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			 THE PROPHETS 
			ONE remarkable feature of Chronicles as compared with the book of 
			Kings is the greater interest shown by the former in the prophets of 
			Judah. The chronicler, by confining his attention to the Southern 
			Kingdom, was compelled to omit almost all reference to Elijah and 
			Elisha, and thus excluded from his work some of the most thrilling 
			chapters in the history of the prophets of Israel. Nevertheless the 
			prophets as a whole play almost as important a part in Chronicles as 
			in the book of Kings. Compensation is made for the omission of the 
			two great northern prophets by inserting accounts of several 
			prophets whose messages were addressed to the kings of Judah. 
			 
			The chronicler’s interest in the prophets was very different from 
			the interest he took in the priests and Levites. The latter belonged 
			to the institutions of his own time, and formed his own immediate 
			circle. In dealing with their past, he was reconstructing the 
			history of his own order; he was able to illustrate and supplement 
			from observation and experience the information afforded by his 
			sources. 
			 
			But when the chronicler wrote, prophets had ceased to be a living 
			institution in Judah. The light that had shone so brightly in Isaiah 
			and Jeremiah burned feebly in Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi, and 
			then went out. Not long after the chronicler’s time the failure of 
			prophecy is expressly recognized. The people whose synagogues have 
			been burnt up complain, - 
			 
			"We see not our signs; There is no more any prophet." 
			 
			When Judas Maccabaeus appointed certain priests to cleanse the 
			Temple after its pollution by the Syrians, they pulled down the 
			altar of burnt offerings because the heathen had defiled it, and 
			laid up the stones in the mountain of the Temple in a convenient 
			place, until there should come a prophet to show what should be done 
			with them. This failure of prophecy was not merely brief and 
			transient. It marked the disappearance of the ancient order of 
			prophets. A parallel case shows how the Jews had become aware that 
			the high-priest no longer possessed the special gifts connected with 
			the Urim and Thummim. When certain priests could not find their 
			genealogies, they were forbidden "to eat of the most holy things 
			till there stood up a priest with Urim and with Thummim." {Ezr 2:63} 
			We have no record of any subsequent appearance of "a priest with 
			Urim and with Thummim" or of any prophet of the old order. 
			 
			Thus the chronicler had never seen a prophet; his conception of the 
			personality and office of the prophet was entirely based upon 
			ancient literature, and he took no professional interest in the 
			order. At the same time he had no prejudice against them; they had 
			no living successors to compete for influence and endowments with 
			the priests and Levites. Possibly the Levites, as the chief 
			religious teachers of the people, claimed some sort of apostolic 
			succession from the prophets; but there are very slight grounds for 
			any such theory. The chronicler’s information on the whole subject 
			was that of a scholar with a taste for antiquarian research. 
			 
			Let us briefly examine the part played by the prophets in the 
			history of Judah as given by Chronicles. We have first, as in the 
			book of Kings, the references to Nathan and Gad: they make known to 
			David the will of Jehovah as regards the building of the Temple and 
			the punishment of David’s pride in taking the census of Israel. 
			David unhesitatingly accepts their messages as the word of Jehovah. 
			It is important to notice that when Nathan is consulted about 
			building the Temple he first answers, apparently giving a mere 
			private opinion, "Do all that is in thine heart, for God is with 
			thee"; but when "the word of God comes" to him, he retracts his 
			former judgment and forbids David to build the Temple. Here again 
			the plan of the chronicler’s work leads to an important omission: 
			his silence as to the murder of Uriah prevents him from giving the 
			beautiful and instructive account on the way in which Nathan rebuked 
			the guilty king. Later narratives exhibit other prophets in the act 
			of rebuking most of the kings of Judah, but none of these incidents 
			are equally striking and pathetic. At the end of the histories of 
			David and of most of the later kings we find notes which apparently 
			indicate that, in the chronicler’s time, the prophets were credited 
			with having written the annals of the kings with whom they were 
			contemporary. In connection with Hezekiah’s reformation we are 
			incidentally told that Nathan and Gad were associated with David in 
			making arrangements for the music of the Temple: "He set the Levites 
			in the house of Jehovah, with cymbals, with psalteries, and with 
			harps, according to the commandment of David, and of Gad the king’s 
			seer, and Nathan the prophet, for the commandment was of Jehovah by 
			His prophets." 
			 
			In the account of Solomon’s reign, the chronicler omits the 
			interview of Ahijah the Shilonite with Jeroboam, but refers to it in 
			the history of Rehoboam. From this point, in accordance with his 
			general plan, he omits almost all missions of prophets to the 
			northern kings. 
			 
			In Rehoboam’s reign, we have recorded, as in the book of Kings, a 
			message from Jehovah by Shemaiah forbidding the king and his two 
			tribes of Judah and Benjamin to attempt to compel the northern 
			tribes to return to their allegiance to the house of David. Later 
			on, when Shishak invaded Judah, Shemaiah was commissioned to deliver 
			to the king and princes the message, "Thus saith Jehovah: Ye have 
			forsaken Me; therefore have I also left you in the hand of Shishak." 
			But when they repented and humbled themselves before Jehovah, 
			Shemaiah announced to them the mitigation of their punishment. 
			 
			Asa’s reformation was due to the inspired exhortations of a prophet 
			called both Oded and Azariah the son of Oded. Later on Hanani the 
			seer rebuked the king for his alliance with Ben-hadad, king of 
			Syria. "Then Asa was wroth with the seer, and put him in the 
			prison-house; for he was in a rage with him because of this thing." 
			 
