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			 TEACHING BY ANACHRONISM 
			1 Chronicles 9 
			"And David the king said Who then offereth willingly? And they 
			gave for the service of the house of God ten thousand darics."- 1Ch 
			29:1; 1Ch 29:5; 1Ch 29:7 
			 
			TEACHING by anachronism is a very common and effective form of 
			religious instruction; and Chronicles, as the best Scriptural 
			example of this method, affords a good opportunity for its 
			discussion and illustration. 
			 
			All history is more or less guilty of anachronism; every historian 
			perforce imports some of the ideas and circumstances of his own time 
			into his narratives and pictures of the past: but we may distinguish 
			three degrees of anachronism. Some writers or speakers make little 
			or no attempt at archaeological accuracy; others temper the 
			generally anachronistic character of their compositions by 
			occasional reference to the manners and customs of the period they 
			are describing; and, again, there are a few trained students who 
			succeed in drawing fairly accurate and consistent pictures of 
			ancient life and history. 
			 
			We will briefly consider the last two classes before returning to 
			the first, in which we are chiefly interested. 
			 
			Accurate archaeology is, of course, part of the ideal of the 
			scientific historian. By long and careful study of literature and 
			monuments and by the exercise of a lively and well-trained 
			imagination, the student obtains a vision of ancient societies. 
			Nineveh and Babylon, Thebes and Memphis, rise from their ashes and 
			stand before him in all their former splendor; he walks their 
			streets and mixes with the crowds in the market-place and the throng 
			of worshippers at the temple, each "in his habit as he lived." 
			Rameses and Sennacherib, Ptolemy and Antiochus, all play their 
			proper parts in this drama of his fancy. He cannot only recall their 
			costumes and features: he can even think their thoughts and feel 
			their emotions; he actually lives in the past. In "Marius the 
			Epicurean," in Ebers’s "Uarda," in Maspero’s "Sketches of Assyrian 
			and Egyptian Life," and in other more serious works we have some of 
			the fruits of this enlightened study of antiquity, and are enabled 
			to see the visions at second hand and in some measure to live at 
			once in the present and the past, to illustrate and interpret the 
			one by the other, to measure progress and decay, and to understand 
			the Divine meaning of all history. Our more recent histories and 
			works on life and manners and even our historical romances, 
			especially those of Walter Scott, have rendered a similar service to 
			students of English history. And yet at its very best such 
			realization of the past is imperfect; the gaps in our information 
			are unconsciously filled in from experience, and the ideas of the 
			present always color our reproduction of ancient thought and 
			feeling. The most accurate history is only a rough approximation to 
			exact truth; but, like many other rough approximations, it is exact 
			enough for many important practical purposes. 
			 
			But scholarly familiarity with the past has its drawbacks. The 
			scholar may come to live so much amongst ancient memories that he 
			loses touch with his own present. He may gain large stores of 
			information about ancient Israelite life, and yet not know enough of 
			his own generation to be able to make them sharers of his knowledge. 
			Their living needs and circumstances lie outside his practical 
			experience; he cannot explain the past to them because he does not 
			sympathize with their present; he cannot apply its lessons to 
			difficulties and dangers which he does not understand. 
			 
			Nor is the usefulness of the archaeologist merely limited by his own 
			lack of sympathy and experience. He may have both, and yet find that 
			there are few of his contemporaries who can follow him in his 
			excursions into bygone time. These limitations and drawbacks do not 
			seriously diminish the value of archaeology, but they have to be 
			taken into account in discussing teaching by anachronism, and they 
			have an important bearing on the practical application of 
			archaeological knowledge. We shall return to these points later on. 
			 
