Monday, March 21, 2016

John Calvin on the Objection Against Moses and the Prophets

"I am aware of what is muttered in corners by certain miscreants, when they would display their acuteness in assailing divine truth.  They ask, how do we know that Moses and the prophets wrote the books which now bear their names?  No, they even dare to question whether there ever was a Moses. Were any one to question whether there ever was a Plato, or an Aristotle, or a Cicero, would not the rod or the whip be deemed the fit chastisement of such folly?  The law of Moses has been wonderfully preserved, more by divine providence than by human care; and though, owing to the negligence of the priests, it lay for a short time buried - from the time when it was found by good King Josiah (1 Kgs 22:8; 2 Chr 34:15) - it has continued in the hands of men, and been transmitted in unbroken succession from generation to generation.  Nor, indeed, when Josiah brought it forth, was it as a book unknown or new, but one which had always been matter of notoriety, and was then in full remembrance.  The original writing had been deposited in the temple, and a copy taken from it had been deposited in the royal archives (Deut 17:18, 19); the only thing which had occurred was, that the priests had ceased to publish the Law itself in due form, and the people also had neglected the wonted reading of it.  I may add, that scarcely an age passed during which its authority was not confirmed and renewed.  Were the books of Moses unknown to those who had the psalms of David in their hands?  To sum up the whole in one word, it is certain beyond dispute, that these writings passed down, if I may so express it, from hand to hand, being transmitted in an unbroken series from the fathers, who either with their own ears heard them spoken, or learned them from those who had, while the remembrance of them was fresh" (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion).

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