			Jehoshaphat’s alliance with Ahab and his consequent visit to Samaria 
			enabled the chronicler to introduce from the book of Kings the 
			striking narrative of Micaiah the son of Imlah; but this alliance 
			with Israel earned for the king the rebukes of Jehu the son of 
			Hanani the seer and Eliezar the son of Dodavahu of Mareshah. 
			However, on the occasion of the Moabite and Ammonite invasion 
			Jehoshaphat and his people received the promise of Divine 
			deliverance from "Jahaziel the son of Zechariah, the son of Benaiah, 
			the son of Jeiel, the son of Mattaniah the Levite, of the sons of 
			Asaph." 
			 
			The punishment of the wicked king Jehoram was announced to him by "a 
			writing from Elijah the prophet." His son Ahaziah apparently 
			perished without any prophetic warning; but when Joash and his 
			princes forsook the house of Jehovah and served the Asherim and the 
			idols, "He sent prophets to them to bring them again to Jehovah," 
			among the rest Zechariah the son of Jehoiada the priest. Joash 
			turned a deaf ear to the message, and put the prophet to death. 
			 
			When Amaziah bowed down before the gods of Edom and burned incense 
			unto them, Jehovah sent unto him a prophet whose name is not 
			recorded. His mission failed, like that of Zechariah the son of 
			Jehoiada; and Amaziah, like Joash, showed no respect for the person 
			of the messenger of Jehovah. In this case the prophet escaped with 
			his life. He began to deliver his message, but the king’s patience 
			soon failed, and he said unto the prophet, "Have we made thee of the 
			king’s counsel? Forbear; why shouldest thou be smitten?" The 
			prophet, we are told, "forbare"; but his forbearance did not prevent 
			his adding one brief and bitter sentence: "I know that God hath 
			determined to destroy thee, because thou hast done this and hast not 
			hearkened unto my counsel." Then apparently he departed in peace and 
			was not smitten. We have now reached the period of the prophets 
			whose writings are extant. We learn from the headings of their works 
			that Isaiah saw his "vision," and that the word of Jehovah came unto 
			Hosea, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah; that the 
			word of Jehovah came to Micah in the days of Jotham, Ahaz, and 
			Hezekiah; and that Amos "saw" his "words" in the days of Uzziah. But 
			the chronicler makes no reference to any of these, prophets in 
			connection with either Uzziah, Jotham, or Ahaz. Their writings would 
			have afforded the best possible materials for his history, yet he 
			entirely neglected them. In view of his anxiety to introduce into 
			his narrative all missions of prophets of which he found any record, 
			we can only suppose that he was so little interested in the 
			prophetical writings that he neither referred to them nor 
			recollected their dates. To Ahaz in Chronicles, in spite of all his 
			manifold and persistent idolatry, no prophet was sent. The absence 
			of Divine warning marks his extraordinary wickedness. In the book of 
			Samuel the culmination of Jehovah’s displeasure against Saul is 
			shown by his refusal to answer him either by dreams, by Urim, or by 
			prophets. He sends no prophet to Ahaz, because the wicked king of 
			Judah is utterly reprobate. Prophecy, the token of the Divine 
			presence and favor, has abandoned a nation given over to idolatry, 
			and has even taken a temporary refuge in Samaria. Jerusalem was no 
			longer worthy to receive the Divine messages, and Oded was sent with 
			his words of warning and humane exhortation to the children of 
			Ephraim. There he met with a prompt and full obedience, in striking 
			contrast to the reception accorded by Joash and Amaziah to the 
			prophets of Jehovah. The chronicler’s history of the reign of 
			Hezekiah further illustrates his indifference to the prophets whose 
			writings are extant. In the book of Kings great prominence is given 
			to Isaiah. In the account of Sennacherib’s invasion his messages to 
			Hezekiah are given at considerable length. {2Ki 19:5-7; 2Ki 
			19:20-34} He announces to the king his approaching death and 
			Jehovah’s gracious answers to Hezekiah’s prayer for a respite and 
			his request for a sign. When Hezekiah, in his pride of wealth, 
			displayed his treasures to the Babylonian ambassadors, Isaiah 
			brought the message of Divine rebuke and judgment. Chronicles 
			characteristically devotes three long chapters to ritual and 
			Levites, and dismisses Isaiah in half a sentence: "And Hezekiah the 
			king and Isaiah the prophet, the son of Amoz, prayed because of 
			this"-i.e., the threatening language of Sennacherib-"and cried to 
			Heaven." {2Ch 32:20} In the accounts of Hezekiah’s sickness and 
			recovery and of the Babylonian embassy the references to Isaiah are 
			entirely omitted. These omissions may be due to lack of space, so 
			much of which had been devoted to the Levites that there was none to 
			spare for the prophet. 
			 
			Indeed, at the very point where prophecy began to exercise a 
			controlling influence over the religion of Judah the chronicler’s 
			interest in the subject altogether flags. He tells us that Jehovah 
			spake to Manasseh and to his people, and refers to "the words of the 
			seers that spake to him in the name of Jehovah, the God of Israel" 
			{2Ch 33:10; 2Ch 33:18} but he names no prophet and does not record 
			the terms of any Divine message. In the case of Manasseh his sources 
			may have failed him, but we have seen that in Hezekiah’s reign he 
			deliberately passes over most of the references to Isaiah. 
			 
