B. H. Carroll Collection
Featuring the Interpretation of the English Bible by B. H. Carroll and his other works
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Contents of the B. H. Carroll Collection
Interpretation of the English Bible - Genesis to Ruth
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 1: Genesis
- Vol. 2: Exodus, Leviticus
- Vol. 3: Numbers-Ruth
Interpretation of the English Bible - Poetical Books to Restoration Period
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 4: The Poetical Books of the Bible
- Vol. 5: The Hebrew Monarchy
- Vol. 6: The Divided Kingdom and Restoration Perio
Interpretation of the English Bible - Prophets of the Assyrian Period to the Inter-Biblical Period
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 7: The Prophets of the Assyrian Period
- Vol. 8: The Prophets of the Chaldean Period
- Vol. 9: Daniel and the Inter-Biblical Period
Interpretation of the English Bible - The Four Gospels
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 10: The Four Gospels Part 1
- Vol. 11: The Four Gospels Part 2
Interpretation of the English Bible - The Acts to Philemon
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 12: Acts
- Vol. 13: James, Thessalonians, Corinthians
- Vol. 14: Galatians, Romans, Philippians, Philemon
Interpretation of the English Bible - Colossians to Revelation
Includes the following volumes:
- Vol. 15: Colossians, Ephesians, Hebrews
- Vol. 16: The Pastoral Epistles of Paul, 1-2 Peter, Jude, 1-3 John
- Vol. 17: Revelation
Discussions and Sketches
Includes the following volumes:
- Ecclesia (The Church)
- Dr. B. H. Carroll - The Colossus of Baptist History
- The Inspiration of the Bible
- The Holy Spirit
- The Way of the Cross
- The Seven Churches of Asia
- The Three Baptisms
- Sermons and Pulpit Messages
Includes the following volumes:
- Messages on Prayer
- Christian Education and Some Social Problems
- Jesus the Christ
- Baptists and Their Doctrines
- The Faith that Saves
- The Providence of God
- Christ and His Church
- Sermons and Life Sketch
- Revival Sermons
Interpretation of the English Bible
Originally published in 17 volumes, this set of commentaries on the entire Bible
by the famous Baptist preacher Benajah Harvey Carroll (1843-1914) was
edited and published by J.B. Carnfill between 1913-16. Carnfill, who was
associated with Carroll for many years and who taught Bible for more than
30 years at the seminary level, testified that the Carroll was "one
of the greatest Bible scholars and exegetes living in the world today."
Carnfill wrote that in the General Introduction to the commentary on Genesis
in 1913, the year before Carroll died. The Wycliffe Biographical Dictionary
says Carroll "was a powerful preacher, keen debater, ready writer,
widely-read historian." An Interpretation of the English Bible is
long out of print and is rare. It is not a verse-by-verse commentary,
but it is packed with helpful thoughts for preachers and teachers. It
is an excellent set for a preacher to use in conjunction with his through-the-Bible
reading one year.
"These works are designed especially for class use in the Seminary, Christian
Colleges and Bible Schools, as well as the Sunday School. That they will
make the greatest commentary on the English Bible ever published, is our
sincere conviction."
- Baptist and Reflector
This work is an interpretation rather than a commentary in the popular acceptance
of the latter term. In such interpretation, the author indulges in paraphrasing
the biblical text, in inserting now and then a sermon on a vital subject,
and in sharing with his readers bits of humor which he has picked up along
the way. After each chapter a lengthy list of pertinent questions is appended.
The reader finds Dr. Carrolls knowledge of the Bible positively
amazing, and rejoices in his strict adherence to the objective with which
he started: "We set out not to study human creeds, but the Bible,
and we agreed to let the Bible interpret itself and mean what it wants
to mean."
- John L. Hill
In-depth information on the interpretation of the English Bible
My theme is a thrilling one - THE ENGLISH BIBLE. The most natural construction
of this topic calls for a history of the Bible in English from the earliest
crude version in this tongue to the latest version, and for a summing
up of the value of these versions in their traceable effect on our language
and literature, on individual character, on the family, the unit of society,
on business and commerce, on national policy, legislation and life, and
on world evangelization, civilization and unity.
A less natural construction allows the more timely discussion of the value of a thorough
study of the whole Bible in English by English-speaking people.
