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Philip Mauro
Life in the Word (1918)

 

VII.

THE BIBLE IS A DISCERNER OF HEARTS.

T HE power of discernment belongs only to an intelligent living being; and the power of discernment possessed by man does not go beneath the surface of things. Yet the passage in Hebrews, already quoted (iv. 12), asserts that the Word of GOD is a "discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart."

      This is a very remarkable statement, yet it is true, and millions of men have felt and recognized the searching and discerning power of the Word of GOD. We go to it not so much to learn the thoughts of other men, as to learn our own thoughts. We go to other books to find what was in the hearts and minds of their authors; but we go to this Book to find what is in our own hearts and minds. To one who reads it with ever so little spiritual intelligence, there comes a perception of the fact that this Book understands and knows all about him. It lays bare the deepest secrets of his heart, and brings to the surface of his consciousness, out of the unfathomable depths [53] and unexplorable recesses of his own being, "thoughts and intents" whose existence was unsuspected. It reveals man to himself in a way difficult to describe, and absolutely peculiar to itself. It Is a faithful mirror which reflects us exactly as we are. It detects our motives, discerns our needs; and having truthfully discovered to us our real selves, it counsels, reproves, exhorts, guides, refreshes, strengthens, and illuminates.

      It has been pointed out that the Greek word rendered "discerner" in Heb. iv. 12, means literally "critic" (kritikos), and that this is its only occurrence in Scripture. How very significant is it that the designation "higher critics" has been assumed by that little coterie of presumptuous men who claim to be able, by their own powers of literary discernment, to assign the dates of production of books and parts of books of Scripture, to detect spurious passages, alleged interpolations, and the like, and to split up books into fragments, assigning bits to one imaginary author and other bits to another; whereas it is the Bible that is the "Critic" of men.

      This is in keeping with the subversive principles of this present evil age, wherein man is seeking to put himself in the place of GOD. This is "man's day." Man is now the critic of everything, and particularly of GOD'S Word. Of that he is a "higher critic." [54]

      There is, however, no external evidence to support the higher critical views as to the late origin of the Pentateuch, Daniel, the latter part of Isaiah, etc. Per contra every pertinent discovery in the ruins of ancient cities corroborates the statements of Scripture. These theories rest entirely upon the alleged intuitive perceptions of sinful men, compassed about by infirmity, who claim to be able to pass infallibly upon the style and contents of each book of the Bible, to decide when it was written, by whom it could not have been written, and even to divide it up into various portions, assigning each to a different "source."

      But high scholarship is not incompatible with belief in the full inspiration and accuracy of Scripture. Dean Burgon, one of the famous scholars of Oxford, says:

      "I must be content with repudiating, in the most unqualified way, the notion that a mistake of any kind whatever is consistent with the texture of a narrative, inspired by the HOLY SPIRIT OF GOD.

      "The Bible is none other but the Word of GOD, not some part of it more and some part of it less so, but all alike the utterance of Him that sitteth upon the throne, absolute, faultless, unerring, supreme. 'The witness of GOD which He hath testified of His SON.'"

      The time is at hand when the haughtiness of man shall be brought low, and the LORD alone shall [55] be exalted in that day. Then the Word of GOD shall judge the critics.

      Meanwhile the living Word shall continue to be the discerning companion of all who resort to it for the help which is not to be had elsewhere in this world of the dying. In going to the Bible we never think of ourselves as going back to a Book of the distant past, to a thing of antiquity; but we go to it as to a Book of the present--a living Book. And so indeed it is, living in the power of an endless life, and able to build us up and to give us an inheritance among all them that are sanctified (Acts xx. 32). [56]

 

[LIWE 53-56]


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Philip Mauro
Life in the Word (1918)