CHAPTER II. BAPTISM AND TEMPATION OF JESUS. §. 49. WHY DID JESUS RECEIVE BAPTISM FEOM JOHN? IN conformity with the evangelical view of the fact, the custom- ary answer given by the orthodox to this question is, that Jesus, by his submission to John's baptism, signified his consecration to tlie messianic office; an explanation which is supported by a passage in Justin, according to which it was the Jewish notion, that the Mes- siah would be unknown as sucli to himself and others, until Elias as his forerunner sliould anoint him, and thereby make him distin- guishable by all.* Tlie Baptist himself, however, as he is repre- sented by tlie first evangelist, could not have partaken of tins design; for had lie regarded his baptism as a consecration which tlie Messiah must necessarily undergo, he would not have hesitated to perform it on tlie person of Jesus (iii. 14.). Our former inquiries have shown that John's baptism related partly e^? T'OV Ep^opsvov, its recipients promising a believing prepara- tion for the expected Messiah; how then could Jesus, if he was conscious of being liimself the ep^ojiigvoc, submit himself to this baptism ? The usual answer from the orthodox point of view is, that Jesus, altliougli conscious of his Messiaship, yet, so long as it was not publicly attested by God, spoke and acted, not as tlie Mes- siah, but merely as an Israelite, who lield liimself bound to obey every divine ordinance relative to his nation.+ But, here, there is a distinction to be made. Negatively, it became Jesus to refrain from performing any messianic deeds, or using any of the Messiah's prerogatives, before Ids title was solemnly attested; even positively, it became him to submit himself to tlie ordinances which were in- cumbent on every Israelite; but to ioin in a new rite, which sym- bolized tlie expectation of another and a future Messiah, could never, without dissimulation, be the act of one who was conscious of being the actual Messiah himself. More recent theologians liave - - -- • • -- •L "„„ p-,,«,.h;,.),tB .Ti.au. 1. B. S. BAPTISM OF JESUS. 243 therefore wisely admitted, that when Jesus came to John for bap- tism, he had not a decided conviction of his Messiahship.* They indeed regard this uncertainty as only the struggle of modesty. Paulus, for instance, observes that Jesus, notwithstanding he had heard from his parents of Ills messianic destination, and had felt this first intimation confirmed by many external incidents, as well as by his own spiritual development, was yet not over eager to ap- propriate the honour, wliich had been as it were thrust upon him. But, if the previous narratives concerning Jesus be regarded as a history, and therefore, of necessity, as a supernatural one; then must lie, who was heralded by angels, miraculously conceived, welcomed into tlie world by the homage of magi and prophets, and who in his twelfth year knew the temple to be his father's house, have long held a conviction of his Messiahship, above all tlie scruples of a false modesty. If on the contrary it be thought possible, by criticism, to reduce the history of the childhood of Jesus to a merely natural one, there is no longer anything to account for his early belief tliat he was the Messiali; and tlie position wliicli lie adopted by tlie re- ception of John's baptism becomes, instead of an affected diffidence, a real ignorance of his messianic destiny. Too modest, continue these commentators, to declare himself Messiali on his own author- ity, Jesus fulfilled all that tlie strictest self-judgment could require, and wislicd to make the decisive experiment, whether tlie Deity would allow tliat lie, as well as every other, should dedicate liimself to the coming Messiali, or whether a sign would be granted, that lie himself was the ep^'o^evoc. But to do something seen to be inap- propriate, merely to try wliether God will correct tlie mistake, is just such a challenging of the divine power as Jesus, shortly after his baptism, decidedly condemns. Thus it must be allowed that, the baptism of John being a baptism el<; T'OV ep^ofzEvov, if Jesus could submit liimself to it without dissimulation or presumption, he could not at the time liave held liimself to be tliat ep^o^eroc, and if lie re- ally uttered ttie words o^ru Trpe-n-ov EO-I, a. T. X. Suffer it to be so no'w, &c. (wliicli, however, could only be called forth by the refusal of tlie Baptist-a refusal that stands or falls with his previous con- viction of tlie Messiahship of Jesus,) he could only mean by them, tliat it became him, witli every pious Israelite, to devote liimself by anticipation to tlie expected Messiali, in baptism, although the evan- gelist, instructed by tlie issue, put on them a different construction. But the relation hitherto discussed is only one aspect of John's baptism ; tlie other, wliicli is yet more strongly attested by history, shows it as a PaTrnaiia fiKravoiag, a baptism of repentance. The Israelites, we are told Matt. iii. 6, were baptized of John, confessing weir sins: sliall we then suppose that Jesus made such a confes- sion ? They received tlie command to repent: did Jesus acknow- ledge such a command ? This difficulty was felt even in the early church. In the gospel of tlie Hebrews, adopted by tlie Nazarenes, * Paulus. ut sun- S- S(i2 ff- S.17. Hase. L. J. S. 48. erste Anss. 246 THE LIFE OF JESUS. The narrations directly convey no other meaning, than that the whole scene was externally visible and audible, and thus they have been always understood by tlic majority of commentators. But in endeavouring to conceive the incident as a real one, a cultivated and reflecting mind must stumble at no insignificant difficulties. First, that for the appearance of a divine being on earth, tlie visible heav- ens must divide themselves, to allow of his descent from Ins ac- customed scat, is an idea tliat can liave no objective reality, but must be the entirely subjective creation of a time when tlic dwell- ing-place of Deity was imagined to be above the vault of licaven. Further, how is it reconcileable with the true idea of tlie Holy Spirit as tlie divine, all-pervading Power, that lie sliould move from ons place to anotlier, like a finite being, and embody himself in tlie form of a dove ? Finally, tliat God should utter articulate tones in a na- tional idiom, lias been justly lield extravagant.* Even in the early church, tlie more enlightened fathers adopted the opinion, tliat tlie heavenly voices spoken of in tlie biblical histo- ry were not external sounds, tlic effect of vibrations in tlie air, but inward impressions produced by God in tlie minds of those to whom he willed to impart himself: thus of tlie appearance at tlie baptism of Jesus, Origen and Theodore of Mopsucstia maintain that it was a vision, and not a reality, on-aalo., ou ipvoi^.) To the simple in- deed, says Origen, in their simplicity, it is a light thing to set the universe in motion, and to sever a solid mass like tlie heavens ; but those who search more deeply into such matters, will, lie flunks, re- fer to those higher revelations, by means of wliicli clioscn persons, even waking, and still more frequently in their dreams, arc led to suppose tliat they perceive something with their bodily senses, wliilc their minds only are affected : so tliat consequently, tlic wliole ap- pearance in question sliould be understood, not as an external inci- dent, but as an inward vision sent by God; an interpretation which has also met witli much approbation among modern tlicologians. In tlie first two Gospels and in the fourth, tills interpretation is favoured by tlie expressions, were opened to /dm, dveu^Orjaav avru>, he saw, elSe, and I beheld, TeOea/tai, which seem to imply tliat the appearance was subjective, in tlie sense intended by Theodore, when he observes that tlie descent of tlie Holy Spirit VMS not seen by all •present, bid that, by a certain spiritual contemplation, it was visi- ble to John alone, ov waiv wi^Oi-] rol<; Trapovoiv, d/l/lo iiard riva •nve.v- fia-iiifjv Oewpiav ^OT] y.6vu> TU 'ludvvy: to John however ^we must add Jesus, who, according to Mark, participated in tlie vision. But in opposition to this stands tlie statement of Luke: the expressions wliicli lie uses, eywe-ro-avw^Or^vcii-nal ica~a0Tjvai-KW. ipuvi'iv- yevioOal, it came to pass-was opened-and descended-and a * Bauer, hebr. Mythologie, 2 S. 223 f. Comp. Gratz, Comm. zum Evang. Matth. i. S. 172 ff. + Those are Theodore's words, in Mimter's Fragmenta patr. grixic. Fasc. 1, S. 142. n-;~ „ ^..1. ; fa It.,.;] Af in «,,i..or'a •I'ln.an.irna C IV 117!). BAPTISM OF JESUS. 247 voice came, bear a character so totally objective and exterior,* es- pecially if we add the words, in a bodily form, aui.ia.Ti.nu e'iSei, tliat (abiding by the notion of the perfect truthfulness of all the evangeli- cal records,) tlic less explicit narratives must be interpreted by the unequivocal one of Luke, and the incident they recount must be un- derstood as something more than an inward revelation to John and Jesus. Hence it is prudent in Olshausen to allow, in concession to Luke, that there was present on the occasion a crowd of persons, who saw and heard something, yet to maintain that tins was nothing distinct or comprehensible. By this means, on the one liand, the occurence is again transferred from the domain of subjective visions to tliat of objective phenomena; while on the other, the descending dove is supposed visible, not to tlie bodily eye, but only to the open spiritual one, and tlie words audible to the soul, not to tlie bodily car. Our understanding fails us in tills pneumatology of Olshausen, wherein there are sensible realities transcending the senses; and we hasten out of tills misty atmosphere into the clearer one of those, who simply tell us, that the appearance was an external incident, but one purely natural. This party appeals to the custom of antiquity, to regard natural occurrences as divine intimations, and in momentous crises, where a bold resolution was to be taken, to adopt them as guides. To Jesus, spiritually matured into tlie Messiah, and only awaiting an external divine sanction, and to tlie Baptist who had already ceded the supe- riority to tlie friend of his youth, in their solemn frame of mind at the baptism of the former by tlie latter, every natural phenomenon that happened at tlic time, must have been pregnant with meaning, and have appeared as a sign of tlie divine will. But wliat the na- tural appearance actually was, is a point on which tlie commentators arc divided in opinon. Some, with the synoptical writers, include a sound as well as an appearance ; others give, with John, an ap- pearance only. They interpret the opening of the heavens, as a sudden parting of the clouds, or a flash of lightning; the dove they consider as a real bird of tliat species, wliicli by cliance hovered over the head of Jesus; or they assume tliat tlie lightning or some me- teor was compared to a dove. from tlie manner of its descent. They wlio include a sound as a part of tlie machinery in tlic scene, sup- pose a clap of thunder, wliicli was imagined by tliose present to be a Bath Kol, and interpreted into the words given by tlie first evan- gelist. Others, on tlie contrary, understand what is said of audible words, merely as an explanation of the visible sign, which was re- garded as an attestation tliat