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14. The
Disciples as Scribes.
“Have ye understood all these things?
They say, Yea.”5219 Christ Jesus,
who knows the things in the hearts of men,5220 as
John also taught concerning Him in the Gospel, puts the question not as
one ignorant, but having once for all taken upon Him the nature of man,
He uses also all the characteristics of a man of which
“asking” is one. And there is nothing to be wondered
at in the Saviour doing this, since indeed the God of the universe,
bearing with the manners of men as a man beareth with the manners of
his son, makes inquiry, as—“Adam, where art
thou?”5221 and, “Where
is Abel thy brother?”5222 But some one
with a forced interpretation will say here that the words “have
understood” are not to be taken interrogatively but
affirmatively; and he will say that the disciples bearing testimony to
His affirmation, say, “Yea.” Only, whether he is
putting a question or making an affirmation, it is necessarily said not
“these things” only,—which is
demonstrative,—not “all things” only, but “all
these things.” And here He seems to represent the disciples
as having been scribes before the kingdom of heaven;5223 but to this is opposed what is said in the
Acts of the Apostles thus, “Now when they beheld the boldness of
Peter and John, and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant
men, they marvelled, and they took knowledge of them that they had been
with Jesus.”5224 Some one may
inquire in regard to these things—if they were scribes, how are
they spoken of in the Acts as unlearned and ignorant men? Or if
they were unlearned and ignorant men, how are they very plainly called
scribes by the Saviour? And it might be answered to these
inquiries that, as a matter of fact, not all the disciples but only
Peter and John are described in the Acts as unlearned and ignorant, but
that there were more disciples in regard to whom, because they
understood all things, it is said, “Every scribe,”
etc. Or it might be said that every one who has been instructed
in the teaching according to the letter of the law is called a scribe,
so that those who were unlearned and ignorant and led captive by the
letter of the law are spoken of as scribes in a particular sense.
And it is very specially the characteristic of ignorant men, who are
unskilled in figurative interpretation and do not understand what is
concerned with the mystical5225 exposition of the
Scriptures, but believe the bare letter, and, vindicate it, that they
call themselves scribes. And
so one will interpret the words, “Woe unto you Scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites,”5226 as having been said
to every one that knows nothing but the letter. Here you will
inquire if the scribe of the Gospel be as the scribe of the law, and if
the former deals with the Gospel, as the latter with the law, reading
and hearing and telling “those things which contain an
allegory,”5227 so as, while
preserving the historic truth of the events, to understand the unerring
principle of mystic interpretation applied to things spiritual, so that
the things learned may not be “spiritual things whose
characteristic is wickedness,”5228 but may be
entirely opposite to such, namely, spiritual things whose
characteristic is goodness. And one is a scribe “made a
disciple to the kingdom of heaven” in the simpler sense, when he
comes from Judaism and receives the teaching of Jesus Christ as defined
by the Church; but he is a scribe in a deeper sense, when having
received elementary knowledge through the letter of the Scriptures he
ascends to things spiritual, which are called the kingdom of the
heavens. And according as each thought is attained, and grasped
abstractly5229
5229 Or, in an exalted
sense. | and proved by
example and absolute demonstration, can one understand the kingdom of
heaven, so that he who abounds in knowledge free from error is in the
kingdom of the multitude of what are here represented as
“heavens.” So, too, you will allegorise the word,
“Repent, for the kingdom of the heavens is at
hand,”5230 as meaning that the
scribes—that is, those who rest satisfied in the bare
letter—may repent of this method of interpretation and be
instructed in the spiritual teaching which is called the kingdom of the
heavens through Jesus Christ the living Word. Wherefore, also, so
far as Jesus Christ, “who was in the beginning with God, God the
word,”5231 has not His home in
a soul, the kingdom of heaven is not in it, but when any one becomes
nigh to admission of the Word, to him the kingdom of heaven is
nigh. But if the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of God are the
same thing in reality,5232 if not in idea,
manifestly to those to whom it is said, “The kingdom of God is
within you,”5233 to them also it
might be said, “The kingdom of heaven is within you;” and
most of all because of the repentance from the letter unto the spirit;
since “When one turn to the Lord, the veil over the letter is
taken away. But the Lord is the Spirit.”5234 And he who is truly a householder is
both free and rich; rich because from the office of the scribe he has
been made a disciple to the kingdom of heaven, in every word of the Old
Testament, and in all knowledge concerning the new teaching of Christ
Jesus, and has this riches laid up in his own treasure-house—in
heaven, in which he stores his treasure as one who has been made a
disciple to the kingdom of heaven,—where neither moth doth
consume, nor thieves break through.5235 And in
regard to him, who, as we have said, lays up treasure in heaven, we may
truly lay down that not one moth of the passions can touch his
spiritual and heavenly possessions. “A moth of the
passions,” I said, taking the suggestion from the
“Proverbs” in which it is written, “a worm in wood,
so pain woundeth the heart of man.”5236 For pain is a worm and a moth, which
wounds the heart which has not its treasures in heaven and spiritual
things, for if a man has his treasure in these—“for where
the treasure is, there will the heart be also,”5237 —he has his heart in heaven, and on
account of it he says, “Though an host should encamp against me,
my heart shall not fear.”5238 And so
neither can thieves in regard to whom the Saviour said, “All that
came before Me are thieves and robbers,”5239
break through those things which are treasured up in heaven, and
through the heart which is in heaven and therefore says, “He
raised us up with Him, and made us to sit with Him in the heavenly
places in Christ,”5240 and, “Our
citizenship is in heaven.”5241
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