			The chronicler’s narrative of Josiah’s reign adheres more closely to 
			the book of Kings. He reproduces the mission from the king to the 
			prophetess Huldah and her Divine message of present forbearance and 
			future judgment. The other prophet of this reign is the heathen king 
			Pharaoh Necho, through whose mouth the Divine warning is given to 
			Josiah. Jeremiah is only mentioned as lamenting over the last good 
			king. In the parallel text of this passage in the apocryphal’ book 
			of Esdras Pharaoh’s remonstrance is given in a somewhat expanded 
			form; but the editor of Esdras shrank from making the heathen king 
			the mouthpiece of Jehovah. While Chronicles tells us that Josiah 
			"hearkened not unto the words of Neco from the month of God," Esdras, 
			glaringly inconsistent both with the context and the history, tells 
			us that he did not regard "the words of the prophet Jeremiah spoken 
			by the mouth of the Lord." This amended statement is borrowed from 
			the chronicler’s account of Zedekiah, who "humbled not himself 
			before Jeremiah the prophet, speaking from the mouth of Jehovah." 
			But this king was not alone in his disobedience. As the inevitable 
			ruin of Jerusalem drew near, the whole nation, priests and people 
			alike, sank deeper and deeper in sin. In these last days, where sin 
			abounded, "grace did yet more abound." Jehovah exhausted the 
			resources of His mercy: "Jehovah, the god of their fathers, sent to 
			them by His messengers, rising tip early and sending, because He had 
			compassion on His people and on His dwelling-place." It was all in 
			vain: "They mocked the messengers of God, and despised His words and 
			scoffed at His prophets, until the wrath of Jehovah arose against 
			His people, till there was no remedy." There are two other 
			references in the concluding paragraphs of Chronicles to the 
			prophecies of Jeremiah; but the history of prophecy in Judah closes 
			with this last great unavailing manifestation of prophetic activity. 
			 
			Before considering the general idea of the prophet that may be 
			collected from the various notices in Chronicles, we may devote a 
			little space to the chronicler’s curious attitude towards our 
			canonical prophets. For the most part he simply follows the book of 
			Kings in making no reference to them; but his almost entire silence 
			as to Isaiah suggests that his imitation of his authority in other 
			cases is deliberate and intentional, especially as we find him 
			inserting one or two references to Jeremiah not taken from the book 
			of Kings. The chronicler had much more opportunity of using the 
			canonical prophets than the author or authors of the book of Kings. 
			The latter wrote before Hebrew literature had been collected and 
			edited; but the chronicler had access to all the literature of the 
			monarchy, Captivity, and even later times. His numerous extracts 
			from almost the entire range of the Historical Books, together with 
			the Pentateuch and Psalms, show that his plan included the use of 
			various sources, and that he had both the means and ability to work 
			out his plan. He makes two references to Haggai and Zechariah, {Ezr 
			5:1; Ezr 6:14} so that if he ignores Amos, Hosea, and Micah, and all 
			but ignores Isaiah, we can only conclude that he does so of set 
			purpose. Hosea and Amos might be excluded on account of their 
			connection with the Northern Kingdom; possibly the strictures of 
			Isaiah and Micah on the priesthood and ritual made the chronicler 
			unwilling to give them special prominence. Such an attitude on the 
			part of a typical representative of the prevailing school of 
			religious thought has an important bearing on the textual and other 
			criticism of the early prophets. If they were neglected by the 
			authorities of the Temple in the interval between Ezra and the 
			Maccabees, the possibility of late additions and alterations is 
			considerably increased. 
			 
			Let us now turn to the picture of the prophets drawn for us by the 
			chronicler. Both prophet and priest are religious personages, 
			otherwise they differ widely in almost every particular; we cannot 
			even speak of them as both holding religious offices. The term 
			"office" has to be almost unjustifiably strained in order to apply 
			it to the prophet, and to use it thus without explanation would be 
			misleading. The qualifications, status, duties, and rewards of the 
			priests are all fully prescribed by rigid and elaborate rules; but 
			the prophets were the children of the Spirit: "The wind bloweth 
			where it listeth, and thou hearest the voice thereof, but knowest 
			not whence it cometh and whither it goeth; so is every one that is 
			born of the Spirit." The priest was bound to be a physically perfect 
			male of the house of Aaron; the prophet might be of any tribe and of 
			either sex. The warlike Deborah found a more peaceful successor in 
			Josiah’s counselor Huldah, and among the degenerate prophets off 
			Nehemiah’s time a prophetess Noadiah {Neh 6:14} is specially 
			mentioned. The priestly or Levitical office did not exclude its 
			holder from the prophetic vocation. The Levite Jaha-ziel delivered 
			the message of Jehovah to Jehoshaphat; and the prophet Zechariah, 
			whom Joash put to death, was the son of the high-priest Jehoiada, 
			and therefore himself a priest. Indeed, upon occasion the prophetic 
			gift was exercised by those whom we should scarcely call prophets at 
			all. Pharaoh Necho’s warning to Jehoshaphat is exactly parallel to 
			the prophetic exhortations addressed to other kings. In the crisis 
			of David’s fortunes at Ziklag, when Judah and Benjamin came out to 
			meet him with apparently doubtful intentions, their adhesion to the 
			future king was decided by a prophetic word given to the mighty 
			warrior Amasai: "Then the Spirit came upon Amasai, who was one of 
			the thirty, and he said, Thine are we, David, and on thy side, thou 
			son of Jesse: peace, peace, be unto thee, and peace be to thine 
			helpers; for thy God helpeth thee." In view of this wide 
			distribution of the prophetic gift we are not surprised to find it 
			frequently exercised by the pious kings. They receive and 
			communicate to the nation direct intimations of the Divine will. 
			David gives to Solomon and the people instructions which God has 
			given him with regard to the Temple; God’s promises are personally 
			addressed to Solomon, without the intervention of either prophet or 
			priest; Abijah rebukes and exhorts Jeroboam and he Israelites very 
			much as other prophets address the wicked kings; the speeches of 
			Hezekiah and Josiah might equally well have been delivered by one of 
			the prophets. David indeed is expressly called a prophet by St. 
			Peter, {Act 2:30} and though the immediate reference is to the 
			Psalms the chronicler’s history both of David and of other kings 
			gives them a valid claim to rank as prophets. 
			 