Jesus was the Son of God. Tills last opinion sacrifices tlie synoptical writers, who undeniably speak of an audible voice, to John, and thus contains a critical doubt as to tlie historical character of tlie narratives, which, consistently followed out, leads to quite other ground than that of the naturalistic inter- * As even Lticke confesses, Comm. zum Evang. Joh. i. S. 370, and Bleeh, lit sup. S. 248 THE LIFE OF JESUS. pretation. If the sound was mere thunder, and the words only an interpretation put upon it bv tlie bystanders ; then, as in the sy- noptical accounts the words are evidently supposed to have been audibly articulated, we must allow that there is a traditional in- gredient in these records. So far as tlie appearance is concerned, it is not to be denied that tlie sudden parting ol' clouds, or a flash of lightning, miglit be described as an opening of heaven ; but in no- wise could tlie form of a dove be ascribed to lightning or a meteor. The form is expressly tlie point of comparison in Luke only, but it is doubtless so intended by the other narrators ; although Fritzsche contends that the words like a dove, wad -reptff-epav, in Matthew refer only to the rapid motion. Tlie flight of the dove lias nothing so peculiar and distinctive, that, supposing this to be the point of comparison, there would not be in any of tlie parallel passagas a variation, a substitution of some other bird, or an entirely new figure. As, instead of this, tlie mention of tlie dove is invariable through all tlie. four Gospels, tlie simile must turn upon something exclusively proper to the dove, and this can apparently be nothing but its form. Hence tliose commit the least violence on tlie text, wlio adopt the supposition of a real dove. Paulus, however, in so doing, incurred tlie hard task of sliewing by a multitude of facts from natural his- tory and other sources, tliat tlie dove might be tame enough to fly towards a man :* how it could linger so long over one, that it might be said, ^etvev e-r' av-w, it abode vpon him, lie has not succeeded in explaining, and he tlius conies into collision witli the narrative of John, by which lie had sustained his supposition of the absence of a voice.f § 51. AN ATTEMPT AT A CRITICISM AND MYTHICAL IXTEEPKETATION OF THE NAREATIVES. IF then a more intelligible representation of tlie scene at the baptism of Jesus is not to be given, without doing violence to the evangelical text, or without supposing it to be partially erroneous, we are necessarily driven to a critical treatment of tlie accounts; and indeed, according to UcWette and Schlcicrmacher, ^ this is the prevalent course in relation to the above point in tlie evangelical history. From tlie narrative of John, as the pure source, it is sought to derive the synoptical accounts, as turbid streams. In the former, it is said, there is no opening heaven, no heavenly voice ; only the descent of tlie Spirit is, as liad been promised, a divine witness to Jolin that Jesus is the Messiah; but in wliat manner the Baptist perceived that tlie Spirit rested on Jesus, he does not tell us, and possibly tlie only sign may have been tlie discourse ot Jesus. * Comp. Enseliius, II. E. vi. 29. •(• See Paulus, Bauer, Kuinol, Hase and Thcile. + DaWette. liilil. UuErmatik, S 208. Anm. 6. exeg. llandliurh 1, 1, S. ;U f. 1, 3 S. 20 f. BAPTISM OF JESL'S. 249 One cannot but wonder at Schleiermacher's assertion, that the manner in which tlie Baptist perceived the descending spirit is not given in tlie fourth Gospel, when here also tlie expression uael rrepi- orspav, like a dove, tells it plainly enough; and this particular marks tlie descent as a visible one, and not a mere inference from tlie discourse of Jesus. Usteri, indeed, thinks that the Baptist mentioned tlie dove, merely as a figure, to denote tlie gentle, mild spirit wliicli he had observed in Jesus. But had tills been all, ho would rather have compared Jesus himself to a dove, as on another occasion lie did to a lamb, than have suggested tlie idea of a sensible appearance by tlie picturesque description, I saw the Spirit descend- ing from, heaven like a dove. It is therefore not true in relation to tlie dove, tliat first in tlie more remote tradition given by the synoptical writers, wliat was originally figurative, was received in a literal sense; for in tills sense it is understood by John, and if he have tlie correct account, tlie Baptist himself must have spoken of a visible dove-like appearance, as Bleek, Neandcr, and others, acknowledge. While tlie alleged distinction in relation to the dove, between tlie first three evangelists and tlie fourth, is not to be found; witli respect to tlie voice, tlie difference is so wide, tliat it is inconceivable how tlie one account could be drawn from the other. For it is said tliat tlie testimony wliicli John gave concerning Jesus, after tlie appearance: TIris is tlie Son of tiocKJolm i. 34.), taken in connex- ion with tlie preceding words: He tliat sent me, to baptize, t/w same said unto me, &.c., became, in the process of tradition, an immediate heavenly declaration, such as we sec in Mattliew: This zs my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Supposing sucli a transformation admissible, some instigation to it must be shown. Now in Isaiah xhi. 1, Jehovah says of his servant: ("2--^>"ii< 1^2?) in •'asa n^s"; ''"i-'na; words wliicli, excepting tliose between tlie parentheses, arc almost literally translated by tlie declaration of tlie heavenly voice in Matthew. We learn from Matt. xii. 17 ff. tliat tins passage was applied to Jesus as tlie Messiali; and in it God himself is the speaker, as in tlie synoptical account of tlie baptism. Here then was wliat would much more readily prompt tlie fiction of a heavenly voice, llian tlie expressions of John. Since, there- fore, we do not need a misapprehension of the Baptist's language, to explain tlie story of tlie divine voice, and since we cannot use it for the derivation of the allusion to the dove; we must seek for the source of our narrative, not in one of tlie evangelical documents, but beyond tlie New Testament,-in the domain of coicmporary ideas, founded on the Old Testament, tlie total neglect of which lias greatly diminished tlie value of Schlciermacher's critique on the New Testament. To regard declarations concerning tlie Messiali, put by poets into tlie mouth of Jehovah, as real, audible voices from heaven, WaS W'hollv 1T1 tllB an;r;+ r,f +l>n lot^,. T^ A n; c, w T.rliSr.L nitt erJ/Ii-im 250 THE LIFE OF JESUS. supposed such vocal communications to fall to the lot of distin- guished rabbins,* and of the messianic prejudices, which the early Christians both shared tlicmselves, and were compelled, in confront- ing the Jews, to satisfy. In the passage quoted from Isaiah, there was a divine declaration, in which the present Messiah was pointed to as it were with the finger, and which was therefore specially adapted for a heavenly annunciation concerning him. How could tlie spirit of Christian legend be slow to imagine a scene, in which these words were audibly spoken from heaven of the Messiah ? But we detect a farther motive for such a representation of tlie case by observing, tliat in Mark and Luke, the heavenly voice addresses Jesus in tlie second person, and by comparing tlie words which, according to the Fathers, were given in the old and lost gospels as tliose of the voice. Justin, following his .Sfemoirs of the Apostles, d7TO{ivri[zovEvp.a~a TUV oT-ooTo/lov, thus reports them: vl6<; y,w el av. eyo) or'ifi.epov yeyevvr]na as ;•)• Thou art my Son, this day have I begot- ten thee. In tlie gospel of tlie Hebrews, according to Epiplianius,^ tills declaration was combined with tliat which our gospels contain. Clement of Alexandria § and Augustin |] seem to have read the words even in some copies of the latter; and it is at least certain that some of our present manuscripts of Luke liave this addition.^ Here were words uttered by the heavenly voice, drawn, not from Isaiali, but from Psalm ii. 7, a passage considered messianic by Jewish inter- preters ;** in Heb. i. 5, applied to Christ; and, from their being couched in tlie form of a direct address, containing a yet stronger inducement to conceive it as a voice sent to the Messiah from heaven. If then tlie words of tlie psalm were originally attributed to tlie heavenly voice, or if tlicy were only taken in connexion with tlie passage in Isaiali, (as is probable from tlie use of tlie second person, av el, in Mark and Luke, since this form is presented in tlie psalm, and not in Isaiali,) we have a sufficient indication tliat tills text, long interpreted of the Messiali, and easily regarded as an address from heaven to the Messiali on earth, was tlie source of our narra- tive of tlie divine voice, heard at tlie baptism of Jesus. To unite it with tlie baptism, followed as a matter of course, when this was lield to be a consecration of Jesus to his office. We proceed to tlie descent of the spirit in tlie form of a dove. In this examination, we must separate tlie descent of tlie Spirit from the form of tlie dove, and consider tlie two particulars apart. Tliat tlie Divine Spirit was to rest in a peculiar measure on tlie Messiali, was an expectation necessarily resulting from tlie notion, tliat tlie messianic times were to be tliose of tlie outpouring of the Spirit upon all flesh (Joel iii. 1 ft.); and in Isaiali xi. 1 f. it was expressly said * According to Bava Mczia, f. lix. 1, (in Wetstein, p. 427), II. Elieser appealed to a heavenly sign, in proof that lie liad tradition in his favour: tuiti persofiuit echo cwiesi'ts: quid vobis cum A*. Eliesere ? nam ubwis secu'tidum ilium obtim't tradUw. f Dial. c. Trypll. 88. t H-eres, xxx. 13. § Piedagog. i. (i. [| Ue consens. Evangg. ii. 14. 1 S. Wet- stein in loc. des Lukas, and De Wette Einl. in das N. T. S. 100. ** See Kosemnuller's 251 BAPTISM OF JESUS. of the stem of Jesse, that the spirit of tlie Lord would rest on it in all its fulness, as the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, of might, and of the fear of tlie Lord. The communication of tlie Spirit, con- sidered as an individual act, coincident with the baptism, had a type in the history of David, on wliom, when anointed by Samuel the spirit of God came from tliat day forward (1 Sam. xvi. 13). Further, in tlie Old Testament plirases concerning tlie imparting of tlie Di- vine Spirit to men, especially in that expression of Isaiali, '^'s nis, which best corresponds to tlie [liveiv ETT'L of John, there already lay tlie germ of a symbolical representation ; for that Hebrew verb is applied also to tlie halting of armies, or, like the parallel Arabic word, even of animals. Tlie imagination, once stimulated by such an expression, would be the more strongly impelled to complete the picture, by tlie necessity for distinguishing the descent of the Spirit on tlie Messiah,-in the Jewish view, from tlie mode in which it was imparted to tlie prophets (c. g. Isaiali Ixi. 1)-in tlie Cliristian view, from its ordinary communication to tlie baptized (e. g. Acts xix. 1 ft.).