In expressing a preference for this less natural construction of the demands of the
topic, I do not seek to disparage the interesting character and importance
of the discussion as delimited by the first construction. No event in
any nation's history can be more momentous and far-reaching than the giving
to them of the Word of God in their mother tongue and allowing it to be
an open book at every fireside, with no page or promise or precept darkened
by the proscriptive shadow of priest or state. The book is for the people
themselves. It is God's message to man and is addressed in all its sublime
simplicity to the individual heart and conscience, obligating the personal
responsibility of private judgment.
You recall the notable fact at Babel, showing that division of the race into nations
arose from a prior confusion of tongues and not different languages from
a prior division into nations. A common speech is the greatest factor
of unity.
And you will observe also in that other Bible story that Pentecost, by its gift of
many tongues to one set of men, reversed the disintegration of Babel,
prepared the way for breaking down the middle walls of partition which
separated peoples, and rejoiced the hearts of the representatives of every
nation under heaven, who thereby were enabled to hear the Word of God
each in the tongue wherein he was born. And you also recall the apostolic
declaration that whoever speaks in an unknown tongue to another even though
he speak the words of life is unto his hearer as a barbarian. Even a thing
without life, a bugle, a harp, or flute, if it give no distinction in
its sounds conveys no message to the hearer. And when I consider what
the English version of the Bible has wrought, I could not overestimate
the greatness of the topic under this construction. (See 1 Corinthians
14:7f.)
On the contrary, I desire to commend as one of the most charming and instructive classics
of our language, "The History of the English Bible," by Doctor
Pattison, of the Rochester Theological Seminary. Every preacher, every
Sunday school teacher, every English-speaking Christian, yea, every student
of our language, would do good to himself by adding to his library this
valuable contribution to our literature. Yet, very weighty are the reasons
which constrain me to adopt the line of discussion suggested by the less
natural construction of the topic.
The Bible in English is valueless unless we study it. Mighty as has been the influence
of this version, that influence has been measured by the study of the
Book. If all the English-speaking people had made this version a vade
mecum, a lamp to their feet and the oracle of their counsel, the millennium
would be here now. We have the Book, but do we study it? Do we study it
all? Who of us ever devoted himself to a four years' consecutive course
of earnest and prayerful study of the English Bible, covering all its
parts from Genesis to Revelation, allowing the Book to mean what it wants
to mean, and to be, by comparison of all its parts, its own interpreter?
THE ORIGIN OF THE IDEA
The idea of the work in this form originated in this way: First, a statement in
a great introductory oration by Dr. Boyce at Greenville, South Carolina,
that the Baptist ministry consists of two kinds - an educated ministry,
and a ministry of educated men - meaning by "an educated ministry"
people in the ministry who had received a college or university education;
and meaning by "a ministry of educated men," men trained for
the ministerial work, whether holding college or university degrees, being
thoroughly disciplined in the truth of the Bible. The history of the denomination
shows that the greatest achievements of the past in Baptist history have
been by men who were educated in the Bible, but not college men. To further
explain this idea, I quote from Dr. Broadus' History of Preaching: "Let
us bear in mind that the early progress of Christianity, that great and
wonderful progress to which we still appeal as one of the proofs of its
divine origin, was due mainly to the labours of obscure men, who have
left no sermons, and not even a name to history, but whose work remains
plain before the all-seeing eye, and whose reward is sure. Hail, ye unknown,
forgotten brethren! we celebrate the names of your leaders, but will not
forget that you fought the battles, and gained the victories. The Christian
world feels your impress, though it has lost your names. And we likewise,
if we cannot live in men's memories, will rejoice at the thought that
if we work for God our work shall live, and we too shall live in our work.
"And not only are these early labourers now unknown, but most of them were
in their own day little cared for by the great and the learned. Most of
them were uneducated. Throughout the first two or three centuries it continued
to be true that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty,
not many noble, were called to be Christian ministers or Christians at
all. It was mainly the foolish things, weak things, base things, that
God chose. And what power they had through the story of the cross, illuminated
by earnest Christian living! And such preachers have abounded from that
day to this, in every period, country and persuasion in which Christianity
was making any real and rapid progress."
The thought is strongly reinforced in that great book, now much neglected by our people,
Wayland's Principles and Practices of the Baptists. What a pity we cannot
get our people to carefully read over again what he has to say upon this
very subject!
