THE following Synopsis was originally written and published in French, at
the desire and more immediately for the use of Christians speaking that
language. It has been already translated into English, and introduced, Book
by Book, into a religious publication appearing from time to time. It has
been thought desirable to give it as a whole.
The Synopsis of the Book of Genesis, which was felt to be too brief, has
been considerably enlarged; and the whole revised and corrected, but
without any material change.
In the original publication of the review of that part of Leviticus which
treats of the sacrifices which prefigured that of Christ, had been omitted,
as such a review had been already published long ago in "Notes on the
Offerings," and more fully in French in "Les Types du Levitique," since
then translated into English also. To complete the Synopsis now published,
this last tract has been, after revisal, introduced into the present work,
of which it naturally formed a part.
A few words only are needed to introduce the reader to the present
publication. He is not to expect a commentary, nor, on the other hand, to
suppose that he has a book which he can read without referring continually
to the word itself in the part treated of. The object of the book is to
help a Christian, desirous of reading the word of God with profit, in
seizing the scope and connection of that which it contains. God has given
to the commentator to understand in the main the intention of the Spirit of
God, or to furnish philological principles and information, which
facilitate to another the discovery of that intention; yet if it pretend to
give the contents of scripture, or if he who uses it seeks these in its
remarks, such commentary can only mislead and impoverish the soul. A
commentary, even if always right, can at most give what the commentator has
himself learned from the passage. The fullest and wisest must be very far
indeed from the living fullness of the divine word. The Synopsis now
presented has no pretension of the kind. Deeply convinced of the divine
inspiration of the scriptures, given to us of God, and confirmed in this
conviction by daily and growing discoveries of their fullness, depth, and
perfectness; ever more sensible, through grace, of the admirable perfection
of the parts, and the wonderful connection of the whole, the writer only
hopes to help the reader in the study of them.
The scriptures have a living source, and living power has pervaded their
composition: hence their infiniteness of bearing, and the impossibility of
separating any one part from its connection with the whole, because one God
is the living centre from which all flows; one Christ, the living centre
round which all its truth circles, and to which it refers, though in
various glory; and one Spirit, the divine sap which carries its power from
its source in God to the minutest branches of the all-united truth,
testifying of the glory, the grace, and the truth of Him whom God sets
forth as the object and centre and head of all that is in connection with
Himself, of Him who is, withal, God over all, blessed for evermore.
To give all this as a whole and perfectly would require the Giver Himself.
Even in learning it, we know in part, and we prophesy in part. The
more-beginning from the utmost leaves and branches of this revelation of
the mind of God, by which we have been reached when far from Him-we have
traced it up towards its centre, and thence looked down again towards its
extent and diversity, the more we learn its infiniteness and our own
feebleness of apprehension. We learn, blessed be God, this, that the love
which is its source is found in unmingled perfectness and fullest display
in those manifestations of it which have reached us even in our ruined
state. The same perfect God of love is in it all. But the unfoldings of
divine wisdom in the counsels in which God has dis-
played Himself remain ever to us a subject of research in which every new
discovery, by increasing our spiritual intelligence, makes the infiniteness
of the whole, and the way in which it surpasses all our thoughts, only more
and more clear to us. But there are great leading principles and truths,
the pointing out of which in the various books which compose the
scriptures, may assist in the intelligence of the various parts of
scripture. It is attempted to do this here. What the reader is to expect,
consequently, in this Synopsis, is nothing more than an attempt to help him
in studying scripture for himself. All that would turn him aside from this
would be mischievous to him; what helps him in it may be useful. He cannot
even profit much by the following pages otherwise than in using them as an
accompaniment to the study of the text itself.
From what has been said it will easily be understood that the writer can
readily feel the imperfection of what he has written. Often he would have
liked to have introduced the developments which he has enjoyed, when
unfolding, particular passages in detail and applying them to the hearts
and consciences of others; but this would have turned him aside from the
object of the work. He trusts, however, that the right direction is given
to the scriptural researches of the reader: grace alone can make those
researches effectual.
He cannot close this short introduction to the book without expressing the
effect which the discovery of the perfectness and divinely ordered
connection of the scriptures produces in his mind as respects what is
called Rationalism. Nothing is proved by the system so denominated but the
total absence of all divine intelligence, a poverty associated with
intellectual pretension, an absence of moral judgment, a pettiness of
observation on what is external, with a blindness to divine and infinite
fullness in the substance, which would be contemptible through its false
pretensions, if it were not a subject of pity, because of those in whom
these pretensions are found. None but God can deliver from the pride of
human pretension. But the haughtiness which excludes God, because it is
incompetent to discover Him, and then talks of His work, and meddles with
His weapons, according to the measure of its own strength, can prove
nothing but its own contemptible folly. Ignorance is generally confident,
because it is ignorant; and such is the mind of man in dealing with the
things of God. The writer must be forgiven for speaking plainly in these
days on this point. The pretensions of infidel reason infect even
Christians.
He would add that it has not been his object to unfold the blessed fruits
the word produces in the mind and ways of him who receives it, nor the
feelings produced in his own mind in reading it, but to help the reader in
the discovery of that which has produced them. May the Lord only make the
word as divinely precious to him as it has been to the writer; to both ever
still more so!