* Tlie position being once laid down, tliat the Spirit was to descend on tlie Messiah, tlie question immediately occurred: How would it descend? This was necessarily decided according to the popular Jcwisli idea, which always represented tlie Divine Spirit under some form or other. In the Old Testament, and even in the New (Acts ii. 3), fire is the principal symbol of the Holy Spirit; but it by no means follows that other sensible objects were not simi- larly used. In an important passage of the Old Testament (Gen. i. 2), the Spirit of God is described as hovering (ns;TT-i), a word which suggests, as its sensible representation, tlie movement of a bird, rather than of fire. Thus tlie expression ^"11, Deut. xxxii. 11, is used of tlie hovering of a bird over its young. But the im- agination could not be satisfied with tlie general figure of a bird; it must have a specific image, and every thing led to the choice of the dove. In the east, and especially in Syria, the dove is a sacred bird,f and it is so for a reason which almost necessitated its association with the Spirit moving on tlie face of the primitive waters (Gen. i. 2). The brooding dove was a symbol of tlie quickening warmth of nature \\ it tlius perfectly represented the function which, in tlie Mosaic cosmogony, is ascribed to tlie Spirit of God,-tlie calling forth of tlie world of life from the chaos of tlie first creation. More- over, when the earth was a second time covered with water, it is a dove, sent by Noah, which hovers over its waves, and which, by plucking an olive leaf, and at length finally disappearing, announces the renewed possibility of living on tlie eartli. Who tlien can won- der that in Jewish writings, tlie Spirit hovering over the primeval * Schleiermacher, fiber den Luhas, S. 57. •i" Tilmll. Carni. L. 1, eleg. 8, v. 17 f. See tlie remark of Broeckhuis on this passage; Creuzer, Symbolik, ii. S. 70 f.; Paulus, exeg. Handb. 1, a, S. 3G9. \ Creuzer, Symbolik, ii. S. 80. 252 THE LIFE OF JESUS. waters is expressly compared to a dove,* and tliat, apart from the nar- rative under examination, the dove is taken as a symbol of tlie Holy Spirit?! How near to this lay the association of the hovering dove with the Messiah, on whom the dove-like spirit was to descend, is evident, without our having recourse to the Jewish writings, which designate the Spirit hovering over tlie waters, Gen. 1. 2, as the Spirit of the Messiah,! and also connect with him its emblem, the Noachian dove.S When, in tills manner, tlie heavenly voice, and tlie Divine Spirit down-hovering like a dove, gathered from tlie cotemporary Jewish ideas, had become integral parts of tlie Christian legend concerning the circumstances of the baptism of Jesus; it followed, of coarse, that the heavens should open themselves, for tlie Spirit, once em- bodied, must have a road, before it could descend through the vault of heaven. || The result of the preceding inquiries, viz., tliat tlie alleged mi- raculous circumstances of the baptism of Jesus have merely a mythi- cal value, might have been miicli more readily obtained, in the way of inference from tlie preceding cliaptcr; for if, according to that, John liad not acknowledged Jesus to be tlie Messiah, tliere could have been no appearances at tlie baptism of Jesus, demonstrative •to Jolm of his Messiahsliip. We have, however, establislied tlie mythical character of tlie baptismal phenomena, without presuppos- ing tlie result of the previous cliapter; and thus the two indepen- dently obtained conclusions may serve to strengthen eacli other. Supposing all the immediate circumstances of tlie baptism of Jesus unhistorical, the question occurs, whether the baptism itself be also a mere mythus. Fritzsche sfems not disinclined to tlie af- firmative, for lie leaves it undecided whether the first Christians knew historically, or only supposed, in conformity witli their messi- anic expectations, that Jesus was consecrated to Ills messianic office by Jolm, as his Forerunner. This view may be supported by the observation, tliat in the Jewisli expectation, which originated in the history of David, combined witli tlie prophecy of Malaclii, there was * Chagiga c. ii.:, Spiritus Dei J'ercbafv.1' super aquas^ sicut columba, quce j'vrtw super pullos suos nee tangit illos. Ir Gibborim ad Genes. 1, 2, ap. Schdttgen, liora", i. p. 9. ^ Torgum Koheleth, ii. 12, vox iu'rfuris is interpreted as vox ^pinii/.^ snncii. To regard tins, with Lucke, as an arbitrary interpretation, seems itself like arbitrariness, in the face of the above data. ^ Bereshith rabba, S. 2, f. 4, +, ad Genes. T. 2 (ap. ydnittgen ut sup.): intelltgatur spir'Uus regis Mvssw3^ de quo dtcitnr Jes. xi. 2 ; et yuiescet St/pir Ulum fplritu? Domini. § Sohar. Kumer. f. 68. col. 271 f. (in Schottgen, hora", 2, p. 537 f.). The pur- port of this passage rests on the following cabalistic conclusion : If David, according to 1's. lii. 10, is the olive tree; the Messiah, a scion of David, is the olive leaf: and since it is said of Noah's dove, Gen. viii. 11, tliat it carried an olive leaf in its mouth ; the Messiah will be ushered into the world by a dove.-Even Christian interpreters have compared the dove at the baptism of Jesus to tlie Noachian one ; see Suicer, Thesaurus, 2. Art. ireptOTtpu, p. 688. It has been customary to cite in this connexion, that the Sa- maritans paid divine honours to a dove under the name of Achiina, on Mount Gerizim ; but this is a Jewish accusation, grounded on a wilful misconstruction. See fetaudlin's and Tzschirner's Arcliiv. fur K. G. 1,3, S. W. Lucke, 1, S. 367. || See Fritzsche, Comm. BAPTISM OF JESUS. 253 adequate inducement to assume such a consecration of Jesus by the Baptist, even without historical warrant; and the mention of John'3 baptism in relation to Jesus (Acts i. 22,) in a narrative, itself tradi- tional, proves notliing to the contrary. Yet, on tlie other hand, it is to be considered, tliat the baptism of Jesus by John furnishes the most natural basis for an explanation of the messianic project of Jesus. When we have two cotemporaries, one of whom announces the proximity of the Messiah's kingdom, and the other subsequently assumes the character of Messiali; tlie conjecture arises, even with- out positive information, that they stood in a relation to each other,- that the latter owed his idea to the former. If Jesus had the mes- sianic idea excited in him by John, yet, as is natural, only so far that lie also looked forward to tlie advent of tlie messianic indi- vidual, whom he did not, in tlie first instance, identify with himself; he would most likely submit himself to tlie baptism of John. Tills would probably take place without any striking occurrences; and Jesus, in no way announced by it as tlie Baptist's superior, might, as above remarked, condnue for some time to demean himself as Ilia disciple. If we take a comparative retrospect of our evangelical documents, tlie pre-eminence which has of late been sought for tlie fourth Gos- pel, appears totally unmerited. The single historical fact, tlie bap- tism of Jesus by John, is not mentioned by the fourth evangelist, wlio is solicitous about tlie mythical adjuncts alone, and these he in reality gives no more simply than tlie synoptical writers, his omis- sion of tlie opening heaven excepted; for the divine speech is not wanting in his narrative, if we read it impartially. In the words, i. 33 : lie that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remain- ing on him, the same is he which ta.ptizeth with the Holy Ghost, we have not only substantially the same purport as, that conveyed by the heavenly voice in tlie synoptical gospels, but also a divine declaration; tlie only difference being, that here John is addressed exclusively, and prior to tlie baptism of Jesus. This difference origi- nated partly in the importance, which the fourth evangelist attached to tlie relation between the Baptist and Jesus, and wliich required that tlie criteria of the messianic individual, as well as tlie proximity of his kingdom, should have been revealed to John at his call to bap- tize ; and it. might be partly suggested by tlie narrative, in 1 Sam. xvi., according to which Samuel, being sent by Jehovah to anoint a king selected from the sons of Jesse, is thus admonished by Je- hovah, on the entrance of David ; Arise and anoint him, for this is he (v. 12.). The descent of the Spirit, which in David's case fol- lows his consecration, is, by the fourth evangelist, made an antece- dent sign of the Messiahsliip of Jesus. 254 THE LIFE OF JESUS. § 52. GELATION OF THE SUPEENATUEAL AT THE BAPTISM OF JESUS TO THE SUPEENATUEAL IN HIS CONCEPTION. AT the commencement of tlilg chapter, we inquired into tlie sub- jective views of Jesus in his reception of John's baptism, or the idea which lie entertained of its relation to his own diameter. We close this discussion with an inquiry into the objective purpose of tlie mir- acles at the baptism of Jesus, or tlie mode in which they were to subserve the manifestation of his niessiahsliip. Tlie common answer to sucli an inquiry is, tliat Jesus was thereby inducted to his public office, and declared to be the Messiah,* i. e. tliat nothing was conferred on him, and that simply tlie char- acter which he already possessed was manifested to others. But, it may be asked, is such an abstraction intended by our narrators? A consecration to an office, effected by divine, co-operation, was ever considered by antiquity as a delegation of divine powers for its fulfil- ment ; hence, in tlie Old Testament, the kings, as soon as they are anointed, arc filled with tlie spirit of God (1 Sam. x. 6, 10, xvi. 13); and in the New Testament also, tlie apostles, before entering on their vocation, are furnished with supernatural gifts (Acts ii.). It may, therefore, be beforehand conjectured, tliat according to tlie original sense of the Gospels, tlie consecration of Jesus at Ills baptism was attended witli a supply of higher powers; and tills is connrmed by an examination of our narratives. For the synoptical writers all state, tliat after the baptism, tlie Spirit led Jesus into tlie wilderness, obviously marking this journey as the first effect of tlie higher prin- ciple infused at his baptism: and in Jolm, tlie words pivsiv err' av- TOV, applied to tlie descending Spirit, seem to intimate, tliat from the time of tlie baptism there was a relation not previously subsist- ing, between tlie irvevfta aywv and Jesus. This interpretation of tlie marvels at the baptism of Jesus, seems in contradiction with tlie narratives of Ills conception. If Jesus, as Matthew and Luke state, was conceived by tlie Holy Gliost; or it, as Jolin propounds, tlie divine -^oyo?, the word, was made flesh in him, from the beginning of his earthly existence; why did he yet need, at his baptism, a special intromission of the n-vev^a ayiov ? Several modern expositors have seen, and sought to solve, tills dif- ficulty. Olshausen's explanation consists in tlie distinction between the potential and the actual; but it is self-contradictory, f Vov if the character of tlie Xp(ffrbc which was manifested actu, with the ripened manhood of Jesus, at his baptism, was already present po- tentia in tlie child and youth; there must have also been an inward principle of development, by means of which his powers would grad- ually unfold themselves from within, instead of being first awakened by a sudden illapse of tlie Spirit from without. Tills, however, does not preclude the possibility tliat tlie divine principle, existing in Je- sus, as supernaturally conceived, from tlie moment ot Ins birth, 255 BAPTISM OF