			The authority and status of the prophets rested on no official or 
			material conditions, such as hedged in the priestly office on every 
			side. Accordingly their ancestry, previous history, and social 
			standing are matters with which the historian has no concern. If the 
			prophet happens so to be a priest or Levite, the chronicler, of 
			course, knows and records his genealogy. It is essential that the 
			genealogy of a priest should be known, but there are no genealogies 
			of the prophets; their order was like that of Melchizedek, standing 
			on the page of history "without father, without mother, without 
			genealogy"; they appear abruptly, with no personal introduction, 
			they deliver their message, and then disappear with equal 
			abruptness. Sometimes not even their names are given. They had the 
			one qualification compared with which birth and sex, rank and 
			reputation, were trivial and meaningless things. The living word of 
			Jehovah was on their lips; the power of His Spirit controlled their 
			hearers; messenger and message were alike their own credentials. The 
			supreme religious authority of the prophet testified to the 
			subordinate and accidental character of all rites and symbols. On 
			the other hand, the combination of priest and prophet in the same 
			system proved the loftiest spirituality, the most emphatic 
			recognition of the direct communion of the soul with God, to be 
			consistent with an elaborate and rigid system of ritual. The 
			services and ministry of the Temple were like lamps whose flame 
			showed pale and dim when earth and heaven were lit up by the 
			lightnings of prophetic inspiration. 
			 
			The gifts and functions of the prophets did not lend themselves to 
			any regular discipline or organization; but we can roughly 
			distinguish between two classes of prophets. One class seem to have 
			exercised their gifts more systematically and continuously than 
			others. Gad and Nathan, Isaiah and Jeremiah, became practically the 
			domestic chaplains and spiritual advisers of David, Hezekiah, and 
			the last kings of Judah. Others are only mentioned as delivering a 
			single message; their ministry seems to have been occasional, 
			perhaps confined to a single period of their lives. The Divine 
			Spirit was free to take the whole life or to take a part only; He 
			was not to be conditioned even by gifts of His own bestowal. 
			 
			Human organization naturally attempted to classify the possessors of 
			the prophetic gift, to set them apart as a regular order, perhaps 
			even to provide them with a suitable training, and, still more 
			impossible task, to select the proper recipients of the gift and to 
			produce and foster the prophetic inspiration. We read elsewhere of 
			"schools of the prophets" and "sons of the prophets." The chronicler 
			omits all reference to such institutions or societies; he declines 
			to assign them any place in the prophetic succession in Israel. The 
			gift of prophecy was absolutely dependent on the Divine will, and 
			could not be claimed as a necessary appurtenance of the royal court 
			at Jerusalem or a regular order in the kingdom of Judah. The priests 
			are included in the list of David’s ministers, but not the prophets 
			Gad and Nathan. Abijah mentions among the special privileges of 
			Judah "priests ministering unto Jehovah, even the sons of Aaron and 
			the Levites in their work"; it does not occur to him to name 
			prophets among the regular and permanent ministers of Jehovah. 
			 
			The chronicler, in fact, does not recognize the professional 
			prophet. The fifty sons of the prophets that watched Elisha divide 
			the waters in the name of the God of Elijah were no more prophets 
			for him than the four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal and the 
			four hundred prophets of the Asherah that ate at Jezebel’s table. 
			The true prophet, like Amos, need not be either a prophet or the son 
			of a prophet in the professional sense. Long before the chronicler’s 
			time the history and teaching of the great prophets had clearly 
			established the distinction between the professional prophet, who 
			was appointed by man or by himself, and the inspired messenger, who 
			received a direct commission from Jehovah. 
			 
			In describing the prophet’s sole qualification we have also stated 
			his function. He was the messenger of Jehovah and declared His will. 
			The priest in his ministrations represented Israel before God, and 
			in a measure represented God to Israel. The rites and ceremonies 
			over which he presided symbolized the permanent and unchanging 
			features of man’s religious experience and the eternal righteousness 
			and mercy of Him who is the same yesterday, today, and forever. From 
			generation to generation men received the good gifts of God, and 
			brought the offerings of their gratitude; they sinned against God 
			and came to seek forgiveness; and the house of Aaron met them 
			generation after generation in the same priestly robes, with the 
			same rites, in the one Temple, in token of the unchanging 
			willingness of Jehovah to accept and forgive His children. 
			 
			The prophet, too, represented God to man; his words were the words 
			of God; through him the Divine presence and the Divine Spirit 
			exerted their influence over the hearts and consciences of his 
			hearers. But while the priestly ministrations symbolized the fixity 
			and permanence of God’s eternal majesty, the prophets expressed the 
			infinite variety of His Divine nature and its continual adaptation 
			to all the changes of human life. They came to the individual and to 
			the nation in each crisis of history with the Divine message that 
			enabled them to suit themselves to altered circumstances, to grapple 
			wit new difficulties, and to solve new problems. The priest and the 
			prophet together set forth the great paradox that the unchanging God 
			is the source of all change, 
			 
			"Lord God, by whom all change is wrought,  
			By whom new things to birth are brought,  
			In whom no change is known,  
			To Thee we rise, in Thee we rest"; 
			 
			"We stay at home, we go in quest,  
			Still Thou art our abode:  
			The rapture swells, the wonder grows,  
			As full on us new life still flows  
			From our unchanging God." 
			 
