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idolatry. During that period, therefore, the religion
of Israel was the only true religion in the world. But
if this is the case—if the religion of Israel was once
the only true one, having been revealed by God to Moses
on Mount Sinai (see Ex. xix. etc.)—is then our question
not answered already, and ought not all Muhammadans
and Christians to become Jews? By no means; for it does
not follow that what was once the whole revealed truth
of God is so still; on the contrary, there was a growth
and progress in revelation, as in every thing else,
until completeness and maturity were attained. As God
created the world, not in one day, but in a succession
of days, so also did He reveal the whole of His saving
truth, not at once, but gradually. At the call of Abraham,
the great ancestor of the Jewish nation, many hundred
years had already elapsed since the deluge; and between
the call of Abraham and the giving of the Law in the
days of Moses again more than four hundred years passed
away. God is not dependent on time, but time depends
on Him. He can well wait with His manifestations of
mercy and judgement till mankind is prepared for them,
or till the right time is come. The family of Abraham
had first to be prepared by their great affliction in
Egypt and their miraculous deliverance from Pharaoh,
before God saw fit that they should receive His Law
from Sinai. So, likewise, ages of preparation had to
pass away, before the time of the |
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coming of Messiah was fulfilled. And again, generations
have come and gone since then; and still the day of
judgement, which will close the present order of things,
has not yet broken in upon us, because the world, in
the eyes of God, is not yet ripe for it. It seems, then,
there is good reason why God should not reveal His truth
all at once, or at the beginning of the world, but gradually,
and after mankind, by a long history and accumulated
experience, has become prepared for it; and we must
easily perceive it to be possible that, when God sends
a further revelation, men should sin against Him and
His truth, by rejecting the later revelation under the
pretence of clinging to that which had been revealed
before. Now it appears that this is actually the sin
of which the Jews have made themselves guilty; for when
the Messiah came, and proved, by His holy life no less
than by His mighty words and works, that He was sent
from heaven, only a few thousand Jews glorified God
by believing in Him, whereas the nation at large refused
to receive the gospel, and the Pharisees, or leaders,
said, 'We know that God hath spoken unto Moses: but
as for this man, we know not whence he is' (John ix.
29). By thus rejecting the messenger of God, who spoke
to them not His own words, but those of the heavenly
Father that had sent Him (John xii. 49-50), the Jews
separated themselves from the true religion; and instead
of still being God's favoured people, they |
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