JESUS. might need, owing to the human form of its development, some im- pulse from without; and Luke* has more justly proceeded on this contrast between external impulse and inward development. The /loyo;-, present in Jesus from his birth, needed, he thinks, however strong might be the inward bent, some external stiniulud and vivi- tication, in order to arrive at fall activity and manifestation in the world ; and that which awakens and guides the divine life-germ in the world is, on apostolic sliowing, the Trvevjia ayiov. Allowing this, yet the inward disposition and the requisite force of the outward stimulus stand in an inverse relation to each other; so that the stronger the outward stimulus required, the weaker is the inward disposition; but in a case wliere the inward disposition is consum- mate,-as it must be supposed in Jesus, engendered by the Spirit, or animated by the /toyoc,-the exterior impulse ought to be a mi- nimum, that is, every circumstance, even the most common, might serve as a determination of the inward tendency. But at the bap- tism of Jesus we see the maximum of exterior impulse, in the visi- ble descent of the divine Spirit; and although we allow for the spe- cial nature of the messianic task, for the fulfilment of which he must be qualified,! yet the maximum of inward disposition, which fitted him to be the vl'oq Qeov, cannot at the same time be supposed as existing in him from his birth: a consequence which Lucke only escapes, by reducing tlie baptismal scene to a mere inauguration, thus, as lias been already sliown, contradicting the evangelical re- cords. We must here give a similar decision to that at which we ar- rived concerning tlie genealogies ; viz., that, in that circle of the early Christian church, in which tlie narrative of the descent of tlie "rvevfia on Jesus at his baptism was formed, the idea that Jesus was gener- ated by the same Trvevfta cannot have prevailed; and while, at the present day, the communication of tlie divine nature to Jesus is thouglit of as cotemporary with his conception, those Christians must have regarded his baptism as tlie epoch of such communication. In tact, those primitive Christians whom, in a former discussion, we found to have known nothing, or to have believed nothing, of the supernatural conception of Jesus, were also those wlio connected the first communication of divine powers to Jesus with his baptism in the Jordan. For no other doctrine did tlie orthodox fathers of tlie churcli more fiercely persecute the ancient Ebionites,f with their gnostic fellow-believer Cerinthus,§ than for tills: that the Holy Spirit first united himself with Jesus at Ills baptism. In the gospel • Comm. zum Evang. Joh. 1, S. 378 f. •)- From the orthodox point of view, it can- not be consistently said, with Hotrmann (p. 301), tliat for the conviction of his messiah- Bhip and the maintenance of the right position, amid so many temptations and adverse circumstances, an internally wrought certainty did not suffice Jesus, and external confirma- tion by a fact was requisite, j: Epiphan. lucres xxx. 14 : imtSfj -yap pov^ovrai TOV f^'ev 'liJaovv OVTUC uvi)puirov elvai, XptCTOi' de tv avru }'£~yevfia-3ai. TOV iv elfin •irepiaTspuf (cnm- 8e/3linoTa K. r. /<,.:-They maintain that Jesus was reul'y man, but that that which descended 256 THE LIFE OF JESUS. of the Ebionites it was written that the TrveVfia not only descended on Jesus in the form of a dove, but entered into him ;* and according to Justin, it was the general expectation of the Jews, that higher powers would first be granted to the Messiah, when he should be anointed by his forerunner Elias.f The development of tliese ideas seems to liave been tlic follow- ing. When the messianic dignity of Jesus began to be acknowl- edged among the Jews, it was thought appropriate to connect his coming into possession of the requisite gifts, with the epoch from which he. was in some degree known, and which, from tlie ceremony that marked it, was also best adapted to represent tliat anointing with the Holy Spirit, expected by the Jews for their Messiah: and from flits point of view was formed the legend of the occurrences at the baptism. But as reverence for Jesus was heightened, and men appeared in the Christian church who were acquainted with more exalted messianic ideas, this tardy manifestation of messiahship was no longer sufficient; his relation with the Holy Spirit was referred to his conception: and from this point of view was formed the tra- dition of the supernatural conception of Jesus. Here too, perhaps, the words of tlie heavenly voice, which might originally be tliosc of Ps. ii. 7, were altered after Isaiali xlii. 1. For the words, o'/ifiepov yeyevvrjKa ae, This day have I begotten, thee, were consistent with the notion that Jesus was constituted tlie Son of God at his bap- tism ; but they were no longer suitable to that occasion, when tlie opinion had arisen that tlie origin of his life was an immediate, di- vine act. By this later representation, however, tlie earlier one was by no means supplanted, but on the contrary, tradition and her re- corders being large-hearted, both narratives-tliat of tlie miracles at the baptism, and tliat of tlie supernatural conception, or the indwell- ing of the /loyoc in Jesus from tlie commencement of his life, al- though, strictly, they exclude each other, went forth peaceably side by side, and so were depicted by our evangelists, not excepting even tlie fourth. Just as in the case of the genealogies: the narrative of the imparting of tlie Spirit at the baptism could not arise after the formation of tlie idea that Jesus was engendered by the Spirit; but it might be retained as a supplement, because tradition is ever un- willing to renounce any of its acquired treasures. §. 53. PLACE AND TIME OF THE TEMPTATION OF JESUS-DIVERGEN- CIES OF THE EVANGELISTS ON THIS SUBJECT. THE transition from the baptism to the temptation of Jesus, as it is made by the synoptical writers, is attended with difficulty in relation both to place and time. With respect to the former, it strikes us at once, that according to all the synoptical gospels, Jesus after his baptism was led into "' Epiphan. haeres. xxx. 13 :-vepw-epuf Kare^ouo-:]! Kal elae^Sovaw "'(• avrbv:-of a BAPTISM OP JESUS. 257 the wilderness to be tempted, implying that he was not previously in the wilderness, although, according to Matt. iii. 1, John, by whom he was baptized, exercised his ministry there. This apparent con- tradiction has been exposed by the most recent critic of Matthew's gospel, for tlie sake of proving the statement that John baptized in the wilderness to be erroneous.* But they who cannot resolve to reject this statement on grounds previously laid down, may here avail themselves of tlie supposition, that John delivered his prelimi- nary discourses in tlie wilderness of Judea, but resorted to the Jor- dan for tlie purpose of baptizing; or, if the banks of the Jordan be reckoned part of tliat wilderness, of the presumption that the evan- gelists can only have intended tliat tlie Spirit led Jesus farther into tlic recesses of the wilderness, but have neglected to state tills with precision, because their description of the scene at the baptism had obliterated from their imagination their former designation of the locality of John's agency. But there is, besides, a chronological difficulty: namely that wliile, according to tlie synoptical writers, Jesus, in the plenitude of tlie Spirit, just communicated to him at the Jordan, betakes liimself, in consequence of that communication, for forty days to the wilder- ness, where the temptation occurs, and then returns into Galilee; John, on tlie contrary, is silent concerning tlie temptation, and ap- pears to suppose an interval of a few days only, between the baptism of Jesus and his journey into Galilee; thus allowing no space for a six weeks' residence in the wilderness. The fourth evangelist com- mences his narrative w-ith tlie testimony which the Baptist delivers to the emissaries of tlie Sanhedrim (i. 19.); the next day (r^ ETravpiov\ lie makes the Baptist recite tlie incident which in the synoptical gos- pels is followed by the baptism (v. 29.): again, the next day (rfj erravplov) lie causes two of his disciples to follow Jesus (v. 35); far- ther, the. next day (rfj sTravplov, y. 44), as Jesus is on the point of journeying into Galileo, Pliilip and Nathanael join him; and lastly, on, the thzrd day, rf] fjizepa rij ~piry (ii. 1.), Jesus is at the wedding in Cana of Galilee. The most natural inference, is, tliat the baptism took place immediately before John's narrative of its attendant oc- currences, and as according to the synoptical gospels the temptation followed close on tlie baptism, both tliese events must be inserted between v. 28 and 29, as Euthymius supposed. But between that which _is narrated down to v. 28, and the sequel from v. 29 inclusive, there is only the interval of a morrow, s-^avpwv, while the tempta- tion requires a period of forty days; hence, expositors have thought it necessary to give enavptov the wider sense of va-repov afterwards; this however is inadmissible, because tlie expression Ty iifispa ry Tpiry, the. third day, follows in connexion with Eiravplov, and restricts its meaning to the morrow. We might therefore be inclined, with Kuinol, to separate, tlie baptism and the temptation, to place the baptism after v. 28, and to regard the next day's interview between 258 THE LIFE OF JESUS. Jesus and John (v. 29) as a parting visit from the former to the lat- ter: inserting after this the journey into tlie wilderness and tlie temptation. But without insisting tliat tlie first three evangelists seem not to allow even of a day's interval between the baptism and the departure of Jesus into tlie wilderness, yet even later we liave tlie same difficulty in finding space for tlie forty days. For it is no more possible to place the residence in tlie wilderness between tlie supposed parting visit and tlie direction of the two disciples to Jesus, tliat is, between v. 34 and 35, as Kuinol attempts, tlian between v. 28 and 29, since tlie former as well as tlie latter passages are con- nected by Tfj ETravplov, on the morrow. Hence we must descend to v. 43 and 44; but here also there is only tlie interval of a mor- row, and even cliap. ii. 1, we are shut out by an f]ftKpa Tpiri], third day, so that, proceeding in tills way, tlie temptation would at last be carried to the residence of Jesus in Galilee, in direct opposition to the statement of tlie synoptical writers; wliile, in farther contra- diction to them, tlie temptation is placed at a farther and farther distance from the baptism. Tlius neither at v. 29, nor below it, can the forty days' residence of Jesus in tlie wilderness with the temptation be intercalated ; and it must therefore be referred, accord- ing to the plan of Liicke and others,* to the period before v. 19, whicli seems to allow of as large an interpolation as can be desired, inasmuch as tlie fourth evangelist there commences his liistory. Now it is true tliat wliat follows from v. 19 to 28 is not of a kind absolutely to exclude tlie baptism and temptation of Jesus as earlier occurences; but from v. 29 to 34, tlie evangelist is far from making the Baptist speak as if there liad been an interval of six weeks be- tween tlie baptism and his narrative of its circumstances, f That the fourth evangelist sliould have omitted, by chance merely, the history of tlie temptation, important as it was in tlie view of the other evangelists, seems improbable; it is rather to be concluded, either that it was dogmatically offensive to him, so that lie omitted it designedly, or that it was not current in the circle of tradition from which he drew his materials. The period of forty days is assigned by all tliree of the synopti- cal writers for tlie residence of Jesus in tlie wilderness; but to this agreement is annexed the not inconsiderable discrepancy, tliat, ac- cording to Matthew, tlie temptation by tlie devil commences after the lapse of the forty days, while, according to tlie others, it appears to have been going forward during this time; for the words of Mark (L 13), he was in, the wilderness forty days tempted of Satan, rfV ev rrj eprifzw rfyiEpac; rsaaapdK.ovTa Treipa^ouevoc VTTO rov Sa-ava and the similar ones of Luke i. 2, can have no other meaning. Added to tills, there is a difference between tlie two latter evangelists; Mark only placing tlie temptation generally within tlie duration of forty days, without naming tlie particular acts of the tempter, whicli ac- cording to Matthew, were subsequent to the forty days; while Luke 259 BAPTISM OF JESUS. mentions both the prolonged temptation (neipa^ea9ai\ of tlie forty days, and tlie three special temptations (TTeipaap.ol\ wdiich followed.