| We hear
a great deal nowadays of the right of Criticism, spoken with
a certain air of conscious heroism, as if Criticism (with a
big C, doubtless because it is "Higher"), were being dreadfully
oppressed by somebody. But we know no one who denies the right
of Criticism. Everybody uses it; and everybody honors it. It
is the instrument by which we test truth. And in proportion
as the truth is important or the claims which it makes on us
are supreme, is not only the right of Criticism allowed, but
its duty insisted upon. The indifference with which we allow
the claim of a book to be a romance of impossible life by Mr.
Rider Haggard, or a romance of impossible canon-building by
Mr. Herbert E. Ryle, passes, for the student of historical politics
at least, into interested alertness to the evidence when it
claims to be the lost work of Aristotle on the Constitution
of Athens, and for all of us into something more than interest
when it claims to be the Constitution of the land in which we
live, with its declaration of our rights and its safeguarding
of our liberties. It ought to, and it does, rise into the keenest
and the most searching critical inquiry, when the book claims,
or is claimed, to be the law of God binding on all our souls,
and the discovery of the only way of salvation for lost sinners.
So far from the Bible being less subject to criticism than other
books, we are bound to submit its unique claims to a criticism
of unique rigor. Criticism is the mode of procedure by which
we assure ourselves that it is what it claims to be. Who will
cast his soul's eternal welfare on an uncriticized way of life?
It is because we believe in criticism, and practice it with
unflinching severity, that we reject the revelations of Mohammed,
the book of Mormon, and the religion of Israel according to
Kuenen and his fellows, and accept and rest upon the religion
of Israel according to Moses and the prophets and the gospel
of Christ according to the evangelists and the apostles. When
such concerns are at stake, we wish to know the pure facts;
and every one of us exercises all the faculties God has given
him and exhausts all the tests at his command to assure himself
of the facts. Criticism consists in careful scrutiny of the
facts, and is good or bad in proportion to the accuracy and
completeness with which the facts are apprehended and collected,
and the skill and soundness with which they are marshaled and
their meaning read. Deny the validity of criticism of the Bible!
Nobody dreams of it. Abate the earnestness of our practice of
it! At our soul's peril, we dare not. In proportion as we are
awake to what the Bible means for man, will we search the Scriptures
to see whether these things are so.
Whence, then, arises
the plaint which we hear about us, that the right of Criticism
is impugned and the rights of Criticism denied? From the ineradicable
tendency of man to confound the right of Criticism with the
rightness of his own criticism. We may safely recognize this
to be a common human tendency; for, as all of us doubtless
know by this time, humanum est errare. But as soon as our
attention is directed to it, the way seems to be opened to
remind ourselves of a few distinctions, which it will be well
for the Presbyterian Church to attend to in the crisis which
is at present impending over her-a crisis the gravity of which
cannot be overestimated for a church of Christ, to which has
been committed the function of being the pillar and ground
of the truth.
MISLEADING METHODS OF CRITICISM
It is not to impugn the right or the duty
of criticism to declare that an untrustworthy and misleading
method of criticism is not right but wrong. Criticism, we
are justly told, is only a method. So is mathematics only
a method. But this does not vindicate the correctness of every
mathematical calculation, by every hand. Neither figures nor
criticism will lie; but the men that use them may manage to
reach very false conclusions through them despite their incorruptible
veracity. And we soon discover, as there is mathematics and
mathematics, so there is criticism and criticism. Because
we believe in mathematics, we do not care to trust our weight
on a bridge the strain of which has been calculated by a misleading
method. An eminent professor of mathematics tells me that
he can prove by an unexceptional process that one is equal
to two. Some of the critics seem to have learned his method.
Am I impugning the right of Criticism when I politely decline
to believe that their criticism is right?
What is the present
situation with regard to the criticism of the Old Testament?
On the credit of a method of criticism which is discredited
wherever it can be tested, we are being asked to believe that
a large number of the books in the Old Testament are not the
product of their apparent ages or their reputed authors, but
the stratified deposits of the sea of time. On this evidence,
at least, we respectfully decline. We point out the inconsequence
of this method of criticism elsewhere. We recall the weary
shadow-dance of similar methods in the sphere of the New Testament
literature, and the recession of their boasted results into
the realm of shadows whenever the light is fully turned on.
We point to that admirable jeu d'esprit of the ingenuous Mr.
McRealsham by which the very same methods applied satirically
to the Epistle to the Romans are shown to yield parallel results-and
lo! that logically compacted epistle falls apart into four
underlying documents, discriminated from one another with
a sharpness and a breadth which must make the Pentateuchal
critic turn green from envy. Or, if we must have a real case,
which is no jeu d'esprit but solemn earnest, we point to Scherer's
brilliant analysis of the Prologue of Faust, which distributed
its parts to their proper periods of Goethe's life, on the
ground of deep-reaching differences of style and internal
inconsistencies, such as were thought inexplicable save on
the supposition of composition at different times and subsequent
combination. But Ehrich Schmidt publishes the oldest manuscript
of the poem, and lo! "it is the 'young Goethe' who wrote the
prologue essentially as it now stands, in a single gush; it
is the same 'young Goethe' who assumes the style at the same
time of an effervescent youngster and of a cynical graybeard."
We point to the thorough refutation of this method in principle
and in results by such Old Testament critics as possess enough
independence of scholarship and judgment not to be swayed
beyond their center of gravity by the reigning faction. Or
if we glance at the method itself we are led to commend the
insight of one of its founders, Graf, who already pointed
out the danger of its degenerating into an argument in a circle,
as we perceive that it first creates the documents it finds
by distributing all the elements of one kind to each, and
then proves their reality by the fact of this constant difference.
