The Causes Of Corruption Of The Text Of The Holy Gospels

Page 287

Appendix III. The Rich Young Man.

[260]

The eternal Godhead of CHRIST was the mark at which, in the earliest age of all, Satan persistently aimed his most envenomed shafts. St. John, in many a well-known place, notices this; begins and ends his Gospel by proclaiming our Saviour's Eternal Godhead502 ; denounces as “deceivers,” “liars,” and “antichrists,” the heretical teachers of his own day who denied this503 ;—which shews that their malice was in full activity before the end of the first century of our era; ere yet, in fact, the echoes of the Divine Voice had entirely died out of the memory of very ancient men. These Gnostics found something singularly apt for their purpose in a famous place of the Gospel, where the blessed Speaker seems to disclaim for Himself the attribute of “goodness,”—in fact seems to distinguish between Himself and GOD. Allusion is made to an incident recorded with remarkable sameness of expression by St. Matthew (xix. 16, 17), St. Mark (x. 17, 18) and St. Luke (xviii. 18, 19), concerning a certain rich young Ruler. This man is declared by all three to have approached our LORD with one and the same question,—to have prefaced it with one and the same glozing address, “Good Master!”—and to have been checked by the object of his adulation with one and the same reproof;—“Why dost thou [who takest me for an ordinary mortal like thyself504 ] call me good? No one is 502

St. John i. 1-3, 14; xx. 31. 1 St. John ii. 18, 22, 23; iv. 1, 2, 3, 15; v. 10, 11, 12, 20; 2 St. John ver. 7, 9, 10. So St. Jude ver. 4. 504 So Athanasius excellently:—A ¸µx ÃŽ±Á¹¸¼uñ ±ÅÄx½ ¼µÄp Äö½ ½¸Á}Àɽ, º±Äp Ät½ ÃqÁº± ±PÄ¿æ Ä¿æÄ¿ µ6Àµ, º±v ÀÁx Äx½ ½¿æ½ Ä¿æ ÀÁ¿Ãµ»¸y½Ä¿Â ±PÄ÷; ºµÖ½¿Â ³pÁ ½¸ÁÉÀ¿½ ±PÄx½ ½y¼¹¶µ ¼y½¿½ º±v ¿P ¸µy½, º±v Ä¿æÄ¿½ ǵ¹ Äx½ ½¿æ½ ! ÀyºÁ¹Ã¹Â. •0 ¼r½ ³pÁ ½¸ÁÉÀ¿½, Æ·Ãw 503


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Appendix VIII. New Editions Of The Peshitto-Syriac And The Harkleian-Syriac Versions

2min
pages 338-339

Appendix VII. The Last Twelve Verses Of St. Mark's Gospel

16min
pages 329-337

Appendix VI. The Peshitto And Curetonian

9min
pages 322-328

Appendix IV. St. Mark i. 1

14min
pages 309-316

Appendix III. The Rich Young Man

39min
pages 287-308

Appendix V. The Sceptical Character Of B And

6min
pages 317-321

Appendix II. Læø¬—Vinegar

10min
pages 280-286

Appendix I. Honeycomb— ¿x ºµª wø £wø

24min
pages 266-279

Chapter XII. Conclusion

27min
pages 250-265

Chapter XI. The Later Uncials And The Cursives

45min
pages 223-249

Chapter IX. The Old Uncials. The Influence Of Origen

24min
pages 184-197

Chapter VIII. Alexandria and Caesarea

18min
pages 172-183

Chapter VI. The Antiquity Of The Traditional Text. II. Witness of the Early Syriac Versions

21min
pages 146-157

Chapter IV. The Vatican And Sinaitic Manuscripts

38min
pages 83-104

Chapter VII. The Antiquity Of The Traditional Text. III. Witness of the Western or Syrio-Low-Latin Text

20min
pages 158-171

Chapter II. Principles

34min
pages 35-54

Chapter III. The Seven Notes Of Truth

47min
pages 55-82

Chapter I. Preliminary Grounds

22min
pages 21-34

Preface

12min
pages 8-15

Introduction

7min
pages 16-20
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.