* It has been thought possible to make tlie three accounts tally by supposing tliat tlie devil tempted Jesus during tlie forty days, as Mark states; that after the lapse of tliat time he approached him with tlie tliree temptations given by Matthew; and tliat Luke's nar- rative. includes tlie whole, f Further, the temptations liave been distinguished into two kinds; tliat wliicli is only generally mentioned, as continued through tlie forty days being considered invisible, like tlie ordinary attempts of Satan against men; and the tliree particu- larized temptations being regarded as personal and visible assaults, resorted to on the failure of tlie first.t But this distinction is evi- dently built on the air; moreover, it is inconceivable why Luke should not specify one of the temptations of the forty days, and sliould only mention tlie tliree subsequent ones detailed by Matthew. We might conjecture that tlie tliree temptations narrated by Luke did not occur after the six weeks, but were given by way of speci- men from among tlie many that took place during tliat time; and that Matthew misunderstood them to be a sequel to the forty days' temptation. § But the challenge to make stones bread must in any case be placed at the end of that period, for it appealed to tlie hun- ger of Jesus, arising from a forty days' fast (a cause omitted by Mark alone.) Now in Luke also this is the first temptation, and if tills occurred at tlie close of the forty days, the others could not liave been earlier. For it is not to be admitted that tlie separate temp- tations being united in Luke merely by KCU, and not by "rd-s and Tfrf/Uy as in Maithew, we are not bound to preserve the order of them, and that witliout violating tlie intention of tlie third evangelist we may place the second and tliird temptation before the first. Thus Luke is convicted of a want of historical tact; for after representing Jesus as tempted by tlie devil forty days, lie lias no details to give concerning this long period, but narrates later temptations; lience we are not inclined, with tlie most recent critic of Matthew's Gos- pel to regard Luke's as tlie original, and Matthew's as the traditional and adulterated narrative. || .Rather, as in Mark the temptation is noticed witliout farther details than that it lasted forty days, and in Mattlicw the particular cases of temptation are narrated, the hunger winch induced tlie first rendering it necessary to place them after tlie forty days; Luke has evidently tlie secondary statement, for lie unites tlie two previous ones in a manner scarcely tolerable, giving tlie forty days' process of temptation, and then su^c'-Huously bring- ing forward particular instances as additional facts. It is not on this account to be concluded tliat Luke wrote after Mark, and in de- pendence on him; but supposing, on the contrary, that Mark here borrowed from Luke, lie extracted only the first and general part of * Compare Fritzsche, Comm. in Marc., S. 23 ; De Wette exeg. Handb., 1, 2, S. 33. + K*llinn1 C'liiTii-ii ;n I >*n C Q^'(t + T ;™*l,p^^<- 1^«.» « oil ff o,.1,^^.,l,^^l,..-.-« JII.A- 260 THE LIFE OP JESUS. the latter evangelist's narrative, having ready, in lieu of the farther detail of single temptations, an addition peculiar to himself; namely, that Jesus, during his residence in the wilderness was perarCiv 6fj- P'MV, with the wild beasts. • What was Mark's object in introducing the wild beasts, it is difficult to say. The majority of expositors are of opinion that he intended to complete the terrible picture of the wilderness ;* but to this it is not without reason objected, that tlie clause would then have been in closer connection with the words ffv ev ry ep'/jfzy, he was in the wilderness, instead of being placed after nsipa^op.evcK;, tempted.^ Ustcri lias hazarded the conjecture that tills particularity may be designed to mark Christ as the antitype of Adam, wlio, in paradise, also stood in a peculiar relation to the animals,^ and Ols- hausen has eagerly laid hold on this mystical notion; but it is an interpretation which finds little support in tlie context. Schleier- macher, in pronouncing this feature of Mark's narrative extrava- gant^ doubtless means tliat tills evangelist here, as in other in- stances of exaggeration, borders on the style of the apocryphal gospels, for whose capricious fictions we are not seldom unable to suggest a cause or an object, and thus we must rest contented, for the present, to penetrate no farther into tlie sense of his statement. With respect to tlie difference between Matthew and Luke in the arrangement of tlie several temptations, we must equally abide by Schleiermachcr's criticism and verdict, namely, that Matthew's order seems to be the original, because it is founded on tlie relative im- portance of tlie temptations, which is tlie main consideration,-the invitation to worship Satan, wliich is the strongest temptation, being made tlie final one; whereas tlie arrangement of Luke looks like a later and not very liappy transposition, proceeding from tlie con- sideration-alien to the original spirit of the narrative,-that Jesus could more readily go with the devil from the wilderness to the ad- jacent mountain and from thence to Jerusalem, than out of the wil- derness to the city and from thence back again to the mountain. [| While tlie first two evangelists close their narrative of tlie tempta- tion with the ministering of angels to Jesus, Luke lias a conclusion peculiar to himself, namely, tliat the devil left Jesus for a season, Sv\f)i. naipov (v. 13.), apparently intimating that tlie sufferings of Je- sus were a farther assault of tlie devil; an idea not resumed by Luke, but alluded to in John xiv. 30. § 54. THE HISTOBY OF THE TEMPTATION CONCEIVED IN THE SENSE OF THE EVANGELISTS. FEW evangelical passages have undergone a more industrious criticism, or m we, completely run through the circle of all possible * Thus Euthymius, Kuinol, and others. \ Fritzsche, in loc. \ Beitrag znr Erklii- flor VB..e,,^h,,r.o-crro«nhi,.ht» in ITIlmBiln'a ami TTmhrpit.'a Stnrlian 18:-t4. 4 8.78!). TEMPTATION OF JESUS. 261 interpretations, than tlie history in question. For the personal ap- pearance of tlie devil, which it seems to contain, was a thorn which would not allow commentators to repose on tlie most obvious inter- pretation, but incessantly urged them to new efforts. The series of explanations licncc resulting, led to critical comparisons, among which tliose of Schmidt,* Fritzsche,f and Usteri,{ seem to have car- ried tlie inquiry to its utmost limits. The first interpretation that suggests itself on an unprejudiced •consideration of tlie text is this ; that Jesus was led by the Divine Spirit received at his baptism, into the wilderness, tliere to undergo a temptation by tlie devil, wlio accordingly appeared to him visibly and personally, and in various ways, and at various places to wliich he was the conductor, prosecuted his purpose of temptation; but meeting with a victorious resistance, lie withdrew from Jesus, and angels appeared to minister to liim. Sucli is the simple exegesis of the narrative, but viewed as a history it is encumbered witli dif- ficulties. To take tlie portions of tlie narrative in their proper order: if the Divine Spirit led Jesus into the wilderness with the design of exposing liim to temptation, as Matthew expressly says, dv^O'i] elg rfjv 'epi]fiov VTTO TOV TivEvftciro^ Treipa.aO'i'jvat (i\-. 1), of what use was this temptation ? Tliat it liad a vicarious and redeeming value will. hardly be maintained, or that it was necessary for God to put Jesus to a trial; neither can it be consistently shown that by this tempta- tion Jesus was to be made like us, and, according to Heb. iv. 15, tempted in all tilings like as we are; for the fullest measure of trial fell to his share in after life, and a temptation, effected by the devil in person, would rather make him unlike us, wlio are spared such appearances. The forty day's fast, too, is singular. One does not understand how Jesus could hunger after six weeks of abstinence from all food, witliout having liungered long before; since in ordinary cases the human frame cannot sustain a week's deprivation of nourishment. It is true, expositors § console themselves by calling the forty days a. round number, and by supposing that tlie expression of Mattliew v'qa- revaag, and even that of Luke, OVK Scfiayev oudw, are not to be taken strictly, and do not denote abstinence from all food, but only from tliat wliich is customary, so that the use of roots and herbs is not excluded. On no supposition, however, can so much be subtracted from the forty days as to leave only tlie duration of a conceivable fast; and tliat nothing short of entire abstinence from all nourish- ment was intended by the evangelists, Fritzsche lias clearly shown, by pointing out the parallel between the fast of Jesus and that of Moses and Elias, the former of wliom is said to liave eaten no bread and drunk no water for forty days (Exod. xxxiv. 28; Deut. ix. 9, * Exegetische Beitrage, 1, S. 277 ff. f Comm. in Matt. S. 172 ff. f In the Essay minted- S. 7fiS- 8 Thni o n. y,,;,,;;l f-- ••- nr-^i. - o- " /- . ~ THE LIFE OF JESUS. 262 18), and tlic latter, to have gone for tlic same period in tlie strength of a meal taken before his journey (1 Kings xix. 8). Bat such a fast wants the credentials of utility, as well as of possibility. From the context it appears, tliat the fast of Jesus wag prompted by tlie same Spirit which occasioned Ills journey to tlie wilderness, and which now moved him to a holy self-discipline, whereby men of God, under tlic old dispensation, purified tliemselves, and became worthy of divine visions. But it could not be hidden from tliat Spirit, tliat Satan, in attacking Jesus, would avail himself of thia very fast, and make tlie hunger thence arising an accomplice in Ins temptation. And was not tlie fast, in tlnis case, a kind of challenge to Satan, an act of presumption, ill becoming even the best war- ranted self-confidence ?