation to created things, or manifested through them.
Thus El, or Eloah, signifies powerful, as is well known, and only applies to God
in respect to His supremacy, as when we call Paul an apostle; the faculties of
his power are set forth in an accompanying adjective, as El, great, awful, just,
merciful, &c., or else all are understood at once by the use of El in the
plural number, with a singular signification, an expression frequently adopted
in Scripture.
Now, as God tells Moses that He was not known to the patriarchs by the
name of Jehovah, it follows that they were not cognizant of any attribute of God
which expresses His absolute essence, but only of His deeds and promises that
is, of His power, as manifested in visible things. God does not thus speak to Moses in order to accuse the patriarchs of infidelity,
but, on the contrary, as a means of extolling their belief and faith, inasmuch
as, though they possessed no extraordinary knowledge of God (such as Moses had), they yet accepted His promises as fixed and
certain; whereas Moses, though his thoughts about God were more exalted,
nevertheless doubted about the Divine promises, and complained to God that,
instead of the promised deliverance, the prospects of the Israelites had
darkened.
As the patriarchs did not know the distinctive name of
God, and as God mentions the fact to Moses, in praise of their faith and single-heartedness,
and in contrast to the extraordinary grace granted to Moses, it follows, as we
stated at first, that men are not bound by, decree to have knowledge of the
attributes of God, such knowledge being only granted to a few of the faithful:
it is hardly worth while to quote further examples from Scripture, for everyone
must recognize that knowledge of God is not equal among all good men. Moreover,
a man cannot be ordered to be wise any more than he can be ordered to live and
exist. Men, women, and children are all alike able to obey by, commandment, but
not to be wise. If any tell us that it is not necessary to understand the Divine
attributes, but that we must believe them simply without proof, he is plainly
trifling. For what is invisible and can only be perceived by the mind, cannot be
apprehended by any other means than proofs; if these are absent the object
remains ungrasped; the repetition of what has been heard on such subjects no
more indicates or attains to their meaning than the words of a parrot or a
puppet speaking without sense or signification.
Before I proceed I ought to explain how it comes that
we are often told in Genesis that the patriarchs preached in the name of
Jehovah, this being in plain contradiction to the text above quoted. A reference
to what was said in Chap. 8. will readily explain the difficulty. It was there
shown that the writer of the Pentateuch did not always speak of things and
places by the names they bore in the times of which he was writing, but by the
names best known to his contemporaries. God is thus said in the Pentateuch to
have been preached by the patriarchs under the name of Jehovah, not because such
was the name by which the patriarchs knew Him, but because this name was the one
most reverenced by the Jews. This point, I say, must necessarily be noticed, for
in Exodus it is expressly stated that God was not known to the patriarchs by
this name; and in chap. iii:13, it is said that Moses desired to know the name of God. Now, if this
name had been already known it would have been known to Moses. We must therefore draw the conclusion indicated,
namely, that the faithful patriarchs did not know this name of God, and that the
knowledge of God is bestowed and not commanded by the Deity.
It is now time to pass on to our second point, and
show that God through His prophets required from men no other knowledge of
Himself than is contained in a knowledge of His justice and charity - that is,
of attributes which a certain manner of life will enable men to imitate.
Jeremiah states this in so many words (xxii:15, 16): "Did not thy father eat,
and drink, and do judgment and justice? and then it was well with him. He judged
the cause of the poor and needy; then it was well with him: was not this to know
Me ? saith the Lord." The words in chap. ix:24 of the same book are equally,
clear. "But let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and
knoweth Me, that I am the Lord which exercise loving- kindness, judgment, and
righteousness in the earth; for in these things I delight, saith the Lord." The
same doctrine maybe gathered from Exod. xxxiv:6, where God revealed to Moses only, those of His attributes which display the
Divine justice and charity. Lastly, we may call attention to a passage in John
which we shall discuss at more length hereafter; the Apostle explains the nature
of God (inasmuch as no one has beheld Him) through charity only, and concludes
that he who possesses charity possesses, and in very, truth knows God.
We have thus seen that Moses, Jeremiah, and John sum up in a very short
compass the knowledge of God needful for all, and that they state it to consist
in exactly what we said, namely, that God is supremely just, and supremely merciful - in
other words, the one perfect pattern of the true life. We may add that Scripture
nowhere gives an express definition of God, and does not point out any other of His attributes
which should be apprehended save these, nor does it in set terms praise any
others. Wherefore we may draw the general conclusion that an intellectual knowledge of God, which takes cognizance of His nature in so far as
it actually is, and which cannot by any manner of living be imitated by mankind
or followed as an example, has no bearing whatever on true rules of conduct, on
faith, or on revealed religion; consequently that men may be in complete error
on the subject without incurring the charge of sinfulness. We need now no longer
wonder that God adapted Himself to the existing opinions and imaginations of the prophets, or that the faithful held
different ideas of God, as we showed in Chap. 2.; or, again, that the
sacred books speak very inaccurately of God, attributing to Him hands, feet, eyes, ears, a
mind, and motion from one place to another; or that they ascribe to Him
emotions, such as jealousy, mercy, &c., or, lastly, that they describe Him
as a Judge in heaven sitting on a royal throne with Christ on His right hand. Such expressions are adapted
to the understanding of the multitude, it being the object of the Bible to make
men not learned but obedient.
In spite of this the general run of theologians, when they come upon any of these phrases
which they cannot rationally harmonize with the Divine nature, maintain that
they should be interpreted metaphorically, passages they cannot understand they
say should be interpreted literally. But if every expression of this kind in the
Bible is necessarily to be interpreted and understood metaphorically, Scripture
must have been written, not for the people and the unlearned masses, but chiefly
for accomplished experts and philosophers.
If it were indeed a sin to hold piously and simply the
ideas about God we have just quoted, the prophets ought to have been strictly on
their guard against the use of such expressions, seeing the weak-mindedness of
the people, and ought, on the other hand, to have set forth first of all, duly
and clearly, those attributes of God which are needful to be understood.
This they have nowhere done; we cannot, therefore, think that opinions taken in themselves without respect to actions are either pious or impious, but must maintain that a man is pious or impious in his beliefs only in so far as he is thereby incited to obedience, or derives from them license to sin and rebel. If a man, by believing what is true, becomes rebellious, his creed is impious; if by believing what is false he becomes obedient, his creed is pious; for the true knowledge of God comes not by commandment, but by Divine gift. God has required nothing from man but a knowledge of His Divine justice and charity, and that not as necessary to scientific accuracy, but to obedience.