The sentiments thus set forth by these three great men of our history I unhesitatingly
accept. These are followed by an additional thought, to wit: That there
ought to be some place higher in character and extent of its work than
Bible institutes and Sunday schools, for preachers and laymen to meet
together to study the Word of God thoroughly.
THE SCOPE OF THE COURSE, AND THE TIME REQUIRED
The course requires that four consecutive years shall be devoted to the study of
the Bible itself, and not of things about the Bible, and must be arranged
to cover in the best method possible within the time limits the whole
Bible - every chapter and verse of every book from Genesis to Revelation.
One hour each of four days in every school week must be devoted to teaching
and recitation, and twice as many to study.
While it is in every way desirable that each student shall complete the entire
course, yet our method of study will possess this advantage - that a failure
to complete the course does not destroy the value of a partial course.
Every lesson even, apart from all others, will be profitable; and this
profit will be greatly enhanced if you prepare the lessons covering only
one book.
LITERARY QUALIFICATIONS OF THE STUDENTS
The higher one's scholastic attainments, the wider the range of his general information,
the more perfect the discipline of his mind, the more systematic his habits
of application, the better is he prepared to take this course, and the
more profit will he likely derive from it. But if these high qualifications
were made conditions of entrance into this course, the main object in
view would be frustrated. The one prerequisite, therefore, is ability
to read and write in English, accompanied with a little common sense.
The course itself will quicken and develop his capacities and enlarge his acquirements.
A course thus restricted, and with this minimum of antecedent qualifications
necessarily assumes or takes for granted many things to which a modern
theological seminary devotes much special and critical inquiry. These,
for the time being, are left to subsequent opportunity, which indeed in
some cases may never come.
The study of the things thus deferred, even if by necessity deferred forever, is
not disparaged. But it is claimed that the study of the Bible itself -
what it says and what it means to the common mind - is a primal, elemental,
vital, and fundamental requirement, binding on every Christian conscience,
and intensely obligatory upon the mind and heart of every preacher.
TEXTBOOKS AND OTHER HELPS
The only textbook absolutely requisite is the English Bible. The Common, or King
James Version, can be made to serve, but the Canterbury Revision, or the
American Standard Version, is much preferred. On the first book of the
Bible Conant's translation of Genesis, with its critical notes, is very
helpful.
Editions of both Testaments can be had with the King James Version and Canterbury
Revision in parallel columns. The Jewish translation of the Old Testament,
by Isaac Leeser will be helpful; and the improved edition of the American
Bible Union Version of the New Testament.
In the study of the Gospels, Broadus' Harmony will be the textbook. After that, Clarke's
Harmony of the Acts will be the textbook, compared with Goodwin's Harmony
of the Life of Paul. The student will need a concordance, Cruden's or
Young's, and access to Smith's Bible Dictionary, either abridged or unabridged,
and to the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowledge, and to
some analysis of the Bible, West's or Hitchcock's. This last to aid in
comparing scripture with scripture. We are now ready for a statement of
the principle.
THINGS ASSUMED
That very critical study of the things deferred calls for a wider range of learning
and a higher grade of scholarship than the commonalty of men, or even
the average preacher, now has or ever will have. By necessity, therefore,
this needed but special work must fall upon a comparatively small class,
and this class itself in turn be measurably dependent upon the greater
scholarship and information of a very few highly qualified experts.
It is assumed that the teacher himself has necessary general information, and either
possesses adequate scholarship or is sufficiently acquainted with its
best results to safely guide his class; and while avoiding technical phraseology
and nomenclature, can point out and expound what the Bible itself says
in the principal passages which have been made the occasion of minute,
far-reaching, and destructive criticism.
For example: (a) the alleged discrepancies in matter and style between the first chapter
of Genesis and the second chapter; (b) between Exodus 6:3, and certain
passages in Genesis; (c) between Jeremiah 7:22, and similar passages from
other prophets on the one hand, and the historical statement of Exodus,
Leviticus, and Deuteronomy on the other hand. It is assumed that the providence
of God, overruling all human agencies and earthly circumstances, has preserved
for the race all that is needed of the revelations his goodness bestowed
at sundry times and through divers instrumentalities, and has assured
reliability in the records embodying them, and their correlated matter.
And that this Providence has also overruled in the combination of the
several books necessary to a complete canon.
