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			 TEACHING BY TYPES 
			A MORE serious charge has been brought against Chronicles than 
			that dealt with in the last chapter. Besides anachronisms, 
			additions, and alterations, the chronicler has made omissions that 
			give an entirely new complexion to the history. He omits, for 
			instance, almost everything that detracts from the character and 
			achievements of David and Solomon; he almost entirely ignores the 
			reigns of Saul and Ishbosheth, and of all the northern kings. These 
			facts are obvious to the most casual reader, and a moment’s 
			reflection shows that David as we should know him if we had only 
			Chronicles is entirely different from the historical David of Samuel 
			and Kings. The latter David has noble qualities, but displays great 
			weakness and falls into grievous sin; the David of Chronicles is 
			almost always a hero and a blameless saint. 
			 
			All this is unquestionably true, and yet the purpose and spirit of 
			Chronicles are honest and praiseworthy. Our judgment must be 
			governed by the relation which the chronicler intended his work to 
			sustain towards the older history. Did he hope that Samuel and Kings 
			would be altogether superseded by this new version of the history of 
			the monarchy, and so eventually be suppressed and forgotten? There 
			were precedents that might have encouraged such a hope. The 
			Pentateuch and the books from Joshua to Kings derived their material 
			from older works; but the older works were superseded by these 
			books, and entirely disappeared. The circumstances, however, were 
			different when the chronicler wrote: Samuel and Kings had been 
			established for centuries. Moreover, the Jewish community in Babylon 
			still exercised great influence over the Palestinian Jews. Copies of 
			Samuel and Kings must have been preserved at Babylon, and their 
			possessors could not be eager to destroy them, and then to incur the 
			expense of replacing them by copies of a history written at 
			Jerusalem from the point of view of the priests and Levites. We may 
			therefore put aside the theory that Chronicles was intended 
			altogether to supersede Samuel and Kings. Another possible theory is 
			that the chronicler, after the manner of mediaeval historians, 
			composed an abstract of the history of the world from the Creation 
			to the Captivity as an introduction to his account in Ezra and 
			Nehemiah of the more recent post-Exilic period. This theory has some 
			truth in it, but does not explain the fact that Chronicles is 
			disproportionately long if it be merely such an introduction. 
			Probably the chronicler’s main object was to compose a text-book, 
			which could safely and usefully be placed in the hands of the common 
			people. There were obvious objections to the popular use of Samuel 
			and Kings. In making a selection from his material, the chronicler 
			had no intention of falsifying history. Scholars, he knew, would be 
			acquainted with the older books, and could supplement his narrative 
			from the sources which he himself had used. In his own work he was 
			anxious to confine himself to the portions of the history which had 
			an obvious religious significance, and could readily be used for 
			purposes of edification. He was only applying more thoroughly a 
			principle that had guided his predecessors. The Pentateuch itself is 
			the result of a similar selection, only there and in the other 
			earlier histories a very human interest in dramatic narrative has 
			sometimes interfered with an exclusive attention to edification. 
			 
			Indeed, the principles of selection adopted by the chronicler are 
			common to many historians. A school history does not dwell on the 
			domestic vices of kings or on the private failings of statesmen. It 
			requires no great stretch of imagination to conceive of a Royalist 
			history of England, that should entirely ignore the Commonwealth. 
			Indeed, historians of Christian missions sometimes show about the 
			same interest in the work of other Churches than their own that 
			Chronicles takes in the Northern Kingdom. The work of the chronicler 
			may also be compared to monographs which confine themselves to some 
			special aspect of their subject. We have every reason to be thankful 
			that the Divine providence has preserved for us the richer and 
			fuller narrative of Samuel and Kings, but we cannot blame the 
			chronicler because he has observed some of the ordinary canons for 
			the composition of historical text-books. 
			 
			The chronicler’s selective method, however, is carried so far that 
			the historical value of his work is seriously impaired; yet in this 
			respect also he is kept in countenance by very respectable 
			authorities. We are more concerned, however, to point out the 
			positive results of the method. Instead of historical portraits, we 
			are presented with a gallery of ideals, types of character which we 
			are asked either to admire or to condemn. On the one hand, we have 
			David and Solomon, Jehoshaphat and Hezekiah, and the rest of the 
			reforming kings of Judah; on the other hand, there are Jeroboam, and 
			Ahab, and Ahaz, the kings of Israel, and the bad kings of Judah. All 
			these are very sharply defined in either white or black. The types 
			of Chronicles are ideals, and not studies of ordinary human 
			character, with its mingled motives and subtle gradations of light 
			and shade. The chronicler has nothing in common with the authors of 
			modern realistic novels or anecdotal memoirs. His subject is not 
			human nature as it is so much as human nature as it ought to be. 
			There is obviously much to be learnt from such ideal pictures, and 
			this form of inspired teaching is by no means the least effective; 
			it may be roughly compared with our Lord’s method of teaching by 
			parables, without, however, at all putting the two upon the same 
			level. 
			 
			Before examining these types in detail, we may devote a little space 
			to some general considerations upon teaching by types. For the 
			present we will confine ourselves to a non-theological sense of 
			type, using the word to mean any individual who is representative or 
			typical of a class. But the chronicler’s individuals do not 
			represent classes of actual persons, but good men as they seem to 
			their most devoted admirers and bad men as they seem to their worst 
			enemies. They are ideal types. Chronicles is not the only literature 
			in which such ideal types are found. They occur in the funeral 
			sermons and obituary notices of popular favorites, and in the 
			pictures which politicians draw in election speeches of their 
			opponents, only in these there is a note of personal feeling from 
			which the chronicler is free. 
			 
