The Fundamentals (1910), Vol.1

120 The Fundamentals. stand with our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in receiving the Scriptures as the Word of God, without objection and with­ out a doubt. A little learning, and a little listening to ration­ alistic theorizers and sympathizers may incline us to uncer­ tainty; but deeper study and deeper research will incline us as it inclined Hengstenberg and Môller, to the profoundest conviction of the authority and authenticity of the Holy Scriptures, and to cry, “Thy word is very pure ; therefore. Thy servant loveth it.” APPENDIX. I t may not be out of place to add here a small list of reading matter that will help the reader who wants to strengthen his position as a simple believer in the Bible. As I said before, a large list would be altogether too cumbersome. I would only put down those that I have personally found most valuable and suggestive. If one can afford only one or two, I would sug­ gest Green and Kennedy; or Munhall and Parker; or Saphir and Anderson; or Orr and Urquhart. The most massive and scholarly are Horne’s Introduction, and Pusey on Daniel, but they are deep, heavy and suitable only for the more cultured and trained readers. GREEN. “The Higher Criticism of the Pentateuch.” (Scrib­ ner’s.) GREEN.

“General Introduction to the Old Testament,” in two volumes; the Text and the Canon. (Scrib­ ner’s.) “Unity of Genesis.” (Scribner’s.) The foregoing are very good. Green was a great scholar, the Princeton Professor of Oriental and Old Testament Literature, a man who deeply loved the Bible and the Lord Jesus. He is perhaps the strongest of the scholarly opponents of the ration­ alistic Higher Critics.

GREEN.

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