and himself an attendant upon one of the most eminent
of that number. The received author of the third
was a stated companion and fellow-traveller of the
most active of all the teachers of the religion, and,
in the course of his travels, frequently in the society
of the original apostles. The received author
of the fourth, as well as of the first, was one of
these apostles. No stronger evidence of the truth
of a history can arise from the situation of the historian
than what is here offered. The authors of all
the histories lived at the time and upon the spot.
The authors of two of the histories were present at
many of the scenes which they describe; eye-witnesses
of the facts, ear-witnesses of the discourses; writing
from personal knowledge and recollection; and, what
strengthens their testimony, writing upon a subject
in which their minds were deeply engaged, and in which,
as they must have been very frequently repeating the
accounts to others, the passages of the history would
be kept continually alive in their memory. Whoever
reads the Gospels (and they ought to be read for this
particular purpose) will find in them not merely a
general affirmation of miraculous powers, but detailed
circumstantial accounts of miracles, with specifications
of time, place, and persons; and these accounts many
and various. In the Gospels, therefore, which
bear the names of Matthew and John, these narratives,
if they really proceeded from these men, must either
be true as far as the fidelity of human recollection
is usually to be depended upon, that is, must be true
in substance and in their principal parts, (which
is sufficient for the purpose of proving a supernatural
agency,) or they must be wilful and mediated falsehoods.
Yet the writers who fabricated and uttered these falsehoods,
if they be such, are of the number of those who, unless
the whole contexture of the Christian story be a dream,
sacrificed their ease and safety in the cause, and
for a purpose the most inconsistent that is possible
with dishonest intentions. They were villains
for no end but to teach honesty, and martyrs without
the least prospect of honour or advantage.
The Gospels which bear the names of Mark and Luke,
although not the narratives of eye-witnesses, are,
if genuine, removed from that only by one degree.
They are the narratives of contemporary writers, or
writers themselves mixing with the business; one of
the two probably living in the place which was the
principal scene of action; both living in habits of
society and correspondence with those who had been
present at the transactions which they relate.
The latter of them accordingly tells us (and with
apparent sincerity, because he tells it without pretending
to personal knowledge, and without claiming for his
work greater authority than belonged to it) that the
things which were believed amount Christians came
from those who from the beginning were eye-witnesses
and ministers of the word; that he had traced accounts
up to their source; and that he was prepared to instruct
his reader in the certainty of the things which he
related.* Very few histories lie so close to their
facts; very few historians are so nearly connected
with the subject of their narrative, or possess such
means of authentic information, as these.