			The second degree of anachronism is very common. We are constantly 
			hearing and reading descriptions of Bible scenes and events in which 
			the centuries before and after Christ are most oddly blended. Here 
			and there will be a costume after an ancient monument, a Biblical 
			description of Jewish customs, a few Scriptural phrases; but these 
			are embedded in paragraphs which simply reproduce the social and 
			religious ideas of the nineteenth century. For instance, in a recent 
			work, amidst much display of archaeological knowledge, we have the 
			very modern ideas that Joseph and Mary went up to Bethlehem at the 
			census, because Joseph and perhaps Mary also had property in 
			Bethlehem, and that when Joseph died "he left her a small but 
			independent fortune." Many modern books might be named in which 
			Patriarchs and Apostles hold the language and express the sentiments 
			of the most recent schools of devotional Christianity; and yet an 
			air of historical accuracy is assumed by occasional touches of 
			archaeology. Similarly in mediaeval miracle-plays characters from 
			the Bible appeared in the dress of the period, and uttered a 
			grotesque mixture of Scriptural phrases and vernacular jargon. Much 
			of such work as this may for all practical purposes be classed under 
			the third degree of anachronism. Sometimes, however, the spiritual 
			significance of a passage or an incident turns upon a simple 
			explanation of some ancient custom, so that the archaeological 
			detail makes a clear addition to its interest and instructiveness. 
			But in other cases a little archaeology is a dangerous thing. 
			Scattered fragments of learned information do not enable the reader 
			in any way to revive the buried past; they only remove the whole 
			subject further from his interest and sympathy. He is not reading 
			about his own day, nor does he understand that the events and 
			personages of the narrative ever had anything in common with himself 
			and his experience. The antique garb, the strange custom, the 
			unusual phrase-disguise that real humanity which the reader shares 
			with these ancient worthies. They are no longer men of like passions 
			with himself, and he finds neither warning nor encouragement in 
			their story. He is like a spectator of a drama played by poor actors 
			with a limited stock of properties. The scenery and dresses show 
			that the play does not belong to his own time, but they fail to 
			suggest that it ever belonged to any period. He has a languid 
			interest in the performance as a spectacle, but his feelings are not 
			touched, and he is never carried away by the acting. 
			 
			We have laid so much stress on the drawbacks attaching to a little 
			archaeology because they will emphasize what we have to say about 
			the use of pure anachronism. Our last illustration, however, reminds 
			us that these drawbacks detract but little from the influence of 
			earnest men. If the acting be good, we forget the scenery and 
			costumes; the genius of a great preacher, more than atones for poor 
			archaeology, because, in spite of dress and custom, he makes his 
			hearers feel that the characters of the Bible were instinct with 
			rich and passionate life. We thus arrive at our third degree of pure 
			anachronism. 
			 
			Most people read their Bible without any reference to archaeology. 
			If they dramatize the stories, they do so in terms of their own 
			experience. The characters are dressed like the men and women they 
			know: Nazareth is like their native village, and Jerusalem is like 
			the county town; the conversations are carried on in the English of 
			the Authorized Version. This reading of Scripture is well 
			illustrated by the description in a recent writer of a modern 
			prophet in Tennessee: 
			 
			"There was naught in the scene to suggest to a mind familiar with 
			the facts an Oriental landscape-naught akin to the hills of Judaea. 
			It was essentially of the New World, essentially of the Great Smoky 
			Mountains. Yet ignorance has its license. It never occurred to Teck 
			Jepson that his Bible heroes had lived elsewhere. Their history had 
			to him an intimate personal relation, as of the story of an 
			ancestor, in the homestead ways and closely familiar. He brooded 
			upon these narratives, instinct with dramatic interest, enriched 
			with poetic color, and localized in his robust imagination, till he 
			could trace Hagar’s wild wanderings in the fastnesses, could show 
			where Jacob slept and piled his altar of stones, could distinguish 
			the bush, of all others on the ‘bald,’ that blazed with fire from 
			heaven when the angel of the Lord stood within it. Somehow, even in 
			their grotesque variation, they lost no dignity in their 
			transmission to the modern conditions of his fancy. Did the facts 
			lack significance because it was along the gullied red clay roads of 
			Piomingo Cove that he saw David, the smiling stripling, running and 
			holding high in his hand the bit of cloth cut from Saul’s garments 
			while the king had slept in a cave at the base of Chilhowie 
			Mountain? And how was the splendid miracle of translation 
			discredited because Jepson believed that the chariot of the Lord had 
			rested in scarlet and purple clouds upon the towering summit of 
			Thunderhead, that Elijah might thence ascend into heaven?" 
			 