We decline to be caught in this circle and whirled around
until we mistake our giddiness for superior wisdom. It is
not denying the right of Criticism to assert that this criticism
is not right, and cannot lead to right, but only to wrong
conclusions.
ANTICHRISTIC
METHODS OF CRITICISM
It
is not to impugn the right of Criticism to declare that such
a misleading criticism, when so far pressing beyond its mark
as to curtail the trustworthiness of the witness of the Truth
himself as a teacher of truth, is not only a wrong but an
intolerable wrong to every Christian heart. Yet the current
form of Old Testament criticism trembles on the verge of this
gulf. The findings of its misleading method run athwart the
implications of the words of him who spake as never man spake;
and instead of adjusting its theories to accord with his teachings,
it thinks of adjusting the God-man to its theories. Thus we
have curious sustained efforts to minimize the amount and
decisiveness of his teaching; new discussions of the propriety
of "accommodation" in his teaching; and a whole new crop of
studies on the limitations of our Lord's knowledge as man.
When such a ball is once started rolling downwards, who knows
to what it may grow? Not merely as a "critic" and as an "exegete,"
but also as a moralist and as a religious teacher, we shall
find we have lost our Lord; if we cannot trust him as to the
revelation of God (of which he, the Logos, was the revealer)
of the past, how can we trust him as the revealer of God for
the future? Are we indeed to say with one "critic" that "interpretation
is essentially a scientific function, and one conditioned
by the existence of scientific means, which in relation to
the Old Testament were but imperfectly at the command of Jesus,"
and so rid ourselves of his authority in interpreting the
Old Testament? Are we to say with another "critic" that as
a logician or critic he belongs to his times, and as such
had "a definite restricted outfit and outlook, which could
be only those of his own day and generation"? But let us go
at once to the bottom. W. Hay M. H. Aiken is reported to have
permitted himself recently to use such words as these: "Literary
criticism is a science, and one that requires as much exercise
of mind as the pursuit of mathematics. You are not surprised
that Christ, in his manhood, was not the equal of Newton in
mathematical knowledge; why should you be surprised if he
prove not to have been the equal of Wellhausen in literary
criticism? The case may be put thus: In the truth of his manhood,
Christ would naturally accept the views of his contemporaries
as to the authorship of the Old Testament Scripture, just
as one of us would naturally accept the common view of the
authorship of Shakespeare's plays in spite of recent transatlantic
theories on that subject. The only thing that would induce
on his part a view that was something more than the popular
opinion of the period in which he lived would be an express
revelation. Of course, if God specifically revealed to Christ
that the Pentateuch was written by Moses, cadit quaestio,
let God be true, and every critic, if not a liar, at any rate
mistaken."
But
is not Christ himself God? Is it true that we could not expect
him to be a "critic," because criticism requires so much exercise
of mind? Are we rushing down to the pit of a new and crasser
unitarianism? What Christ is this that Aiken pictures before
us? Not the Christ of the Bible, who is our prophet and our
guide; who is the Truth itself incarnated; who is dramatized
before our eyes in the length and breadth of the Gospels,
not as a child of his times, limited by the mental outlook
of his day, but as a teacher to his and to all times, sent
from God as not more the power of God than the wisdom of God;
and whose own witness to himself was, "Verily, verily I say
unto you, we speak that we know, and testify that we have
seen; and ye receive not our witness. If I have told you of
earthly things and ye believed not, how shall ye believe,
if I tell you heavenly things?" Is it to deny the right of
Criticism, to declare that a criticism which, starting on
a wrong path, rushes headlong into the very face of the Truth
himself, is an intolerable wrong which no Christian heart
can calmly bear?
THE CHURCH'S RIGHT TO CRITICISM
It is not to impugn
the right of Criticism to declare that those who adopt a misleading
criticism as their guide to truth; and draw from it conclusions
inconsistent with what is held as precious truth by the Church
with which they are connected; and teach these conclusions
in opposition to the public Confession of the Church; may
not rightly continue to receive the endorsement of that Church
as sound teachers of religion. The refusal of the Church to
remain responsible before the world for their teaching is
no blow at the right of Criticism in the abstract, or even
at the freedom of these "critics" to teach their special form
of criticism. It is, on the one hand, only the assertion by
the Church of her right to teach only what she believes, without
infringing in the least upon the right of others to teach
what they please on their own responsibility and in their
own names; and on the other hand the liberation of the new
thinkers from whatever trammels to their thought and speech
they may recognize as growing out of the pledges they may
have taken to believe and teach the doctrines of the Church.
Or is the Critic only to be free and the Church bound? Let
him exercise freely his right to criticize; and let the Church
also be free to test not only the truth of the Scriptures
as he does, but also the truth of his theories of the Scriptures,
and to act accordingly. What Democrat would feel that his
liberty of thought and speech were infringed by the refusal
of a Republican club to become or remain sponsor of his political
teachings? But, you say, no Democrat would desire to become
or remain a member of a Republican club. That is the strangeness
of the situation. One wonders that a new Criticism involving,
as we are told, a wholly reconstructed theology should find
so much attraction in a "traditionalist" Church of an "outworn"
creed; or should care to do business under its trademark.
Hear the parable
of the thistles. Thistles certainly have beauties of their
own, and many virtues, which nobody would care to deny. But
they do seem out of place in a garden designed for roses,
even though they proclaim themselves more beautiful than any
roses in the garden. And the husbandman seems to have a duty
towards thistles growing in the garden, which even their irritable
noli me tangere ought not to deter him from executing, with
all due kindness indeed, but with that firmness of touch which
becomes one in dealing with thistles. Otherwise, what will
he say to the Lord of the garden, whom even the more luxuriant
growth of the thistles may not please, when they are tossing
their bold heads in the bed intended for roses?
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