			The prophetic utterances recorded by the chronicler illustrate the 
			work of the prophets in delivering the message that tact the present 
			needs of the people. There is nothing in Chronicles to encourage the 
			unspiritual notion that the main object of prophecy was to give 
			exact and detailed information as to the remote future. There is 
			prediction necessarily: it was impossible to declare the will of God 
			without stating the punishment of sin and the victory of 
			righteousness; but prediction is only part of the declaration of 
			God’s will. In Gad and Nathan prophecy appears as a means of 
			communication between the inquiring soul and God; it does not, 
			indeed, gratify curiosity, but rather gives guidance m perplexity 
			and distress. The later prophets constantly intervene to initiate 
			reform or to hinder the carrying out of an evil policy. Gad and 
			Nathan lent their authority to David’s organization of the Temple 
			music; Asa’s reform originated in the exhortation of Oded the 
			prophet; Jehoshaphat went out to meet the Moabite and Ammonite 
			invaders in response to the inspiriting utterance of Jahaziel the 
			Levite; Josiah consulted the prophetess Huldah before carrying out 
			his reformation; the chiefs of Ephraim sent back the Jewish captives 
			in obedience to another Oded. On the other hand, Shemaiah prevented 
			Rehoboam from fighting against Israel; Micaiah warned Ahab and 
			Jehoshaphat not to go up against Ramoth-gilead. 
			 
			Often, however, the prophetic message gives the interpretation of 
			history, the Divine judgment upon conduct, with its sentence of 
			punishment or reward. Hanani the seer, for instance, comes to Asa to 
			show him the real value of his apparently satisfactory alliance with 
			Benhadad, king of Syria: "Because thou hast relied on the king of 
			Syria, and hast not relied on Jehovah thy God, therefore is the host 
			of the king of Syria escaped out of thine hand Herein thou hast done 
			foolishly; for from henceforth thou shalt have wars." Jehoshaphat is 
			told why his ships were broken: "Because thou hast joined thyself 
			with Ahaziah, Jehovah hath destroyed thy works." Thus the prophetic 
			declaration of Divine judgment came to mean almost exclusively 
			rebuke and condemnation. The witness of a good conscience may be 
			left to speak for itself; God does not often need to send a prophet 
			to His obedient servants in order to signify His approval of their 
			righteous acts. But the censures of conscience need both the 
			stimulus of external suggestion and the support of external 
			authority. Upon the prophets was constantly laid the unwelcome task 
			of rousing and bracing the conscience for its stern duty. They 
			became the heralds of Divine wrath, the precursors of national 
			misfortune. Often, too, the warnings that should have saved the 
			people were neglected or resented, and thus became the occasion of 
			new sin and severer punishment. We must not, however, lay too much 
			stress on this aspect of the prophets’ work. They were no mere 
			Cassandras, announcing inevitable ruin at the hands of a blind 
			destiny; they were not always, or even chiefly, the messengers of 
			coming doom. If they declared the wrath of God, they also vindicated 
			His justice; in the day of the Lord which they so often foretold, 
			mercy and grace tempered and at last overcame judgment. They taught, 
			even in their sternest utterances, the moral government of the world 
			and the benevolent purpose of its Ruler. These are man’s only hope, 
			even in his sin and suffering, the only ground for effort, and the 
			only comfort in misfortune. 
			 
			There are, however, one or two elements in the chronicler’s notices 
			of the prophets that scarcely harmonize with this general picture. 
			The scanty references of the books of Samuel and Kings to the 
			"schools" and the sons of the prophets have suggested the theory 
			that the prophets were the guardians of national education, culture, 
			and literature. The chronicler expressly assigns the function to the 
			Levites, and does not recognize that the "schools of the prophets" 
			had any permanent significance for the religion of Israel, possibly 
			because they chiefly appear in connection with the Northern Kingdom. 
			At the same time, we find this idea of the literary character of the 
			prophets in Chronicles in a new form. The authorities referred to in 
			the subscriptions to each reign bear the names of the prophets who 
			flourished during the reign. The primary significance of the 
			tradition followed by the chronicler is the supreme importance of 
			the prophet for his period; he, and not the king, gives it a 
			distinctive character. Therefore the prophet gives his name to his 
			period, as the consuls at Rome, the Archon Basileus at Athens, and 
			the Assyrian priests gave their own names to their year of office. 
			Probably by the time Chronicles was written the view had been 
			adopted which we know prevailed later on, and it was supposed that 
			the prophets wrote the Historical Books which bore their names. The 
			ancient prophets had given the Divine interpretation of the course 
			of events and pronounced the Divine judgment on history. The 
			Historical Books were written for religious edification; they 
			contained a similar interpretation and judgment. The religious 
			instincts of later Judaism rightly classed them with the prophetic 
			Scriptures. 
			 