			Another and more familiar example of "singular alterations in date 
			and circumstances" is the version in "Ivanhoe" of the war between 
			Benjamin and the other tribes:- 
			 
			"How long since in Palestine a deadly feud arose between the tribe 
			of Benjamin and the rest of the Israelitish nation; and how they cut 
			to pieces well-nigh all the chivalry of that tribe; and how they 
			swore by our blessed Lady that they would not permit those who 
			remained to marry in their lineage; and how they became grieved for 
			their vow, and sent to consult his Holiness the Pope how they might 
			be absolved from it; and how, by the advice of the Holy Father, the 
			youth of the tribe of Benjamin carried off from a superb tournament 
			all the ladies who were there present, and thus won them wives 
			without the consent either of their brides or their brides’ 
			families." 
			 
			It is needless to say that the chronicler was not thus hopelessly at 
			sea about the circumstances of ancient Hebrew history; but he wrote 
			in the same simple, straightforward, childlike spirit. Israel had 
			always been the Israel of his own experience, and it never occurred 
			to him that its institutions under the kings had been other than 
			those with which he was familiar. He had no more hesitation in 
			filling up the gaps in the book of Kings from what he saw round 
			about him than a painter would have in putting the white clouds and 
			blue waters of today into a picture of skies and seas a thousand 
			years ago. He attributes to the pious kings of Judah the observance 
			of the ritual of his own times. Their prophets use phrases taken 
			from post-Exilic writings. David is regarded as the author of the 
			existing ecclesiastical system in almost all matters that do not 
			date back to Moses, and especially as the organizer of the familiar 
			music of the Temple. David’s choristers sing the hymns of the second 
			Temple. Amongst the contributions of his nobles towards the building 
			of the Temple, we read of ten thousand darics, the daric being a 
			coin introduced by the Persian king Darius. 
			 
			But we must be careful to recognize that the chronicler writes in 
			perfect good faith. These views of the monarchy were common to all 
			educated and thoughtful men of his time; they were embodied in 
			current tradition, and were probably already to be met with in 
			writing. To charge him with inventing them is absurd; they already 
			existed, and did not need to be invented. He cannot have colored his 
			narrative in the interests of the Temple and the priesthood. When he 
			lived, these interests were guaranteed by ancient custom and by the 
			authoritative sanction of the Pentateuchal Law. The chronicler does 
			not write with the strong feeling of a man who maintains a doubtful 
			cause; there is no hint of any alternative view which needs to be 
			disproved and rejected in favor of his own. He expatiates on his 
			favorite themes with happy, leisurely serenity, and is evidently 
			confident that his treatment of them will meet with general and 
			cordial approval. 
			 
			And doubtless the author of Chronicles "served his own generation by 
			the will of God," and served them in the way he intended. He made 
			the history of the monarchy more real and living to them, and 
			enabled them to understand better that the reforming kings of Judah 
			were loyal servants of Jehovah and had been used by Him for the 
			furtherance of true religion. The pictures drawn by Samuel and Kings 
			of David and the best of his successors would not have enabled the 
			Jews of his time to appreciate these facts. They had no idea of any 
			piety that was not expressed in the current observances of the Law, 
			and Samuel and Kings did not ascribe such observances to the earlier 
			kings of Judah. But the chronicler and his authorities were able to 
			discern in the ancient Scriptures the genuine piety of David and 
			Hezekiah and other kings, and drew what seemed to them the obvious 
			conclusion that these pious kings observed the Law. They then 
			proceeded to rewrite the history in order that the true character of 
			the kings arm their relation to Jehovah might be made intelligible 
			to the people. The only piety which the chronicler could conceive 
			was combined with observance of the Law; naturally therefore it was 
			only thus that he could describe piety. His work would be read with 
			eager interest, and would play a definite and useful part in the 
			religious education of the people. It would bring home to them, as 
			the older histories could not, the abiding presence of Jehovah with 
			Israel and its leaders. Chronicles interpreted history to its own 
			generation by translating older records into the circumstances and 
			ideas of its own time. 
			 