			In fact, all biography tends to idealize; human nature as it is has 
			generally to be looked for in the pages of fiction. When we have 
			been blessed with a good and brave man, we wish to think of him at 
			his best; we are not anxious to have thrust upon our notice the 
			weaknesses and sins which he regretted and for the most part 
			controlled. Some one who loved and honored him is asked to write the 
			biography, with a tacit understanding that he is not to give us a 
			picture of the real man in the deshabille, as it were, of his own 
			inner consciousness. He is to paint us a portrait of the man as he 
			strove to fashion himself after his own high ideal. The true man, as 
			God knows him and as his fellows should remember him, was the man in 
			his higher nature and nobler aspirations. The rest, surely, was but 
			the vanishing remnant of a repudiated self. The biographer 
			idealizes, because he believes that the ideal best represents the 
			real man. 
			 
			This is what the chronicler, with a large faith and liberal charity, 
			has done for David and Solomon. 
			 
			Such an ideal picture appeals to us with pathetic emphasis. It seems 
			to say, "In spite of temptation, and sin, and grievous falls, this 
			is what I ever aimed at and desired to be. Do not thou content 
			thyself with any lower ideal My higher nature had its achievements 
			as well as its aspirations. Remember that in thy weakness thou 
			mayest also achieve." 
			 
			"What I aspired to be, And was not, comforts me; All I could never 
			be, All men ignored in me, This I was worth to God" 
			 
			But we may take these ideals as types, not only in a general sense, 
			but also in a modification of the dogmatic meaning of the word. We 
			are not concerned here with the type as the mere external symbol of 
			truth yet to be revealed; such types are chiefly found in the ritual 
			of the Pentateuch. The circumstances of a man’s life may also serve 
			as a type in the narrower sense, but we venture to apply the 
			theological idea of type to the significance of the higher nature in 
			a good man. It has been said in reference to types in the 
			theological sense that "a type is neither a prophecy, nor a symbol, 
			nor an allegory, yet it has relations with each of these. A prophecy 
			is a prediction in words, a type a prediction in things. A symbol is 
			a sensuous representation of a thing; a type is such a 
			representation having a distinctly predictive aspect a type is an 
			enacted prophecy, a kind of prophecy by action." We cannot, of 
			course, include in our use of the term type "sensuous 
			representation" and some other ideas connected with "type" in a 
			theological sense. Our type is a prediction in persons rather than 
			in things. But the use of the term is justified as including the 
			most essential point: that "a type is an enacted prophecy, a kind of 
			prophecy by action." These personal types are the most real and 
			significant; they have no mere arbitrary or conventional relation to 
			their antitype. The enacted prophecy is the beginning of its own 
			fulfillment, the first-fruits of the greater harvest that is to be. 
			The better moments of the man who is hungering and thirsting after 
			righteousness are a type, a promise, and prophecy of his future 
			satisfaction. They have also a wider and deeper meaning: they show 
			what is possible for humanity, and give an assurance of the 
			spiritual progress of the world. The elect remnant of Israel were 
			the type of the great Christian Church; the spiritual aspirations 
			and persistent faith of a few believers were a prophecy that "the 
			earth should be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters 
			cover the sea." "The kingdom of heaven is like unto a grain of 
			mustard seed which is less than all seeds; but when it-is grown, it 
			is greater than the herbs, and becometh a tree." When therefore the 
			chronicler ignores the evil in David and Solomon and only records 
			the good, he treats them as types. He takes what was best in them 
			and sets it forth as a standard and prophecy for the future, a 
			pattern in the mount to be realized hereafter in the structure of 
			God’s spiritual temple upon earth. 
			 
			But the Holy Spirit guided the hopes and intuitions of the sacred 
			writers to a special fulfillment. We can see that their types have 
			one antitype in the growth of the Church and the progress of 
			mankind: but the Old Testament looked for their chief fulfillment in 
			a Divine Messenger and Deliverer: its ideals are types of the 
			Messiah. The higher life of a good man was a revelation of God and a 
			promise of His highest and best manifestation in Christ. We shall 
			endeavor to show in subsequent chapters how Chronicles served to 
			develop the idea of the Messiah. 
			 
			But the chronicler’s types are not all prophecies of future progress 
			or Messianic glory. The brighter portions of his picture are thrown 
			into relief by a dark background. The good in Jeroboam is as 
			completely ignored as the evil in David. Apart from any question of 
			historical accuracy, the type is unfortunately a true one. There is 
			a leaven of the Pharisees and of Herod, as well as a leaven of the 
			kingdom. If the base leaven be left to work by itself, it will 
			leaven the whole mass; and in a final estimate of the character of 
			those who do evil "with both hands earnestly," little allowance 
			needs to be made for redeeming features. Even if we are still able 
			to believe that there is a seed of goodness in things evil, we are 
			forced to admit that the seed has remained dead and unfertilized, 
			has had no growth and borne no fruit. But probably most men may 
			sometimes be profitably admonished by considering the typical 
			sinner-the man in whose nature evil has been able to subdue all 
			things to itself. 
			 
			The strange power of teaching by types has been well expressed by 
			one who was herself a great mistress of the art: "Ideas are often 
			poor ghosts: our sun-filled eyes cannot discern them; they pass 
			athwart us in thin vapor, and cannot make themselves felt; they 
			breathe upon us with warm breath, they touch us with soft, 
			responsive hands; they look at us with sad, sincere eyes, and speak 
			to us in appealing tones; they are clothed in a living human soul 
			their presence is a power." 
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