The Fundamentals - 1910: Vol.4

72

The Fundamentals should take no account of what is peculiar to different species of writing, treating poetry and prose, history and allegory, the symbolical and the literal, as if all were the same. The consideration of this most important subject of interpretation with which apologetical interests are, indeed, closely connected, has not been before us. But nothing which we could be called upon to advance regarding the interpretation of the Old Testa­ ment could modify the results here reached in relation to the subject of which we have spoken. Our Lord’s testimony to the character of the Old Testament must remain unimpaired.

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