The Teaching of Jesus
Whosoever goeth onward and abideth not in the teaching of Christ, hath not God: he that abideth in the teaching, the same hath both the Father and the Son. --2 JOHN IX (R.V.).
The following chapters are the outcome of an attempt to set before a large Sunday evening congregation--composed for the most part of working men and women--the teaching of our Lord on certain great selected themes. The reader will know, therefore, what to look for in these pages. If he be a trained Biblical scholar he need go no further, for he will find nothing here with which he is not already thoroughly familiar. On the other hand, the book will not be wholly without value even to some of my brother-ministers if it serve to convince them that a man may preach freely on the greatest themes of the gospel, and yet be sure that the common people will hear him gladly, if only he will state his message at once seriously and simply, and with the glow that comes of personal conviction. Indeed, one may well doubt if there is any other kind of preaching that they really care for.
My indebtedness to other workers in the same field is manifold. As far as possible detailed acknowledgement is made in the footnotes. Wendt's Teaching of Jesus and Beyschlag's New Testament Theology have been always at my elbow, though not nearly in such continual use as Stevens' Theology of the New Testament , a work of which it is impossible to speak too highly. Brace's Kingdom of God , Stalker's Christology of Jesus , Harnack's What is Christianity? Horton's Teaching of Jesus , Watson's Mind of the Master , Selby's Ministry of the Lord Jesus , and Robertson's Our Lord's Teaching (a truly marvellous sixpenny worth), have all been laid under contribution, not the less freely because I have been compelled to dissent from some of their conclusions. Like many another busy minister, I am a daily debtor to Dr. Hastings and his great Dictionary of the Bible . And, finally, I gladly avail myself of this opportunity of expressing once more my unceasing obligations to the Rev. Professor James Denney, of Glasgow. Now that Dr. Dale has gone from us, there is no one to whom we may more confidently look for a reasonable evangelical theology which can be both verified and preached.
George Jackson
THE TEACHING OF JESUS
REV. GEORGE JACKSON, B.A.
PREFACE
CONTENTS
I
INTRODUCTORY
I
II
II
CONCERNING GOD
I
II
III
III
CONCERNING HIMSELF
I
II
IV
CONCERNING HIS OWN DEATH
I
II
III
IV
CONCERNING THE HOLY SPIRIT
I
II
CONCERNING THE KINGDOM OF GOD
I
II
CONCERNING MAN
I
II
CONCERNING SIN
I
II
CONCERNING RIGHTEOUSNESS
I
II
III
CONCERNING PRAYER
I
II
III
IV
CONCERNING THE FORGIVENESS OF INJURIES
I
II
III
CONCERNING CARE
I
II
III
CONCERNING MONEY
I
II
III
CONCERNING THE SECOND ADVENT
I
II
CONCERNING THE JUDGMENT
I
II
CONCERNING THE FUTURE LIFE
I
II