			The striking contrast we have been able to trace between the priests 
			and the prophets in their qualifications and duties extends also to 
			their rewards. The book of Kings gives us glimpses of the way in 
			which the reverent gratitude of the people made some provision for 
			the maintenance of the prophets. We are all familiar with the 
			hospitality of the Shunammite. and we read how "a man from 
			Baal-shalishah" brought first-fruits to Elisha. {2Ki 4:42} But the 
			chronicler omits all such references as being connected with the 
			Northern Kingdom, and does not give us any similar information as to 
			the prophets of Judah. He is not usually indifferent as to ways and 
			means. He devotes some space to the revenues of the kings of Judah, 
			and delights to dwell on the sources of priestly income. But it 
			never seems to occur to him that the prophets have any wants to be 
			provided for. To use George MacDonald’s phrase, he is quite content 
			to leave them "on the lily and sparrow footing." The priesthood and 
			the Levites must be richly endowed; the honor of Israel and of 
			Jehovah is concerned in their having cities, tithes, first-fruits, 
			and offerings. Prophets are sent to reproach the people when the 
			priestly dues are withheld; but for themselves the prophets might 
			have said with St. Paul, "We seek not yours, but you." No one 
			supposed that the authority and dignity of the prophets needed to be 
			supported by ecclesiastical status, splendid robes, and great 
			incomes. Spiritual force so manifestly resided in them that they 
			could afford to dispense with the most impressive symbols of power 
			and authority. On the other hand, they received an honor that was 
			never accorded to the priesthood: they suffered persecution for the 
			cause of Jehovah. Zechariah the son of Jehoiada was put to death, 
			and Micaiah the son of Imlah was imprisoned. We are never told that 
			the priest as priest suffered persecution. Ahaz closed the Temple, 
			Manasseh set up an idol in the house of God, but we do not read of 
			either Ahaz or Manasseh that they slew the priests of Jehovah. The 
			teaching of the prophets was direct and personal, and thus eminently 
			calculated to excite resentment and provoke persecution; the 
			priestly services, however, did not at all interfere with concurrent 
			idolatry, and the priests were accustomed to receive and execute the 
			orders of the kings. There is nothing to suggest that they sought to 
			obtrude the worship of Jehovah upon unwilling converts; and it is 
			not improbable that some, at any rate, of the priests allowed 
			themselves to be made the tools of the wicked kings. On the eve of 
			the Captivity we read that "the chiefs of the priests and the people 
			trespassed very greatly after all the abominations of the heathen, 
			and they polluted the house of Jehovah." No such disloyalty is 
			recorded of the prophets in Chronicles. The most splendid incomes 
			cannot purchase loyalty. It is still true that "the hireling fleeth 
			because he is a hireling"; men’s most passionate devotion is for the 
			cause in which they have suffered. 
			 
			We have seen that the modern ministry presents certain parallels to 
			the ancient priesthood. Where are we to look for an analogue to the 
			prophet? If the minister be, in a sense, a priest when he leads the 
			worship of the people, is he also a prophet when he preaches to 
			them? Preaching is intended to be-perhaps we may venture to say that 
			it mostly is-a declaration of the will of God. Moreover, it is not 
			the exposition of a fixed and unchangeable ritual or even of a set 
			of rigid theological formulae. The preacher, like the prophet, seeks 
			to meet the demands for new light that are made by constantly 
			changing circumstances; he seeks to adapt the eternal truth to the 
			varying needs of individual lives. So far he is a prophet, but the 
			essential qualifications of the prophet are still to be sought 
			after. Isaiah and Jeremiah did not declare the word of Jehovah as 
			they had learnt it from a Bible or any other book, nor yet according 
			to the traditions of a school or the teaching of great authorities; 
			such declaration might be made by the scribes and rabbis in later 
			times. But the prophets of Chronicles received their message from 
			Jehovah Himself: while they mused upon the needs of the people, the 
			fire of inspiration burned within them: then they spoke. Moreover, 
			like their great antitype, they spoke with authority, and not as the 
			scribes; their words carried with them conviction even when they did 
			not produce obedience. The reality of men’s conviction of their 
			Divine authority was shown by the persecution to which they were 
			subjected. Are these tokens of the prophet also the notes of the 
			Christian ministry of preaching? Prophets were found among the house 
			of Aaron and from the tribe of Levi, but not every Levite or priest 
			was a prophet. Every branch of the Christian Church has numbered 
			among its official ministers men who delivered their message with an 
			inspired conviction of its truth; in them the power and presence of 
			the Spirit have compelled a belief in their authority to speak for 
			God: this belief has received the twofold attestation of hearts and 
			consciences submitted to the Divine will on the one hand or of 
			bitter and rancorous hostility on the other. In every Church we find 
			the record of men who have spoken, "not in words which man’s wisdom 
			teacheth, but which the Spirit teacheth." Such were Wyclif and 
			Latimer, Calvin and Luther, George Whitefield and the Wesleys; such, 
			too, were Moffat and Livingstone. Nor need we suppose that in the 
			modern Christian Church the gift of prophecy has been confined to 
			men of brilliant genius who have been conspicuously successful. In 
			the sacred canon Haggai and Obadiah stand side by side with Isaiah, 
			Jeremiah, and Ezekiel. The chronicler recognizes the prophetic 
			calling of men too obscure to be mentioned by name. He whom God hath 
			sent speaketh the words of God, not necessarily the orator whom men 
			crowd to hear and whose name is recorded in history; and God giveth 
			not the Spirit by measure. Many of the least distinguished of His 
			servants are truly His prophets, speaking, by the conviction He has 
			given them, a message which comes home with power to some hearts at 
			any rate, and is a savor of life unto life and of death unto death. 
			The seals of their ministry are to he found in redeemed and purified 
			lives, and also only too often in the bitter and vindictive ill-will 
			of those whom their faithfulness has offended. 
			 
			We naturally expect to find that the official ministry affords the 
			most suitable sphere for the exercise of the gift of prophecy. Those 
			who are conscious of a Divine message will often seek the special 
			opportunities which the ministry affords. But our study of 
			Chronicles reminds us that the vocation of the prophet cannot be 
			limited to any external organization; it was not confined to the 
			official ministry of Israel; it cannot be conditioned by recognition 
			by bishops, presbyteries, conferences, or Churches; it will often 
			find its only external credential in a gracious influence over 
			individual lives. Nay, the prophet may have his Divine vocation and 
			be entirely rejected of men. In Chronicles we find prophets, like 
			Zechariah the son of Jehoiada, whose one Divine message is received 
			with scorn and defiance. 
			 
			In practice, if not in theory, the Churches have long since 
			recognized that the prophetic gift is found outside any official 
			ministry, and that they may be taught the will of God by men and 
			women of all ranks and callings. They have provided opportunities 
			for the free exercise of such gifts in lay preaching, missions, 
			Sunday-schools, meetings of all kinds. 
			 