* But the personal appearance of tlic devil is the great stumbling- block in tlic present narrative. If, it is said, there be a personal devil, he cannot take a visible form; and if tliat were possible, he would hardly demean himself as lie is represented to have done in tlie gospels. It is with tlie existence of the devil as with tliat of angels-even tlie believers in a revelation are perplexed by it, because the idea did not spring up among tlie recipients of revelation, but was transplanted by them, during exile, from a profane soil.f More- over, to tliosc wlio have not quite shut out tlie lights of tlie present age, the existence of a devil is become in the liiglicst degree doubt- ful. On this subject, as well as on tliat of angels, Schlciermacher may serve as an interpreter of modern opinion. He shows tliat the idea of a being, such as the devil, is an assemblage of contradic- 0' ' 0 tlons: tliat as tlie idea of angels originated in a limited observation of nature, so tliat of tlie devil originated in a limited observation of self, and as our knowledge of human nature progresses, must recede farther into tlic background, and tlie appeal to tlie devil be hence- forth regarded as tlie resource of ignorance and sloth.j; Even ad- mitting the existence of a devil, a visible and personal appearance on his part, sucli as is here supposed, lias its peculiar difficulties. Olsliausen himself observes, that there is no parallel to it cither in the Old or New Testament. Farther, if tlic devil, tliat lie might liave some hope of deceiving Jesus, abandoned his own form, and took that of a man, or of a good angel; it may be reasonably asked whether tlie passage, 2 Cor. xi. 14, Satan is transformed into an angel of light, be intended literally, and if so, whether tills fantastic conception can be substantially true ? § As to tlie temptations, it was early asked by Julian, how the devil could liopc to deceive Jesus, knowing, as lie must, his higher * Usteri, uber den Taiifer Johannes, die Tanfe und Versuchung Christi. In den tlieol. Studieii unit Kritikeu, zweiten Jahrganga (1829) dr'ittcs Heft, S. 4,'iO. De Wette, exeg. Handli., 1, 1, 8. 38. •t" De Wette, Libl. Dogmatik, § 171. Grambcrg, Grundzuge einer EiiRullehre des A. T., § .'">, in Winer's Zeitsclirift f. wissenschaftlk-he Theologie, 1 Bd. S. lu.i r + r.i,>..i,,.^^i^i,,.t, i s ,14. 1;Y di.r zwritin Ausir. S Scliinidt, excg. Beitrage. TEMPTATION OF JESUS. 263 nature ?* And Theodore's answer that the divinity of Jesus was then unknown to the devil, is contradicted by tlie observation, tliat had he not then beheld a higher nature in Jesus, he would scarcely have taken the trouble to appear specially to him in person. In re- lation to the particular temptations, an assent cannot be withheld from llie canon, tliat, to be credible, the narrative must ascribe noth- ing to tlie devil inconsistent with his established cunning. f Now the •first temptation, appealing to hunger, we grant, is not ill-conceived; if this were ineffectual, tlie devil, as an artful tactician, sliould have liad a yet more alluring temptation at hand ; but instead of this, we find him, in Matthew, proposing to Jesus the neck-breaking feat of casting himself down from tlie pinnacle of the temple-a far less inviting experiment tlian the metamorphosis of tlie stones. This proposition finding no acceptance, tliere follows, as a crowning effort, a suggestion which, whatever might be tlie bribe, every true Israelite would instantly reject with abhorrence-to fall down and worship the devil. So indiscreet a clioicc and arrangement, of temptations has thrown most modern commentators into perplexity. ^ As the three temptations took place in three different and distant places, the question occurs: how did Jesus pass witli tlie devil from one to the other ? Even the orthodox hold tliat this cliange of place was effected quite naturally, for they suppose tliat Jesus set out on a journey, and tliat the devil followed him. § But tlie expressions, the devil takes him-sets him, vafsaka.y.ftavs.i.-la-r]cnv avr'ov b Sid/So^of, in Matthew; Hiking, avayaywv, brought, fjyayev, set, MT'TJOEV, in Luke, obviously imply tliat tlie transportation was effected by the devil, and moreover, tlie particular given in Luke, tliat tlie devil showed Jesus all tlie kingdoms of tlie world in a moment of time, points to sometliing magical; so that witliout doubt tlie evangelists intended to convey the idea of magical transportations, as in Acts viii. 29, a power of carrying away, aprrd^eiv, is attributed to the Spirit of the Lord. But it was early found irreconcileable with the dignity of Jesus tliat tlie devil should thus exercise a magical power over him, and carry him about in tlic air : || an idea which seemed extravagant even to those wlio tolerated tlic personal ap- pearance of tlic devil. Tlie incredibility is augmented, when we consider tlie sensation which the appearance of Jesus on the roof of the temple must have excited, even supposing it to be tlie roof of Solomon's Porch only, in wliich case tlie gilded spears on the Holy Place, and tlie prohibition to laymen to tread its roof, would not be an obstacle.^ Tlie well-known question suggested by the last * In a fragment of Theodore of Mopsuestia in Hunter's Fragm. Patr. Graic. Fasc. 1, P. 99 f. \ Paulus. } Hoffinann thinks that the devil, in his second temptation, design- edly chose so startling an example as the leap from the temple roof, the essential aim of the temptation being to induce Jesus to a false use of his miraculous power and conscious- ness of a divine nature. But this evasion leaves the matter where it was, for there is the Baine absurdity in choosing unlit examples as unlit temptations. § Mess, Gesehichte Jesu, 1, 8. 124. || See tlie author of the discourse de jejunio et fentationibus Chrlsli, among Cyp- rian's works. «[ Compare Joseph, b. j. v. v. 6, vi. v. 1. Fritzsche, in Matth., S. Kil. Us THE LIFE OF JESUS. 264 temptation, as to the situation of tlie mountain, from whose summit may be seen all the kingdoms of the world, lias been met Ly the in- formation that KOO|U.OC here means no more than Palestine, and j3ao-(- ^eiac:, its several kingdoms andtetrarchies:* hut this is a scarcely less ludicrous explanation tlian the one that tlie devil showed Jesus all the kingdoms of the world on a map! No answer remains Taut that such a mountain existed only in the ancient idea of the earth as a plain, and in the popular imagination, which can easily stretch a mountain up to heaven, and sharpen an eye to penetrate infinity. Lastly, tlie incident with which our narrative closes, namely, that angels came and ministered to Jesus, is not without difficulty, apart from the above-mentioned doubts as to tlie existence of such beings. For the expression SirjKovovv can signify no other kind of ministering than that of presenting food; and this is proved not only by the context, according to which Jesus liad need of such tendance, but by a comparison of tlie circumstances with 1 Kings xix. 5, where an angel brings food to Elijah. But of the only two possible sup- positions, botli are equally incongruous: that ethereal beings like angels should convey earthly material food, or that the human body of Jesus should be nourished with heavenly substances, if any such exist. § 55. THE TEMPTATION CONSIDERED AS A NATURAL OCCURRENCE EITHER INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL; AND ALSO AS A PARABLE. THE impossibility of conceiving the sudden removals of Jesus to the temple and tlie mountain, led some even of the ancient commen- tators to tlie opinion, that at least tlie locality of the second and third temptations was not present to Jesus corporeally and externally, but merely in a vision ;f wliile some modern ones, to whom tlie personal appearance of the devil was especially offensive, have supposed that the whole transaction with him passed from beginning to end within the recesses of the soul of Jesus. Herewith they have regarded the forty day's fast either as a mere internal representation^ (which, how- ever, is a most inadmissible perversion of tlie plainly historic text: vijaTEvoac; fjfiKpa^ reoaapditovra va~epov wuvaos, Matt. iv. 2), or as a real fact, in which case tlie formidable difficulties mentioned in the preceding section remain valid. The Internal representation of the temptations is by some made to accompany a state of ecstatic vision, for which they retain a supernatural cause, deriving it eitlier from God, or from the kingdom of darkness :§ others ascribe to tlie vision * The one proposed by Kuinol, in Matth., p. GO; the other by Fritzsclie, p. 168. \ Theodore of Mopsuestia, ut sup. p. 107, maintained, afiain^t Julian that the devil had made the imago of a mountain, ijiavTaaiav opouc TOV A.u,8oAov vcTfOi.fjiteva.l, and according to the author of the discourse already cited, de jejunio et tentatiimibus Clirisii, the first temptation it is true passed liicaliter in, deserld, lut Jesus only went ..,.. ..,,n,,>i,en,i him. 265 TEMTATION OF JESUS. more of the nature of a dream, and accordingly seek a natural caixse for it, in the reflections with which Jesus was occupied during his waking moments.* According to this theory, Jesus, in the solemn mood which tlie baptismal scene was calculated to produce, reviews his messianic plan, and together with the true means for its execu- tion, he recals their possible abuses; an excessive use of miracles and a love of domination, by which man, in the Jewish mode of thinking, became, instead of an instrument of God, a promoter of the plans of the devil. While surrendering himself to such medita- tions, his finely organized body is overcome by tlieir exciting in- fluence; he sinks for some time into deep exhaustion, and tlien into a dream-like state, in which his mind unconsciously embodies his previous thoughts in speaking and acting forms. To support tills transference of tlie whole scene to the inward nature of Jesus, commentators tliink tliat they can produce some features of the evangelical narrative itself. The expression of Mat- thew (iv. 1), avr^Q't] £((• -n}v KpfJfwv VTTO TOV IIveiyo.-o?, and still more that of Luke (iv. 1), i/ye-o EV TU HVEV^CITI,, correspond fully to the forms : eyevofi^v ev TrvevfzaTi,, Rev. i. 10, dmjveyns jiie eic; Sprifnov ev •nvevji.ari, xvii. 3, and to similar ones in Ezekiel; and as in these passages inward intuition is alone referred to, neither in the evan- gelical ones, it is said, can any external occurrence be intended. But it has been with reason objected,! that tlie above forms may be adapted eitlier to a real external abduction by the Divine Spirit (as in Acts viii. 39, 2 Kings ii. 16), or to one merely internal and visionary, as in tlie quotation from the Apocalypse, so that between these two possible significations the context must decide ; that in works replete with visions, as are the Apocalypse and Ezekiel, the context indeed pronounces in favour of a merely spiritual occurrence; but in an historical work such as our gospels, of an external one. Dreams, and especially visions, are always expressly announced as such in tlie historical books of the New Testament: supposing, therefore, tliat tlie temptation was a vision, it sliould have been in- troduced by tlie words, elder ev bpup.a.Ti, ev eitdrdaei,, as in Acts ix. 12 ; x. 10 ; or e(}>dvr] avrw KOT map, as in Matt. i. 20; ii. 13. Be- sides, if a dream had been narrated, the transition to a continuation of the real history must have been marked by a (5teyep0e^, being awaked, as in Matt. i. 24; ii, 14, 21 ; whereby, as Paulus truly says, much labour would have been spared to expositors. It is further alleged against the above explanations, that Jesus does not seem to liave been at any other time subject to ecstaeies, and that he nowliere else attaches importance to a dream, or even recapitulates onc.j: To what end God should have excited such a vision in Jesus, it is difficult to conceive, or how the devil should have had power and permission to produce it; especially in Christ. * Paulus, S. 377 ff. f Friteche, in Matth. 