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第7章

a theologico-political treatise [part i]-第7章

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in concession to popular ignorance; describes God as having a mind; a heart;



emotions … nay; even a body and breath … the expression Spirit of the Lord



is used for God's mind; disposition; emotion; strength; or breath。



(93) Thus; Isa。 xl:13: 〃Who hath disposed the Spirit of the Lord?〃 i。e。 who;



save Himself; hath caused the mind of the Lord to will anything;? and



Isa。 lxiii:10: 〃But they rebelled; and vexed the Holy Spirit。〃







(94) The phrase comes to be used of the law of Moses; which in a sense



expounds God's will; Is。 lxiii。 11; 〃Where is He that put His Holy Spirit



within him?〃 meaning; as we clearly gather from the context; the law of



Moses。 (95) Nehemiah; speaking of the giving of the law; says; i:20;



〃Thou gavest also thy good Spirit to instruct them。〃 (96) This is referred



to in Deut。 iv:6; 〃This is your wisdom and understanding;〃 and in



Ps。 cxliii:10; 〃Thy good Spirit will lead me into the land of uprightness。〃



(97) The Spirit of the Lord may mean the breath of the Lord; for breath; no



less than a mind; a heart; and a body are attributed to God in Scripture; as



in Ps。 xxxiii:6。 (98) Hence it gets to mean the power; strength; or faculty



of God; as in Job xxxiii:4; 〃The Spirit of the Lord made me;〃 i。e。 the



power; or; if you prefer; the decree of the Lord。 (99) So the Psalmist in



poetic language declares; xxxiii:6; 〃By the word of the Lord were the



heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of His mouth;〃 i。e。 by



a mandate issued; as it were; in one breath。 (100) Also Ps。 cxxxix:7;



〃Wither shall I go from Thy Spirit; or whither shall I flee from Thy



presence?〃 i。e。 whither shall I go so as to be beyond Thy power and Thy



presence?







(101) Lastly; the Spirit of the Lord is used in Scripture to express the



emotions of God; e。g。 His kindness and mercy; Micah ii:7; 〃Is the Spirit



'i。e。 the mercy' of the Lord straitened? (102) Are these cruelties His



doings?〃 (103) Zech。 iv:6; 〃Not by might or by power; but My Spirit 'i。e。



mercy'; saith the Lord of hosts。〃 (104) The twelfth verse of the seventh



chapter of the same prophet must; I think; be interpreted in like manner:



〃Yea; they made their hearts as an adamant stone; lest they should hear the



law; and the words which the Lord of hosts hath sent in His Spirit 'i。e。 in



His mercy' by the former prophets。〃 (105) So also Haggai ii:5: 〃So My Spirit



remaineth among you: fear not。〃







(106) The passage in Isaiah xlviii:16; 〃And now the Lord and His Spirit hath



sent me;〃 may be taken to refer to God's mercy or His revealed law; for the



prophet says; 〃From the beginning〃 (i。e。 from the time when I first came to



you; to preach God's anger and His sentence forth against you) 〃I spoke not



in secret; from the time that it was; there am I;〃 and now I am sent by



the mercy of God as a joyful messenger to preach your restoration。 (107) Or



we may understand him to mean by the revealed law that he had before come to



warn them by the command of the law (Levit。 xix:17) in the same manner under



the same conditions as Moses had warned them; that now; like Moses; he ends



by preaching their restoration。 (108) But the first explanation seems to me



the best。







(109) Returning; then; to the main object of our discussion; we find that



the Scriptural phrases; 〃The Spirit of the Lord was upon a prophet;〃 〃The



Lord breathed His Spirit into men;〃 〃Men were filled with the Spirit of God;



with the Holy Spirit;〃 &c。; are quite clear to us; and mean that prophets



were endowed with a peculiar and extraordinary power; and devoted themselves



to piety with especial constancy(3); that thus they perceived the mind or



the thought of God; for we have shown that God's Spirit signifies in Hebrew



God's mind or thought; and that the law which shows His mind and thought is



called His Spirit; hence that the imagination of the prophets; inasmuch as



through it were revealed the decrees of God; may equally be called the mind



of God; and the prophets be said to have possessed the mind of God。 (110) On



our minds also the mind of God and His eternal thoughts are impressed; but



this being the same for all men is less taken into account; especially by



the Hebrews; who claimed a pre…eminence; and despised other men and other



men's knowledge。







(111) Lastly; the prophets were said to possess the Spirit of God because



men knew not the cause of prophetic knowledge; and in their wonder referred



it with other marvels directly to the Deity; styling it Divine knowledge。







(111) We need no longer scruple to affirm that the prophets only



perceived God's revelation by the aid of imagination; that is; by words and



figures either real or imaginary。 (112) We find no other means mentioned in



Scripture; and therefore must not invent any。 (113) As to the particular law



of Nature by which the communications took place; I confess my ignorance。



(114) I might; indeed; say as others do; that they took place by the power



of God; but this would be mere trifling; and no better than explaining some



unique specimen by a transcendental term。 (115) Everything takes place by



the power of God。 (116) Nature herself is the power of God under another



name; and our ignorance of the power of God is co…extensive with our



ignorance of Nature。 (117) It is absolute folly; therefore; to ascribe an



event to the power of God when we know not its natural cause; which is the



power of God。







(118) However; we are not now inquiring into the causes of prophetic



knowledge。 (119) We are only attempting; as I have said; to examine the



Scriptural documents; and to draw our conclusions from them as from ultimate



natural facts; the causes of the documents do not concern us。







(120) As the prophets perceived the revelations of God by the aid of



imagination; they could indisputably perceive much that is beyond the



boundary of the intellect; for many more ideas can be constructed from words



and figures than from the principles and notions on which the whole fabric



of reasoned knowledge is reared。







(121) Thus we have a clue to the fact that the prophets perceived nearly



everything in parables and allegories; and clothed spiritual truths in



bodily forms; for such is the usual method of imagination。 (122) We need no



longer wonder that Scripture and the prophets speak so strangely and



obscurely of God's Spirit or Mind (cf。 Numbers xi:17; 1 Kings xxii:21; &c。);



that the Lord was seen by Micah as sitting; by Daniel as an old man clothed



in white; by Ezekiel as a fire; that the Holy Spirit appeared to those with



Christ as a descending dove; to the apostles as fiery tongues; to Paul on



his conversion as a great light。 (123) All these expressions are plainly in



harmony with the current ideas of God and spirits。







(124) Inasmuch as imagination is fleeting and inconstant; we find that the



power of prophecy did not remain with a prophet for long; nor manifest



itself frequently; but was very rare; manifesting itself only in a few men;



and in them not often。







(125)We must necessarily inquire how the prophets became assured of the



truth of what they perceived by imagination; and not by sure mental laws;



but our investigation must be confined to Scripture; for the subject is one



on which we cannot acquire certain knowledge; and which we cannot explain by



the immediate causes。 (126) Scripture teaching about the assurance of



prophets I will treat of in the next chapter。



















CHAPTER II。 … OF PROPHETS。







(1) It follows from the last chapter that; as I have said; the prophets were



endowed with unusually vivid imaginations; and not with unusually; perfect



minds。 (2) This conclusion is amply sustained by Scripture; for we are told



that Solomon was the wisest of men; but had no special faculty of prophecy。


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