			We have here stumbled upon another modern controversy: the 
			desirability of women preaching. Chronicles mentions prophetesses as 
			well as prophets; on the other hand, there were no Jewish 
			priestesses. The modern minister combines some priestly duties with 
			the opportunity, at least, of exercising the gift of prophecy. The 
			mention of only two or three prophetesses in the Old Testament shows 
			that the possession of the gift by women was exceptional. These few 
			instances, however, are sufficient to prove that God did not in old 
			times limit the gift to men; they suggest at any rate the 
			possibility of its being possessed by women now, and when women have 
			a Divine message the Church will not venture to quench the Spirit. 
			Of course the application of these broad principles would have to be 
			adapted to the circumstances of individual Churches. Huldah, for 
			instance, is not described as delivering any public address to the 
			people; the king sent his ministers to consult her in her own house. 
			Whatever hesitation may be felt about the public ministry of women, 
			no one will question their Divine commission to carry the messages 
			of God to the bedsides of the sick and the homes of the poor. Most 
			of us have known women to whom men have gone, as Josiah’s ministers 
			went to Huldah, to "inquire of the Lord." 
			 
			Another practical question, the payment of the ministers of 
			religion, has already been raised by the chronicler’s account of the 
			revenues of the priests. What more do we learn on the subject from 
			his silence as to the maintenance of the prophets? The silence is, 
			of course, eloquent as to the extent to which even a pious Levite 
			may be preoccupied with his own worldly interests and quite 
			indifferent to other people’s; but it would not have been possible 
			if the idea of revenues and endowments for the prophets had ever 
			been very familiar to men’s minds. It has been said that today the 
			prophet sells his inspiration, but the gift of God can no more be 
			bought and sold with money now than in ancient Israel. The purely 
			spiritual character of true prophecy, its entire dependence on 
			Divine inspiration, makes it impossible to hire a prophet at a fixed 
			salary regulated by the quality and extent of his gifts. By the 
			grace of God there is an intimate practical connection between the 
			work of the official ministry and the inspired declaration of the 
			Divine will; and this connection has its bearing upon the payment of 
			ministers. Men’s gratitude is stirred when they have received 
			comfort and help through the spiritual gifts of their minister, but 
			in principle there is no connection between the gift of prophecy and 
			the payment of the ministry. A Church can purchase the enjoyment of 
			eloquence, learning, intellect, and industry; a high character has a 
			pecuniary value for ecclesiastical as well as for commercial 
			purposes. The prophet may be provided with leisure, society, and 
			literature so that the Divine message may be delivered in its most 
			attractive form; he may be installed in a large and well-appointed 
			building, so that he may have the best possible opportunity of 
			delivering his message; he will naturally receive a larger income 
			when he surrenders obscure and limited opportunities to minister in 
			some more suitable sphere. But when we have said all, it is still 
			only the accessories that have to do with payment, not the Divine 
			gift of prophecy itself. When the prophet’s message is not 
			comforting, when his words grate upon the theological and social 
			prejudices of his hearers, especially when he is invited to curse 
			and is Divinely compelled to bless, there is no question of payment 
			for such ministry. It has been said of Christ, "For the minor 
			details necessary to secure respect, and obedience, and the 
			enthusiasm of the vulgar, for the tact, the finesse, the 
			compromising faculty, the judicious ostentation of successful 
			politicians-for these arts He was not prepared." Those who imitate 
			their Master often share His reward. 
			 
			The slight and accidental connection of the payment of ministers 
			with their prophetic gifts is further illustrated by the free 
			exercise of such gifts by men and women who have no ecclesiastical 
			status and do not seek any material reward. Here again any exact 
			adoption of ancient methods is impossible; we may accept from the 
			chronicler the great principle that loyal believers will make all 
			adequate provision for the service and work of Jehovah, and that 
			they will be prepared to honor Him in the persons of those whom they 
			choose to represent them before Him, and also of those whom they 
			recognize as delivering to them His messages. On the other hand, the 
			prophet-and for our present purpose we may extend the term to the 
			humblest and least gifted Christian who in any way seeks to speak 
			for Christ-the prophet speaks by the impulse of the Spirit and from 
			no meaner motive. 
			 
			With regard to the functions of the prophet, the Spirit is as 
			entirely free to dictate His own message as He is to choose His own 
			messenger. The chronicler’s prophets were concerned with foreign 
			politics-alliances with Syria and Assyria, wars with Egypt and 
			Samaria-as well as with the ritual of the Temple and the worship of 
			Jehovah. They discerned a religious significance in the purely 
			secular matter of a census. Jehovah had His purposes for the civil 
			government and international policy of Israel as well as for its 
			creed and services. If we lay down the principle that politics, 
			whether local or national, are to be kept out of the pulpit, we must 
			either exclude from the official ministry all who possess any 
			measure of the prophetic gift, or else carefully stipulate that, if 
			they be conscious of any obligation to declare the Lord’s will in 
			matters of public righteousness, they shall find some more suitable 
			place than the Lord’s house and some more suitable time than the 
			Lord’s day. When we suggest that the prophet should mind his own 
			business by confining himself to questions of doctrine, worship, and 
			the religious experiences of the individual, we are in danger of 
			denying God’s right to a voice in social and national affairs. 
			 
