(cause to sin) one of these little ones,”—Go
out into the high ways and
compel (urge) them
to come in,”—Only let your
conversation
(habitual conduct or course of life) be as becometh
the Gospel,”—They that seek me
early
(earnestly) shall find me,—Give me
by
and by (now) in a charger, the head of John the
Baptist,”—So when tribulation or
persecution ariseth
by-and-by (immediately)
they are offended. Nothing is more mutable than
language. Words, like bodies, are continually
throwing off particles and absorbing others. So
long as they are mere
representatives, elected
by the whims of universal suffrage, their meaning
will be a perfect volatile, and to cork it up for the
next century is an employment sufficiently silly,
(to speak within bounds,) for a modern Bible dictionary
maker. There never was a shallower conceit than
that of establishing the sense attached to a word centuries
ago, by showing what it means
now. Pity
that hyper-fashionable mantuamakers and milliners
were not a little quicker at taking hints from some
of our Doctors of Divinity. How easily they could
save their pious customers all qualms of conscience
about the weekly shiftings of fashion, by demonstrating
that the last importation of Parisian indecency, just
now flaunting here on promenade, was the identical
style of dress in which the pious Sarah kneaded cakes
for the angels, the modest Rebecca drew water for
the camels of Abraham’s servants. Since
such fashions are rife in Chestnut-street and Broadway
now, they
must have been in Canaan and
Pandanaram four thousand years ago!
II. 1. The inference that the word buy, used
to describe the procuring of servants, means procuring
them as chattels, seems based upon the fallacy—that
whatever costs money is money; that whatever
or whoever you pay money for, is an article
of property, and the fact of your paying for it proves
that it is property. The children of Israel were
required to purchase their first-born out from
under the obligations of the priesthood, Numb. xviii.
15, 16; Exod. xxxiv. 20. This custom is kept
up to this day among the Jews, and the word buy
is still used to describe the transaction. Does
this prove that their first-born were, or are, held
as property? They were bought as really
as were servants. So the Israelites were
required to pay money for their own souls.
This is called sometimes a ransom, sometimes an atonement.
Were their souls therefore marketable commodities?
2. Bible saints bought their wives.
Boaz bought Ruth. “So Ruth the Moabitess,
the wife of Mahlon, have I purchased to be my
wife.” Ruth iv. 10. Hosea bought his
wife. “So I bought her to me for
fifteen pieces of silver, and for an homer of barley,
and an half homer of barley.” Hosea iii.
2. Jacob bought his wives Rachel and Leah,