Pastor Pastorum; Or, The Schooling of the Apostles by Our Lord

CHAPTER IV. OUR LORD’S USE OF SIGNS.

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It has been already observed that there is one feature of our Lord’s way of revealing truths to men which distinguishes Him from all teachers before or since. This is the use of Signs.

Miracles may have been attributed to those who have promulgated creeds at various times, but these miracles did not form a constituent part of the teaching; they were not blended with it as those of our Lord were. They are introduced only to serve for credentials, so that an appeal to them may silence incredulity; they convey no lesson, they only serve for proof. I hope to shew that it was otherwise with the signs wrought by Christ.

My especial concern in this chapter is not with the nature or the credibility of miracles in general, but only with the purposes for which Christ introduced them; and with the questions of how far they were performed with a view to draw men to listen and to set forth God’s kingdom, and how far for the purpose of working conviction. In the first