AN
We have now
before us the holy Bible, or book, for so bible
signifies. We call it the book, by way of eminency; for it
is incomparably the best book that ever was written, the book of
books, shining like the sun in the firmament of learning, other
valuable and useful books, like the moon and stars, borrowing their
light from it. We call it the holy book, because it was written by
holy men, and indited by the Holy Ghost; it is perfectly pure from
all falsehood and corrupt intention; and the manifest tendency of
it is to promote holiness among men. The great things of God's law
and gospel are here written to us, that they might be
reduced to a greater certainty, might spread further, remain
longer, and be transmitted to distant places and ages more pure and
entire than possibly they could be by report and tradition: and we
shall have a great deal to answer for if these things which belong
to our peace, being thus committed to us in black and white, be
neglected by us as a strange and foreign thing,
We have before us that part of the Bible
which we call the Old Testament, containing the acts and
monuments of the church from the creation almost to the coming of
Christ in the flesh, which was about four thousand years—the
truths then revealed, the laws then enacted, the devotions then
paid, the prophecies then given, and the events which concerned
that distinguished body, so far as God saw fit to preserve to us
the knowledge of them. This is called a testament, or
covenant (Diatheke), because it was a settled
declaration of the will of God concerning man in a federal
way, and had its force from the designed death of the great
testator, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world,
(
We have before us that part of the Old
Testament which we call the Pentateuch, or five books of
Moses, that servant of the Lord who excelled all the other
prophets, and typified the great prophet. In our Saviour's
distribution of the books of the Old Testament into the law,
the prophets, and the psalms, or Hagiographa,
these are the law; for they contain not only the laws given
to Israel, in the last four, but the laws given to Adam, to Noah,
and to Abraham, in the first. These five books were, for aught we
know, the first that ever were written; for we have not the least
mention of any writing in all the book of Genesis, nor till
God bade Moses write (
We have before us the first and longest of
those five books, which we call Genesis, written, some
think, when Moses was in Midian, for the instruction and comfort of
his suffering brethren in Egypt: I rather think he wrote it in the
wilderness, after he had been in the mount with God, where,
probably, he received full and particular instructions for the
writing of it. And, as he framed the tabernacle, so he did the more
excellent and durable fabric of this book, exactly according to the
pattern shown him in the mount, into which it is better to resolve
the certainty of the things herein contained than into any
tradition which possibly might be handed down from Adam to
Methuselah, from him to Shem, from him to Abraham, and so to the
family of Jacob. Genesis is a name borrowed from the Greek.
It signifies the original, or generation: fitly is
this book so called, for it is a history of originals—the creation
of the world, the entrance of sin and death into it, the invention
of arts, the rise of nations, and especially the planting of the
church, and the state of it in its early days. It is also a history
of generations—the generations of Adam, Noah, Abraham, &c.,
not endless, but useful genealogies. The beginning of the New
Testament is called Genesis too (