			Turning, however, to more directly ecclesiastical affairs, we have 
			noted that Asa’s reformation received its first impulse from the 
			utterances of the prophet Azariah or Oded, and also that one feature 
			of the prophet’s work is to provide for the fresh needs developed by 
			changing circumstances. A priesthood or any other official ministry 
			is often wanting in elasticity; it is necessarily attached to an 
			established organization and trammeled by custom and tradition. The 
			Holy Spirit in all ages has commissioned prophets as the free agents 
			in new movements in the Divine government of the world. They may be 
			ecclesiastics, like many of the Reformers and like the Wesleys; but 
			they are not dominated by the official spirit. The initial impulse 
			that moves such men is partly one of recoil from their environment; 
			and the environment in return casts them out. Again, prophets may 
			become ecclesiastics, like the tinker to whom English-speaking 
			Christians owe one of their great religious classics and the cobbler 
			who stirred up the Churches to missionary enthusiasm. Or they may 
			remain from beginning to end without official status in any Church, 
			like the apostle of the anti-slavery movement. In any case the 
			impulse to a larger, purer, and nobler standard of life than that 
			consecrated by long usage and ancient tradition does not come from 
			the ecclesiastical official because of his official training and 
			experience; the living waters that go mat of Jerusalem in the day of 
			the Lord are too wide, and deep, and strong to flow in the narrow 
			rock-hewn aqueducts of tradition: they make new channels for 
			themselves; and these channels are the men who do not demand that 
			the Spirit shall speak according to familiar formulae and 
			stereotyped ideas, but are willing to be the prophets of strange and 
			even uncongenial truth. Or, to use the great metaphor of St. John’s 
			Gospel, with such men, both for themselves and for others, the water 
			that the Lord gives them becomes a well of water springing up unto 
			eternal life. 
			 
			But the chronicler’s picture of the work of the prophets has its 
			darker side. Few were privileged to give the signal for an immediate 
			and happy reformation. Most of the prophets were charged with 
			messages of rebuke and condemnation, so that they were ready to cry 
			out with Jeremiah, "Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me, a 
			man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth! I have not 
			lent on usury, neither have men lent to me on usury, yet every one 
			of them doth curse me." {Jer 15:10} 
			 
			Perhaps even today the prophetic spirit often charges its possessors 
			with equally unwelcome duties. We trust that the Christian 
			conscience is more sensitive than that of ancient Israel, and that 
			the Church is more ready to profit by the warnings addressed to it; 
			but the response to the sterner teaching of the Spirit is not always 
			accompanied by a kindly feeling towards the teacher, and even where 
			there is progress, the progress is slow compared to the eager 
			longing of the prophet for the spiritual growth of his hearers. And 
			yet the sequel of the chronicler’s history suggests some relief to 
			the gloomier side of the picture. Prophet after prophet utters his 
			unavailing and seemingly useless rebuke, and delivers his 
			announcement of coming ruin, and at last the ruin falls upon the 
			nation. But that is not the end. Before the chronicler wrote there 
			had arisen a restored Israel, purified from idolatry and delivered 
			from many of its former troubles. The Restoration was only rendered 
			possible through the continued testimony of the prophets to the Lord 
			and His righteousness. However barren of immediate results such 
			testimony may seem today, it is still the word of the Lord that 
			cannot return unto Him void, but shall accomplish that which He 
			pleaseth and shall prosper in the thing whereto He sent it. 
			 
			The chronicler’s conception of the prophetic character of the 
			historian, whereby his narrative sets forth God’s will and 
			interprets His purposes, is not altogether popular at present. The 
			teleological view of history is somewhat at a discount. Yet the 
			prophetic method, so to speak, of Carlyle and Ruskin is largely 
			historical; and even in so unlikely a quarter as the works of George 
			Eliot we can find an example of didactic history. "Romola" is 
			largely taken up with the story of Savonarola, told so as to bring 
			out its religious significance. But teleological history is 
			sometimes a failure even from the standpoint of the Christian 
			student, because it defeats its own ends, He who is bent on deducing 
			lessons from history may lay undue stress on part of its 
			significance and obscure the rest. The historian is perhaps most a 
			prophet when he leaves history to speak for itself. In this sense, 
			we may venture to attribute a prophetic character to purely 
			scientific history; accurate and unbiased narrative is the best 
			starting-point for the study of the religious significance of the 
			course of events. 
			 
			In concluding our inquiry as to how far modern Church life is 
			illustrated by the work of the prophets, one is tempted to dwell for 
			a moment on the methods they did not use and the subjects not dealt 
			with in their utterances. This theme, however, scarcely belongs to 
			the exposition of Chronicles; it would be more appropriate to a 
			complete examination of the history and writings of the prophets. 
			One point, however, may be noticed. Their utterances in Chronicles 
			lay less direct stress on moral considerations than the writings of 
			the canonical prophets, not because of any indifference to morality, 
			but because, seen in the distance of a remote past all other sins 
			seemed to be summed up in faithlessness to Jehovah. Perhaps we may 
			see in this a suggestion of a final judgment of history, which 
			should be equally instructive to the religious man who has any 
			inclination to disparage morality and to the moral man who wishes to 
			ignore religion. 
			 
			Our review and discussion of the varied references of Chronicles to 
			the prophets bring home to us with fresh force the keen interest 
			felt in them by the chronicler and the supreme importance he 
			attached to their work. The reverent homage of a Levite of the 
			second Temple centuries after the golden age of prophecy is an 
			eloquent testimony to the unique position of the prophets in Israel. 
			His treatment of the subject shows that the lofty ideal of their 
			office and mission had lost nothing in the course of the development 
			of Judaism; his selection from the older material emphasizes the 
			independence of the true prophet of any professional status or 
			consideration of material reward; his sense of the importance of the 
			prophets to the state and Church in Judah is an encouragement to 
			those "who look for redemption in Jerusalem," and who trust the 
			eternal promise of God that in all times of His people’s need He 
			"will raise up a prophet from among their brethren and I will put My 
			words in his mouth, and he shall speak unto them all that I shall 
			command them." {Deu 18:18} "The memorial of the prophets was blessed 
			for they comforted Jacob, and delivered them by assured hope." {Ecc 
			4:9-10} Many prophets of the Church have also left a blessed 
			memorial of comfort and deliverance, and God ever renews this more 
			than apostolic succession. 
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