210 The Fundamentals in regarding the Old Testament as the Word of God, as the Bible of the ages before the Advent, and as still part of the B op ib ed le r f a o t r io t n h a e li C sm hri w st a i s an th C is hu p r o c s h i . tio N n o c t al u le n d til in the qu d e a s y ti s on o , f e d x e c v e e p lt a ci m sm ong wh un ic b h e , lie in ver o s u . r B ow ut n it tim is e o , b i v s io f u r s eq t u h e a n t tl t y he ap st p y l l i e ed of to cr t i h ti e i O n l g d i T ts es h ta is m to e r n i t es ( , n i o ts t t l o aw s s a , y it a s ny m th o i r n a g lit a y b , ou is t q th u e ite Ne in w c ) o , ns to is u t c e h n t with the recognition of any special divine characteristics or authority as belonging to it. The very maxim so often repeated, that criticism must deal with these writings precisely as it deals with other writings is a refusal to Scripture, in lin,#ne, of the peculiar character which it claims, and which the Church has ever recognized in it. If a special divine authority can be vindicated for these books, or for any of them, this fact, it is clear, ought to be taken into account by the linguistic and historical critic. Logically, we should begin our study of them by investi ga ting their title to such authority, and, should their claim prove well founded, it e sh ss o e u s l . d T ne h v e er es b ta e bl f is o h rg m o e t n te t n of in th th is e h s i u g b h se c q l u a e im nt w cr il i l tic i a m l p p ly ro i c n these writings moral characteristics (not to mention others) which should exempt them from a certain suspicion which tbe critic may not unwarrantably allow to be present when he begins to examine documents of an ordinary kind. It is not, therefore, correct to say that criticism, in commencing its inquiries, should know nothing of the alleged divine origin or sacred character of a book. If the book has no good vouchers for its claims to possess a sacred character, criti-· cism must proceed unhindered ; but correct conceptions of critical methods demand that every important fact already ascertained as to any writings should be kept faithfully before the mind in the examination of them. Science must here unite with reverential feeling in requiring right treatment of a book which claims special divin� sanction, and is willing
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