			And in this it remains our example. Chronicles may fall very far 
			short of the ideal and yet be superior to more accurate histories 
			which fail to make themselves intelligible to their own generation. 
			The ideal history no doubt would tell the story with archaeological 
			precision, and then interpret it by modern parallels; the historian 
			would show us what we should actually have seen and heard if we had 
			lived in the period he is describing; he would also help our weak 
			imagination by pointing us to such modern events or persons as best 
			illustrate those ancient times. No doubt Chronicles fails to bring 
			before our eyes an accurate vision of the history of the monarchy; 
			but, as we have said, all history fails somewhat in this respect. It 
			is simply impossible to fulfill the demand for history that shall 
			have the accuracy of an architect’s plans of a house or an 
			astronomer’s diagrams of the orbit of a planet. Chronicles, however, 
			fails more seriously than most history, and on the whole rather more 
			than most commentaries and sermons. 
			 
			But this lack of archaeological accuracy is far less serious than a 
			failure to make it clear that the events of ancient history were as 
			real and as interesting as those of modern times, and that its 
			personages were actual men and women, with a full equipment of body, 
			mind, and soul. There have been many teachers and preachers, 
			innocent of archaeology, who have yet been able to apply Bible 
			narratives with convincing power to the hearts and consciences of 
			their hearers. They may have missed some points and misunderstood 
			others, but they have brought out clearly the main, practical 
			teaching of their subject; and we must not allow amusement at 
			curious anachronisms to blind us to their great gifts in applying 
			ancient history to modern circumstances. For instance, the little 
			captive maid in the story of Naaman has been described by a local 
			preacher as having illuminated texts hung up in her bedroom, and 
			(perambulators not being then in use) as having constructed a 
			go-cart for the baby out of an old tea-chest and four cotton reels. 
			We feel inclined to smile; but, after all, such a picture would make 
			children feel that the captive maid was a girl whom they could 
			understand and might even imitate. A more correct version of the 
			story, told with less human interest, might leave the impression 
			that she was a mere animated doll in a quaint costume, who made 
			impossibly pious remarks. 
			 
			Enlightened and well-informed Christian teachers may still learn 
			something from the example of the chronicler. The uncritical 
			character of his age affords no excuse to them for shutting their 
			eyes to the fuller light which God has given to their generation. 
			But we are reminded that permanently significant stories have their 
			parallels in every age. There are always prodigal sons, and foolish 
			virgins, importunate widows, and good Samaritans. The ancient 
			narratives are interesting as quaint and picturesque stories of 
			former times; but it is our duty as teachers to discover the modern 
			parallels of their eternal meaning: their lessons are often best 
			enforced by telling them afresh as they would have been told if 
			their authors had lived in our time, in other words by a frank use 
			of anachronism. 
			 
			It may be objected that the result in the case of Chronicles is not 
			encouraging. Chronicles is far less interesting than Kings, and far 
			less useful in furnishing materials for the historian. These facts, 
			however, are not inconsistent with the usefulness of the book for 
			its own age. Teaching by anachronism simply seeks to render a 
			service to its own generation; its purpose is didactic, and not 
			historical. How many people read the sermons of eighteenth-century 
			divines? But each generation has a right to this special service. 
			The first duty of the religious teacher is for the men and women 
			that look to him for spiritual help and guidance. He may 
			incidentally produce literary work of permanent value for posterity; 
			but a Church whose ministry sacrificed practical usefulness in the 
			attempt to be learned and literary would be false to its most sacred 
			functions. The noblest self-denial of Christian service may often 
			lie in putting aside all such ambition and devoting the ability 
			which might have made a successful author to making Divine truth 
			intelligible and interesting to the uncultured and the 
			unimaginative. Authors themselves are sometimes led to make a 
			similar sacrifice; they write to help the many today when they might 
			have written to delight men of literary taste in all ages. Few 
			things are so ephemeral as popular religious literature; it is as 
			quickly and entirely forgotten as last year’s sunsets: but it is as 
			necessary and as useful as the sunshine and the clouds, which are 
			being always spent and always renewed. Chronicles is a specimen of 
			this class of literature, and its presence in the canon testifies to 
			the duty of providing a special application of the sacred truths of 
			ancient history for each succeeding generation. 
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