155 f. Usteri, Beitrag zur ErkUrung der Versuchuiigsgescliichte, S. 774 f. t Ullmann, tiber die Unsundlichkeit Jesn, in hia Studien, 1, 1, S. 56. Uiiteri, ut sup. S. 775. THE LIFE OF JESUS. 266 The orthodox, too, should not forget that, admitting the temptation to be a dream, resulting from tlie thoughts of Jesus, the false mes- sianic ideas which were a part of those thoughts, are supposed to have had a strong influence on his mind.* If, then, the liistory of tlie temptation is not to be understood as confined to the soul of Jesus, and if we have before shown that it cannot be regarded as supernatural; nothing seems to remain but to view it as a real, yet thoroughly natural, event, and to reduce the tempter to a mere man. After Jolin had drawn attention to Jesus as the Messiah, (thinks tlie author of the Natural History of tlie Prophet of Nazareth,!) the ruling party in Jerusalem commissioned an artful Pharisee to put Jesus to tlie test, and to ascertain whether he really possessed miraculous powers, or whether he might not be drawn into the interest of the priesthood, and be induced to give his countenance to an entcrprize against tlie Romans. This conception of tlie c!ta/3o;loc is in dignified consistency with that of tlie dyye/lot, who appeared after his departure to refresh Jesus, as an approaching caravan with provisions, or as soft reviving breezes.f But this view, as Usteri says, has so long completed its phases in the theological world, that to refute it would be to waste words. If tlie foregoing discussions have proved that the temptation, as narrated by the synoptical evangelists, cannot be conceived cither as an external or internal, a supernatural or natural occurrence, the conclusion is inevitable, tliat it cannot have taken place in the man- ner represented. The least invidious expedient is to suppose that the source of our histories of the temptation was some real event in the life of Jesus, so narrated by him to his disciples as to convey no accurate impression of tlie fact. Tempting thoughts, which intruded them- selves into his soul during his residence in the wilderness, or at various seasons, and under various circumstances, but which were immediately quelled by tlie unimpaired force of his will, were, ac- cording to the oriental mode of thought and expression, represented by him as a temptation of tlie devil; and this figurative narrative was understood literally.§ Tlie most prominent objection to this view, that it compromises tlie impeccability of Jcsus,|| being founded on a dogma, lias no existence for the critic: we can, however, gather from tlie tenor of the evangelical liistory, that tlie practical sense of Jesus was thoroughly clear and just; but this becomes questionable, if he could ever feel an inclination, corresponding to tlie second temp- tation in Matthew, or even if he merely cliose such a form for com- municating a more reasonable temptation to his disciples. Further, in sucli a narrative Jesus would have presented a confused mixture of fiction and truth out of his life, not to be expected from an in- * Uateri, S. 776. \ 1 Bd. 8. 512 ff. f The former in Henke's n. Magazin 4, 2, 8. 852 ; the latter in the naturlichen Geachichte, 1, S. 591 (f. § This view is held by Ull- -T._.. _.,,i yo^nri^,. ]] Schliaennacher, uber den Lukas, Si 51. Usteri, ut sup. S. 267 TEMPTATION OF JESUS. ecnuous teacher, as he otherwise appears to be, especially if it be supposed that the tempting thoughts did not really occur to him after his forty days' sojourn in the wilderness, and that tins parti- cular is only a portion of the fictitious investiture; while if it be assumed, on the contrary, tliat the date is historical, there remains the forty day's fast, one of the most insurmountable difficulties of the narrative. If Jesus wislicd simply to describe a mental exercise in the manner of tlie Jews, wlio, tracing tlie effect to tlie cause, as- cribed evil thoughts to diabolical agency, nothing more was requisite than to say that Satan suggested such and sucli thoughts to his mind; and it was quite superfluous to depict a personal devil and a journey with him, unless, together with the purpose of narration, or in its stead, there existed a poetical and didactic intention. Such an intention, indeed, is attributed to Jesus by tliose who hold tliat the liistory of the temptation was narrated by him as a parable, but understood literally by his disciples. This opinion is not encumbered with the difficulty of making some real inward ex- perience of Jesus tlie basis of tlie history ;* it does not suppose tliat Jesus himself underwent sucli temptations, but only that he sought to secure his disciples from them, by impressing on them, as a com- pendium of messianic and apostolic wisdom, tlie three following maxims: first, to perform no miracle for their own advantage even in the greatest exigency; secondly, never to venture on a chimerical undertaking in the hope of extraordinary divine aid; thirdly, never to enter into fellowship witli tlie wicked, however strong tlie entice- ment.f It was long ago observed, in opposition to tills interpreta- tion, tliat tlie narrative is not easily recognized as a parable, and that its moral is hard to discern.^ With respect to tlie latter ob- jection, it. is true that the second temptation would be an ill-chosen image; but tlie former remark is the more important one. To prove that this narrative lias not the characteristics of a parable, the fol- lowing definition has been recently given: a parable, being essen- tially historical in its form, is only distinguishable from real liistory when its agents are of an obviously fictitious character.S Tills is the case where tlie subjects are mere generalizations, as in tlie para- bles of tlie sower, the king, and others of a like kind; or when they are, indeed, individualized, but so as to be at once recognized as un- historical persons, as mere supports for the drapery of fiction, of which even Lazarus, in tlie parable of tlie rich man, is an example, though distinguished by a name. In neither species of parable is it admissible to introduce as a subject a person corporcally present, and necessarily determinate and historical. Thus Jesus could not make Peter or any other of his disciples the subject of a parable, * If something really experienced by Jesus is supposed as the germ of the parable, this opinion is virtually the same as the preceding. •(• J. E. C. Sehmidt, in seiner Biblio- thek, 1, 1, S. CO f. Schleiermacher, ilber den Lukas, S. 51 f. Usteri, ulier den Taufer Johannes, die Taufe und Versuchung Cfaristi, in den theolog. Studien, 2, 3, S. 456 ff. j: K. Ch. L. Schmidt, exeg. Bcitragc, 1, S. 339. § Hasert, Bumerkungen uber die Ansichten THE LIFE OF JESUS. 268 still less himself, for the reciter of a parable ia pre-eminently present to his auditors; and hence he cannot have delivered the history of the temptation, of which he is the subject, to his disciples as a parable. To assume that the history had originally another subject, for whom oral tradition substituted Jesus, is inadmissible, because the narrative, even as a parable, has no definite significance unless the Messiah be its subject.* If such a parable concerning himself or any other person, could. not have been delivered by Jesus, yet it is possible tliat it was made by some other individual concerning Jesus; and this is tlie view taken by Thelle, who has recently explained the history of the temp- tation as a parabolic'admonition, directed by some partisan of Jesus against the main features of the worldly messianic liope, with the purpose of establisliing the spiritual and moral view of the new economy, f Here is tlie transition to tlie mythical point of view, which the above theologian shuns, partly because tlie narrative is not sufficiently picturesque (though it is so in a high degree); partly because it is too pure (though lie tlius imputes false ideas to the pri- mitive Christians); and partly because tlie formation of the mythus was too near tlie time of Jesus (an objection wliicli must be equally valid against tlie early misconstruction of the parable). If it can be shown, on tlie contrary, tliat tlie narrative in question is formed less out, of instructive thoughts and tlicir poetical clotliing, as is the case with a parable, than out of Old Testament passages and types, we shall not hesitate to designate it a mythus. § 56. THE IIISTOEY OF THE TEMPTATION AS A MYTHUS. SATAN, the evil being and enemy of mankind, borrowed from the Persian religion, was by the Jews, whose exclusiveness limited all that was good and truly human to the Israelitish people, viewed as the special adversary of their nation, and hence as tlie lord. of the heathen states with whom they were in hostility.} The interests of the Jewish people being centred in the Messiah, it followed that Sa- tan was emphatically his adversary; and thus throughout tlie New Testament we find the idea of Jesus as the Messiah associated with that of Satan as the enemy of his person and cause. Christ liaving appeared to destroy the works of the devil (1 John iii. 8), tlie latter seizes every opportunity of sowing tares among the good seed (Matt. xiii. 39), and not only aims, though unsuccessfully, at obtaining tlie mastery over Jesus himself (John xiv. 30), but continually assails the faithful (Eph. vi. 11; 1 Pet. 5. 8). As these attacks of tlie devil on the pious are nothing else than attempts to get them into * Hasert, ut sup. S. 76. •)• Zur Biographic Jesu, § 23. f See Zechar. iii. 1, where Satan resists the liiyh priest standing before the angel of the Lord ; farther Vajikra rabba, f. cli. Cm Bcrthulilt, Cluistol. Jud. p. 183), where, according to Rabbi Jochanan, Jehovah - - - . - • ' - -1 /\00\. TEMPTATION OF JESUS. 