Primitive Christian Worship eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Primitive Christian Worship.

Primitive Christian Worship eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Primitive Christian Worship.
his mind.  In the midst indeed of his brief precepts of religious and moral obligation, he directs the Christian to seek out every day “the persons of the saints,” but they are our fellow-believers on earth; those saints or holy ones, for administering to whose necessities, the Scripture assures us that God will not forget our work and labour of love [Heb. vi. 10.]:  these the author bids the Christians {75} search out daily, for the purposes of religious intercourse, and of encouragement by the word.

    [Footnote 22:  Archbishop Wake considers this Epistle to have
    been written by St. Barnabas to the Jews, soon after the
    destruction of Jerusalem.]

The following interesting extracts shall conclude our reference to this work:—­

“There are two ways of doctrine and authority, one of light, the other of darkness; and the difference between the two ways is great.  Over the one are appointed angels of God, conductors of the light; over the other, angels of Satan:  and the one (God) is Lord from everlasting to everlasting; the other (Satan) is ruler of the age of iniquity.  The way of light is this ...  Thou shalt love Him that made thee; thou shalt glorify Him that redeemed thee from death.  Thou shalt be single in heart, and rich in spirit.  Thou shalt not join thyself to those who are walking in the path of death.  Thou shalt hate to do what is displeasing to God; thou shalt hate all hypocrisy.  Thou shalt entertain no evil counsel against thy neighbour.  Thou shalt not take away thy hand from thy son or thy daughter, but shalt teach them the fear of the Lord from their youth.  Thou shalt communicate with thy neighbour in all things, and call not things thine own.  Thou shalt not be of a froward tongue, for the mouth is the snare of death.  To the very utmost of thy power keep thy soul chaste.  Do not open thine hand to receive, and close it against giving.  Thou shalt love as the apple of thine eye every one who speaketh to thee the word of the Lord.  Call to remembrance the day of judgment, night and day.  Thou shalt search out every day the persons of the saints [23]; both meditating by the word, {76} and proceeding to exhort them, and anxiously caring to save a soul by the word.  Thou shalt preserve what thou hast received, neither adding thereto, nor taking therefrom.  Thou shalt not come with a bad conscience to thy prayer.”

[Footnote 23:  There is much obscurity in the phraseology of this passage:  [Greek:  ekzaetaeseis kath hekastaen haemeran ta prosopa ton hagion kai dia logou skopion kai poreuomenos eis to parakalesai, kai meleton eis sosai psuchaen to logo].  In the corresponding exhortation among the Apostolical Constitutions (book vii. ch. 9), the expression is, “Thou shalt seek the person ([Greek:  prosopon]) of the saints, that thou mayest find rest (or find refreshment, or refresh thyself) ([Greek:  in epanapanae tois logois auton]) in their words.”  The author seems evidently
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Primitive Christian Worship from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.