Excerpt from The Redeemer: A Sketch of the History of Redemption
These chapters are not sermons. The preparation of them was indeed occasioned by preaching a series of sermons upon the work of salvation, but, with the exception of the direct form of address, which I thought it advisable not to change, they have been modified for the press. They form a sketch of the history of redemption, exhibited in its different phases, but particularly in its essential phase, - the life of Jesus Christ.
I have freely drawn from the fountains of cotemporary theology, as was natural. The works of Neander, Lange, Ullmann, Lucke, and Sartorious, the numerous commentaries on the Gospels as well as the writings of the Reformers, and especially Calvin's Harmony of the Gospels, have been largely turned to account. I have not thought it necessary, however, to load my hook with notes and citations, for I have received from these great theologians a general impulse rather than specific documents. I have not attempted to set forth a Life of Jesus from the scientific point of view, though I have had constantly before my eyes the work of Strauss, whose negative results have entered much farther than is thought into the circulation of cotemporary ideas. But the presentation of the fact of redemption in its totality is of itself a strong defense of Christianity. It is already proving revelation, when it is set forth in its rich unity from the Fall to the Crucifixion and the Resurrection. The binding into one sheaf of the scattered cars of wheat exhibits and enhances their beauty.
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