The Ancient Church eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 775 pages of information about The Ancient Church.

The Ancient Church eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 775 pages of information about The Ancient Church.
in a variety of instances, he does not trace the line of succession, he takes care, in others, to mention the father and many of his sons. [44:1] The Jewish notion current in the time of our Lord as to the existence of seventy heathen nations, seems, therefore, to have rested on a sound historical basis, inasmuch as, according to the Mosaic statement, there were, beside Peleg, precisely seventy individuals by whom “the nations were divided in the earth after the flood.”  We may thus infer that our Lord meant to convey a great moral lesson by the appointment alike of the Twelve and of the Seventy.  In the ordination of the Twelve He evinced His regard for all the tribes of Israel; in the ordination of the Seventy He intimated that His Gospel was designed for all the nations of the earth.  When the Twelve were about to enter on their first mission He required them to go only to the Jews, but He sent forth the Seventy “two and two before His face into every city and place whither He himself would come.” [45:1] Towards the commencement of His public career, He had induced many of the Samaritans to believe on Him, [45:2] whilst at a subsequent period His ministry had been blessed to Gentiles in the coasts of Tyre and Sidon; [45:3] and there is no evidence that in the missionary journey which He contemplated when He appointed the Seventy as His pioneers, He intended to confine His labours to His kinsmen of the seed of Abraham.  It is highly probable that the Seventy were actually sent forth from Samaria, [45:4] and the instructions given them apparently suggest that, in the circuit now assigned to them, they were to visit certain districts lying north of Galilee of the Gentiles. [45:5] The personal ministry of our Lord had respect primarily and specially to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, [45:6] but His conduct in this case symbolically indicated the catholic character of His religion.  He evinced His regard for the Jews by sending no less than twelve apostles to that one nation, but He did not Himself refuse to minister either to Samaritans or Gentiles; and to shew that He was disposed to make provision for the general diffusion of His word, He “appointed other seventy also, and sent them two and two before His face into every city and place whither He himself would come.”

It is very clear that our Lord committed, in the first instance, to the Twelve the organisation of the ecclesiastical commonwealth.  The most ancient Christian Church, that of the metropolis of Palestine, was modelled under their superintendence; and the earliest converts gathered into it, after His ascension, were the fruits of their ministry.  Hence, in the Apocalypse, the wall of the “holy Jerusalem” is said to have “twelve foundations, and in them the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.” [46:1] But it does not follow that others had no share in founding the spiritual structure.  The Seventy also received a commission from Christ, and we have

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The Ancient Church from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.