The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Leviticus

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Leviticus by S H Kellogg, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: S H Kellogg ISBN: 9781465578419
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: S H Kellogg
ISBN: 9781465578419
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

Perhaps no book in the Bible presents to the ordinary reader so many and peculiar difficulties as the book of Leviticus. Even of those who devoutly believe, as they were taught in their childhood, that, like all the other books contained in the Holy Scriptures, it is to be received throughout with unquestioning faith as the very Word of God, a large number will frankly own in a discouraged way that this is with them merely a matter of belief, which their personal experience in reading the book has for the most part failed to sustain; and that for them so to see through symbol and ritual as to get much spiritual profit from such reading has been quite impossible. A larger class, while by no means denying or doubting the original Divine authority of this book, yet suppose that the elaborate ritual of the Levitical law, with its multiplied, minute prescriptions regarding matters religious and secular, since the Mosaic dispensation has now long passed away, neither has nor can have any living relation to present-day questions of Christian belief and practice; and so, under this impression, they very naturally trouble themselves little with a book which, if they are right, can now only be of special interest to the religious antiquarian. Others, again, while sharing this feeling, also confess to a great difficulty which they feel in believing that many of the commands of this law can ever have been really given by inspiration from God. The extreme severity of some of the laws, and what seems to them to be the arbitrary and even puerile character of other prescriptions, appear to them to be irreconcilable, in the one case, with the mercy, in the other, with the dignity and majesty, of the Divine Being.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Perhaps no book in the Bible presents to the ordinary reader so many and peculiar difficulties as the book of Leviticus. Even of those who devoutly believe, as they were taught in their childhood, that, like all the other books contained in the Holy Scriptures, it is to be received throughout with unquestioning faith as the very Word of God, a large number will frankly own in a discouraged way that this is with them merely a matter of belief, which their personal experience in reading the book has for the most part failed to sustain; and that for them so to see through symbol and ritual as to get much spiritual profit from such reading has been quite impossible. A larger class, while by no means denying or doubting the original Divine authority of this book, yet suppose that the elaborate ritual of the Levitical law, with its multiplied, minute prescriptions regarding matters religious and secular, since the Mosaic dispensation has now long passed away, neither has nor can have any living relation to present-day questions of Christian belief and practice; and so, under this impression, they very naturally trouble themselves little with a book which, if they are right, can now only be of special interest to the religious antiquarian. Others, again, while sharing this feeling, also confess to a great difficulty which they feel in believing that many of the commands of this law can ever have been really given by inspiration from God. The extreme severity of some of the laws, and what seems to them to be the arbitrary and even puerile character of other prescriptions, appear to them to be irreconcilable, in the one case, with the mercy, in the other, with the dignity and majesty, of the Divine Being.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Cliges: A Romance by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Life in Morocco and Glimpses Beyond by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book False Evidence by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Adapa's Treatise on Sumerian Religion by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book My Double Life: The Memoirs of Sarah Bernhardt by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Parlous Times: A Novel of Modern Diplomacy by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Our Caughnawagas in Egypt: A Narrative of what was seen and Accomplished by the Contingent of North American Indian Voyageurs who led the British Boat Expedition for the Relief of Khartoum up the Cataracts of the Nile by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Western Scenes and Reminiscences: Together with Thrilling Legends and Traditions of the Red Men of the Forest by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book The Big Drum: A Comedy in Four Acts by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Philosophical Transactions on the Magnetizing Power of the More Refrangible Solar Rays and other Biographical Sketches of Mary Fairfax Somerville by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book La Gaviota: A Spanish Novel by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Dahcotah by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book The History and Romance of Crime: Oriental Prisons From the Earliest Times to the Present Day by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book Velazquez by S H Kellogg
Cover of the book The Wire Pullers by S H Kellogg
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy