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| The Discrepancy Between John and the First Three Gospels at This Part of the Narrative, Literally Read, the Narratives Cannot Be Harmonized: They Must Be Interpreted Spiritually. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
2. The Discrepancy Between John and the First Three Gospels
at This Part of the Narrative, Literally Read, the Narratives Cannot Be
Harmonized: They Must Be Interpreted Spiritually.
The truth of these matters must lie in that which is
seen by the mind. If the discrepancy between the Gospels is not
solved, we must give up our trust in the Gospels, as being true and
written by a divine spirit, or as records worthy of credence, for both
these characters are held to belong to these works. Those who
accept the four Gospels, and who do not consider that their apparent
discrepancy is to be solved anagogically (by mystical interpretation),
will have to clear up the difficulty, raised above, about the forty
days of the temptation, a period for which no room can be found in any
way in John’s narrative; and they will also have to tell us when
it was that the Lord came to Capernaum. If it was after the six
days of the period of His baptism, the sixth being that of the marriage
at Cana of Galilee, then it is clear that the temptation never took
place, and that He never was at Nazara, and that John was not yet
delivered up. Now, after Capernaum, where He abode not many days,
the passover of the Jews was at hand, and He went up to Jerusalem,
where He cast the sheep and oxen out of the temple, and poured out the
small change of the bankers. In Jerusalem, too, it appears that
Nicodemus, the ruler and Pharisee, first came to Him by night, and
heard what we may read in the Gospel. “After these
things,4995 Jesus came, and His
disciples, into the land of Judæa, and there He tarried with them
and baptized, at the same time at which John also was baptizing in
Ænon near Salim, because there were many waters there, and they
came and were baptized; for John was not yet cast into
prison.” On this occasion, too, there was a questioning on
the part of John’s disciples with the Jews about purification,
and they came to John, saying of the Saviour, “Behold, He
baptizeth, and all come to Him.” They had heard words from
the Baptist, the exact tenor of which it is better to take from
Scripture itself. Now, if we ask when Christ was first in
Capernaum, our respondents, if they follow the words of Matthew, and of
the other two, will say, After the temptation, when, “leaving
Nazareth, He came and dwelt in Capernaum by the sea.” But
how can they show both the statements to be true, that of Matthew and
Mark, that it was because He heard that John was delivered up that He
departed into Galilee, and that of John,4996
found there, after a number of other transactions, subsequent to His
stay at Capernaum, after His going to Jerusalem, and His journey from
there to Judæa, that John was not yet cast into prison, but was
baptizing in Ænon near Salim? There are many other points on
which the careful student of the Gospels will find that their
narratives do not agree; and these we shall place before the reader,
according to our power, as they occur. The student, staggered at
the consideration of these things, will either renounce the attempt to
find all the Gospels true, and not venturing to conclude that all our
information about our Lord is untrustworthy, will choose at random one
of them to be his guide; or he will accept the four, and will consider
that their truth is not to be sought for in the outward and material
letter.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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