269 his power, that is, to entice them to sin; and as this can only be done by tlie indirect suggestion or immediate insinuation of evil, se- ductive thoughts, Satan had the appellation of 6 iTeipci^uv, the. tempter. In the prologue to tlie book of Job, lie seeks to seduce tlie pious man from God, by the instrumentality of a succession of plagues and mis- fortunes : while the ensnaring counsel wliicli tin' serpent gave to the woman was early considered an immediate diabolical suggestion. (Wisdom ii. 24; John viii. 44; Rev. xii. 9.) In the more ancient Hebrew theology, the idea was current that temptation ("isl, LXX. TTEipd^eiv) was an act of God himself, who thus put liis favourites, as Abraham (Gen. xxii. 1), and tlie people of Israel (Exod. xvi. 4, and elsewhere), to the test, or in just anger even instigated men to pernicious deeds. But as soon as the idea of Satan was formed, the office of temptation was transferred to him, and withdrawn from God, with wliose absolute goodness it began to be viewed as incompatible (James i. 13). Hence it is Satan, who by his importunity obtains the divine permission to put Job to the severest trial through suffering; lience David's culpable project of numbering the people, which in the second book of Samuel was traced to the anger of God, is in the later chronicles (1 Chron. xxii. 1) put directly to the account of tlie devil; and even tlie well-meant temptation with which, according to Genesis, God visited Abraham, in requiring from him tlie sacrifice of his son, was in tlie opinion of the later Jews, undertaken by God at the instigation of Satan.* Nor was this enough-scenes were imagined in which the devil per- sonally encountered Abraham on his way to tlie place of sacrifice, and in which lie tempted tlie. people of Israel during the absence of Moses.f If tlie most eminent men of piety in Hebrew antiquity were thus tempted, in the earlier view, by God, in the later one, by Satan, what was more natural than to suppose tliat the Messiah, the Head of all the righteous, the representative and champion of God's people, would be the primary object of tlie assaults of Satan ?{ And we find this actually recorded as a rabbinical opinioii,§ in tlie material mode * See the passages quoted by Fabricius in Cod. pseudepigr. V. T. p. 395., from Gemara Sanhedrin. -|- Tlie same, p. 396. As Abraham went out to sacrifice his son in obedience to Jehovah, antevertit eum Sntanas in via, et tali colloquio cum ipso haUto apro- posito avertere eum ccmatvs est, etc.. Schemoth, K, 41 (ap. Wetstcin in loc. Matth.): Cum. Moses in allum adscenderef, dix-lt Israeli: post dies XL hora sexta redibo. Cum autem XL lilt dies elapsi essenf, venit Satanas, et turbavit mundum, dixitque: vbi est Moses, magister cester? mortuus est. It is worthy of remark that here also the temptation takes place after the lapse of 40 days. -S, Thus Fritzsche, in Matt. p. 173. His very title is striking, V- l°'t : Quod in- vulgar! Judaorum opinions erat,fore, ut Satanas saliitaribus Messim con- suns omni mode, sed sine ejfectu, iamen, nocere studeret, id ipsum Jesu ^{essiw accidif. Nnm quuin is ad exemplum illustrium majorum quadraginta dierum in dcserto loco egisset jejunium, Satanas earn comenit, protervisque afque impiis - - consiliis ad impietatem deducere frust.ra conatus est. ^ Schottgcn, horse, ii. 538, adduces from Fin; Flagellum Judasorum, I". 3», a passage of Pesikta; Ait Satan: Domine, permitte me tentare Messiam et ejus gw.eratwiwm.t Cui inguit Dens: Won hitberes ullam adversus eum poiesialem. Satanas (irym ait: Sine me, quia potestatem kabeo. Respondit Dens: S'i in' hoc dilttius persevr-- raozs, Satan, potius (fe) de munde, perdam quam aliqvam animam pvneraftftnis Messifs perdi 270 THE LIFE OF JESUS. of representation of the later Judaism, under the form of a Irodily appearance and a personal dialogue. If a place were demanded where Satan miglit probably under- take such a temptation of the Messiah, tlie wilderness would present itself from more tlian one quarter. Not only had it been from Azazel (Lev. xvi. 8-10), and Asmodeus (Tobit viii. 3), to the demons ejected by Jesus (Matt. xii. 43), the fearful dwelling-place of tlie in- fernal powers : it was also tlie scene of temptation for tlie people of Israel, th&t filius Dei cullectivus* Added to this, it was tlie habit of Jesus to retire to solitary places for still meditation and prayer (Matt. xiv. 13; Mark i. 35; Luke vi. 12; John vi. 15); to which after Ills consecration to the messianic office he would feel more than usually disposed. It is hence possible that, as some theologians! have supposed, a residence of Jesus in tlie wilderness after his bap- tism (though not one of precisely forty days' duration) served as the historical foundation of our narrative; but even without this con- necting thread, botli the already noticed clioice of place and that of time are to be explained by tlie consideration, that it seemed conso- nant witli tlie destiny of tlie Messiali tliat, like a second Hercules, lie should undergo sucli a trial on his entrance into mature age and tlie messianic office. But wliat liad tlie Messiah to do in tlie wilderness ? That tlie Messiah, tlie second Saviour, should like his typical predecessor, Moses, on Mount Sinai, submit himself to the lioly discipline of fasting, was an idea tlie more inviting, because it furnished a suit- able introduction to the nrst temptation wliicli presupposed extreme hunger. The type of Moses and tliat of Elias (1 Kings xix. 8.), determined also the duration of tills fast in tlie wilderness, for they too liad lasted forty days ; moreover, tlie number forty was lield sa- cred in Hebrew antiquity.:}: Above all, tlie forty days of tlie temp- tation of Jesus seem, as Olshausen justly observes, a miniature image of tlie forty years' trial in tlie wilderness, endured by tlie Israelitish people as a penal emblem of tlie forty days spent by tlie spies in the land of Canaan (Numb. xiv. 34). For, that in the temptations of Jesus there was a special reference to tlie temptation of Israel in tlie wilderness, is shown by tlie circumstance that all the passages cited by Jesus in opposition to Satan are drawn from tlie recapitulatory description of tlie journeyings of tlie Israelites In Dcut. vi. and viii. Tlie apostle Paul too, 1 Cor. x. 6, enumerates a series of particulars from tlie behaviour of tlie Israelites in tlie wilderness, with tlie con- sequent judgments of God, and warns Christians against similar the devil, was not foreign to the circle of Jewish ideas. Although the author of the above quotation represents the demand of Satan to have been denied, others, so soon as the im- agination was once excited, would be sure to allow its completion. * Dent. viii. 2 (I,XX.) the pocple are thus addressed : p'r/cnSy/Ot) nuaav rriv fiSov, {jv syycyf (T£ Ki'pcof; 6 Geo^ aov rovro rsacapaKOvrbv ^ro- 'I? 272 THE LIFE OF JES-JS. The second temptation (in Matthew) was not determined by its relation to the precceding; hence its presentation seems abrupt, and the clioice fortuitous or capricious. This may be true with respect to its form, but its substantial meaning is in close connection with the foregoing temptation, since it also lias reference to tlie conduct of tlie Jewish people in the wilderness. To tliem tlie warning was given in Deut. vi. 16. to tempt God no more as they liad tempted him at Massali; a warning which was reiterated 1 Cor. x. 9. to tlie members of the new covenant, though more in allusion to Numb. xxi. 4. To this crying sin, therefore, under wliicli tlie ancient people of God liad fallen, must tlie Messiah be incited, that by re- sisting the incitement he might compensate, as it were, for the trans- gression of tlie people. Now tlie conduct wliicli was condemned in them as a temptiny of the Lord, eiCTreipd^siv Kvplov, was occasioned by a dearth of water, and consisted in their murmurs at tills depri- vation. This, to later tradition, did not seem fully to correspond to the terms; something more suitable was sought for, and from this point of view there could hardly be a more eligible clioice than tlie one we actually find in our history of tlie temptation, for nothing can be more properly called a tempting of God than so audacious an ap- peal to his extraordinary succour, as that suggested by Satan in his second temptation. The reason why a leap from tlie pinnacle of tlie temple was named as an example of such presumption, is put into the mouth of Satan himself. It occurred to the originator of tills feature in tlie narrative, that the passage Ps. xci. 11. was capable of perversion into a motive for a rash act. It is there promised to one dwelling under the protec- tion of Jehovah, (a designation under wliicli the Messiah was pre- eminently understood,) tliat angels should bear Idm vp in their hands, lest at any time he should dash his foot against a stone. Bearing up in their hands to prevent a. fall, seemed to imply a precipitation from some eminence, and this might induce tlie idea that tlie divinely-protected Messiah might hurl himself from a height with impunity. But from wliat height ? There could be no hesita- tion on this point. To tlie pious man, and therefore to the liead of all the pious, is appropriated, according to Ps. xv. 1; xxiv. 3, the distinction of going up to Jehovah's lioly hill, and standing witliin his holy place: hence tlie pinnacle of tlie temple, in tlie presump- 2. Safanas : Annon fimor fuus^ spcs iua (Job. iv. 6.) ? Abraham: Kecordare qua'so, quis est iizsons, qui perifrif (v. 7.)? 3. Quare, yuum videret Satanus, se mhil projirere, nee A brahamum sibi obedire, cits-it ad ilium: et ad me verbum ftirtim aUatum est (v. -12.), atldwi-pecus J'uturum esse pro hoit>- cat/sfo (Gen. xxii. 7.), non aufew Isancum. Cm resp. Abraham : llac est plena mendacis, ut ttlam cum vera loquitur, jvks ei noa haheaiur. I am far from maintaining that tills rabbinical passage was the model of our history of tlie temptation ; but since it is impossible to prove, on the other side, that such nar- ratives were only imitations of the New Testament ones, the supposed independent for- mation of i.torirs so similar shows plainly enough tlie ease witli which thev sprang out of LOCALITY OF THE PUBLIC LIFE OF JESUS. 273 tuous mode of inference supposed, might be regarded as the height whence the Messiah could precipitate himself unhurt. The third. temptation wliicli Jesus underwent-to worship the devil-is not apparent among the temptations of God's ancient people. But one of the most fatal seductions by which tlie Israelites were led astray in the wilderness was that of idolatry; and the apostle Paul adduces it as admonitory to Christians. Not only is this sin derived immediately from the devil in a passage above quoted ;* but in the later Jewish idea, idolatry was identical with the worship of tlie devil (Baruch iv. 7; 1 Cor. x. 20). How, then, could tlie worship of the devil be suggested to tlie Messiah in the form of a temptation ? The notion of the Messiali as he who, being tlie King of the Jewish people, was destined to be lord of all other nations, and that of Satan as tlie ruler of the heathen worldf to be conquered by the Messiah, were here combined. That dominion over the world which, in tlie christianized imagination of the period, the Messiah was to obtain by a long and painful struggle, was offered him as an easy bargain if he would only pay Satan, the tribute of worship. This temptation Jesus meets with the maxim inculcated on the Israelites, Deut. vi. 13, that God alone is to be worshipped, and thus gives the enemy a final dismissal. Matthew and Mark crown their history of the temptation with the appearance of angels to Jesus, and their refreshing him with nourishment after his long fast and the fatigues of temptation. This incident was prefigured by a similar ministration to Elijah after his forty days' fast, and was brought nearer to tlie imagination by the circumstance that the manna which appeased the hunger of the people in the wilderness was named, ap-oc dv-ysXuv, angels' food. (Ps. Ixxviii. 25. LXX.; Wisdom xvi. 20).f