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12. Heracleon’s
View of the Voice, and of John the Baptist.
The words, however, “I am the voice of one crying
in the wilderness,” etc., may be taken as equivalent to “I
am He of whom the ‘voice in the wilderness’ is
written.” Then John would be the person crying, and his
voice would be that crying in the wilderness, “Make straight the
way of the Lord.” Heracleon, discussing John and the
prophets, says, somewhat slanderously, that “the Word is the
Saviour; the voice, that in the wilderness which John interpreted; the
sound is the whole prophetic order.” To this we may reply
by reminding him of the text,4881 “If the
trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for the
battle,” and that which says that though a man have knowledge of
mysteries, or have prophecy but wants love, he is a sounding or a
tinkling cymbal.4882 If the
prophetic voice be nothing but sound, how does our Lord come to refer
us to it as where He says,4883 “Search the
Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life, and these are
they which bear witness,” and4884 “If ye
believed Moses, ye would believe Me,” and4885
“Well did Isaiah prophesy concerning you, saying, This people
honours me with their lips”? I do not know if any one can
reasonably admit that the Saviour thus spoke in praise of an uncertain
sound, or that there is any preparation to be had from the Scriptures
to which we are referred as from the voice of a trumpet, for our war
against opposing powers, should their sound give an uncertain
voice. If the prophets had not love, and if that is why they were
sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal, then how does the Lord send us to
their sound, as these writers will have it, as if we could get help
from that? He asserts, indeed, that a voice, when well fitted to
speech, becomes speech, as if one should say that a woman is turned
into a man; and the assertion is not supported by argument. And,
as if he were in a position to put forth a dogma on the subject and to
get on in this way, he declares that sound can be changed in a similar
way into voice, and the voice,
which is changed into speech, he says, is in the position of a
disciple, while sound passing into voice is in that of a slave.
If he had taken any kind of trouble to establish these points we should
have had to devote some attention to refuting them; but as it is, the
bare denial is sufficient refutation. There was a point some way
back which we deferred taking up, that, namely, of the motive of
John’s speeches. We may now take it up. The Saviour,
according to Heracleon, calls him both a prophet and Elijah, but he
himself denies that he is either of these. When the Saviour,
Heracleon says, calls him a prophet and Elijah, He is speaking not of
John himself, but of his surroundings; but when He calls him greater
than the prophets and than those who are born of women, then He is
describing the character of John himself. When John, on the other
hand, is asked about himself, his answers relate to himself, not to his
surroundings. This we have examined as carefully as possible,
comparing each of the terms in question with the statements of
Heracleon, lest he should not have expressed himself quite
accurately. For how it comes that the statements that he is
Elijah and that he is a prophet apply to those about him, but the
statement that he is the voice of one crying in the wilderness, to
himself, no attempt whatever is made to show. Heracleon only
gives an illustration, namely, this: His surroundings were, so to
speak, his clothes, and other than himself, and when he was asked about
his clothes, if he were his clothes, he could not answer
“Yes.” Now that his being Elijah, who was to come,
was his clothes, is scarcely consistent, so far as I can see, with
Heracleon’s views; it might consist, perhaps, with the exposition
we ourselves gave of the words, “In the spirit and power of
Elijah;” it might, in a sense, be said that this spirit of Elijah
is equivalent to the soul of John. He then goes on to try to
determine why those who were sent by the Jews to question John were
priests and levites, and he answers by no means badly, that it was
incumbent on such persons, being devoted to the service of God, to busy
themselves and to make enquiries about such matters. When he goes
on, however, to say that it was “because John was of the
levitical tribe,” this is less well considered. We raised
the question ourselves above, and saw that if the Jews who were sent
knew John’s birth, it was not open to them to ask if he was
Elijah. Then, again, in dealing with the question, “Art
thou the prophet?” Heracleon does not regard the addition of the
article as having any special force, and says, “They asked him if
he were a prophet, wishing to know this more general fact.”
Again, not Heracleon alone, but, so far as I am informed, all those who
diverge from our views, as if they had not been able to deal with a
trifling ambiguity and to draw the proper distinction, suppose John to
be greater than Elijah and than all the prophets. The words are,
“Of those born of women there is none greater than John;”
but this admits of two meanings, that John is greater than they all, or
again, that some of them are equal to him. For though many of the
prophets were equal to him, still it might be true in respect of the
grace bestowed on him, that none of them was greater than he. He
regards it as confirming the view that John was greater, that “he
is predicted by Isaiah;” for no other of all those who uttered
prophecies was held worthy by God of this distinction. This,
however, is a venturesome statement and implies some disrespect of what
is called the Old Testament, and total disregard of the fact that
Elijah himself was the subject of prophecy. For Elijah is
prophesied by Malachi, who says,4886 “Behold,
I send unto you Elijah, the Tishbite, who shall restore the heart of
the father to the son.” Josiah, too, as we read in third
Kings,4887 was predicted by
name by the prophet who came out of Judah; for he said, Jeroboam also
being present at the altar, “Thus saith the Lord, Behold a son is
born to David, his name is Josiah.” There are some also who
say that Samson was predicted by Jacob, when he said,4888 “Dan shall judge his own people, he is
as one tribe in Israel,” for Samson who judged Israel was of the
tribe of Dan. So much by way of evidence of the rashness of the
statement that John alone was the subject of prophecy, made by
Heracleon in his attempted explanation of the words, “I am the
voice of one crying in the wilderness.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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