Page:Lives of the apostles of Jesus Christ (1836).djvu/373

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the epistle, may certainly be adopted with great propriety and justice; but in regard to the places of its composition and direction, a different view is much more probable, as well as more consistent with the notion, already presented above, of the date and place of the gospel. It is very reasonable to suppose that the epistle was written some years after John's return to Ephesus,—that it was intended, (along with the gospel, for the churches of Asia generally, to whom John hoped to make an apostolic pastoral visit, shortly,) to confirm them in the faith, as he announces in the conclusion. There is not a single circumstance in gospel or epistle, which should lead any one to believe that they were directed to Ephesus in particular. On the contrary, the total absence of anything like a personal or local direction to the epistle, shows the justice of its common title, that it is a "general epistle," a circular, in short, to all the churches under his special apostolic supervision,—for whose particular dangers, errors and necessities, he had written the gospel just sent forth, and to whom he now minutely commended that work, in the very opening words of his letter, referring as palpably and undeniably to his gospel, as any words can express. "Of that which 'was from the beginning, of the Word,' which I have heard, which I have seen with my eyes, which I have looked upon, which my hands have handled,—of the Word of Life" &c.; particularizing with all the minute verbosity of old age, his exact knowledge of the facts which he gives in his gospel, assuring them thus of the accuracy of his descriptions. The question concerns his reputation for fidelity as a historian; and it is easy to see therefore, why he should labor thus to impress on his readers his important personal advantages for knowing exactly all the facts he treats of, and all the doctrines which he gives at such length in the discourses of Christ. Again and again he says, "I write," and "I have written," recapitulating the sum of the doctrines which he has designed to inculcate; and he particularizes still farther that he has written to all classes and ages, from the oldest to the youngest, intending his gospel for the benefit of all. "I have written to you, fathers,"—"unto you, young men,"—"unto you, little children," &c. What else can this imply, than a dedication of the work concerning "the WORD," to all stations and ages,—to the whole of the Christian communities, to whom he commits and recommends his writings;—as he writes "to the fathers—because they know him who was from the beginning,"—in the same way