That this library of many books embodied now in one book and called by us the Holy
Bible, not only contains, but is the Word of God and is both so necessary
and complete in every part that it may not be subject to addition or subtraction,
and that, being inspired of God throughout, it must remain to the end
of the world as the sufficient, supreme, and infallible standard by which
all human creed and conduct should be regulated in time, and by which
they shall be judged at the last day.
That our present Hebrew and Greek texts being in essential substance transcripts
of the original manuscripts in these tongues, are sufficiently accurate
for all practical purposes; no doctrine, or precept, or promise, or hope
being lost or affected by transcription.
That our English versions do with substantial fidelity and accuracy translate the
Hebrew and Greek texts, and where difficulties arise, helps, brief but
sufficient for the purposes of this course, are accessible to the English
student.
That this book, as we now have it, both as a whole and in all its parts, is profitable
for teaching what we ought to know and believe, and for conviction and
correction of all wrongdoing, and for instruction in all right doing,
in order that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped unto
every good work. It is assumed that in our Baptist literary schools, or
in other accessible schools or theological seminaries, abundant provision
is made in behalf of those needing it or desiring it, for both the needed
scholarships and its employment in pursuing the studies about the Bible
only briefly considered in this course, whether relating to textual or
historical criticism, or to any other department of study prescribed in
modern universities or theological seminaries.
It is assumed that this course in the English Bible will not only not be in opposition
to, or a substitute for, higher scholarship and more critical studies,
but will promote them by tending powerfully and continually to increase
the number of recruits seeking to add to knowledge strictly biblical all
other helpful knowledge relative to it, and that too from a class who,
without the awakening and inspiration of this course, would certainly
never seek higher attainments, and more certainly never pursue special
and critical studies. All observation and experience justify the expectation
that when the mental horizon has been widened, aspiration kindled and
the love of God's word by study of the Bible in the mother tongue, it
will be difficult for the student to stop at the terminus of an elemental
and fundamental course.
But the hope may be reasonably cherished that one grounded in this elemental course
will be safeguarded in many directions while pursuing other courses, and
will at least have attained to familiarity with all the Book itself. And,
sad to say, this safeguarding and attainment many never possess who actually
become or affect to become experts in the things about the Bible.
GENERAL RULES
The Bible is its own interpreter. That is, we arrive at the meaning of any passage
by a comparison of scripture with scripture. Revelation is a unit, or
system of truth. The parts must be interpreted to agree with each other,
and with the trend of the whole system. A difficult or doubtful passage,
here or there, must not be set aside but must conform to what is clearly
taught in many unambiguous scriptures. As the Bible was given us for practical
purposes, bearing upon character, conduct and destiny, our study of it,
to be profitable, must be in a line with these purposes. The very heart
of every lesson, therefore, will be its doctrine on these points, and
this doctrine must be so received by faith and assimilated by obedience
as to become experimental knowledge. "Whosoever willeth to do the
will of God shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God."
Continual confirmation and increased assurance that we are rightly interpreting
the Divine Word can come to only those who can say: "Then shall we
know if we follow on to know the Lord," in the same experimental
way which brings its own blessings with every forward step. "But
he that looketh into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and so continueth,
being not a hearer that forgetteth but a doer that worketh, this man shall
be blessed in his doing." As this book is the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, reverent and prayerful appeal to him for its right understanding
and application is continually necessary.
FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF THE IDEA
The idea of a course of study in the English Bible which would comprehend the entire
book is not of recent origin. Even before my conversion, when the book
was considered merely from the standpoint of literature, it seemed to
me the best and richest of the classics, and utterly apart from any thought
of its alleged inspiration, to deserve a place in the curriculum of a
liberal education far beyond that assigned Greek and Roman classics, or
to the other acknowledged masterpieces of our own tongue. That at least
our textbooks should include selections from its history, moral code,
jurisprudence, worship, poetry, orations, essays, and parables, sufficiently
full in extent to convey a fair understanding of the scope and variety
of this matchless library of literature: selections something like in
extent and variety those given in Professor Wilkinson's Foreign Classics
in English.
From any literary viewpoint I could see no good reason far excluding from our schools
a study of this book, while giving so much attention to the myths, fables,
legends, idolatries, philosophies, and sceptical speculations selected
from ancient heathen and more modern foreign classics. In moral purity
and sublimity of thought, grandeur of matter and loftiness of design,
they all fall below the excluded Hebrew literature.
But soon after my conversion, and in the light of it, my reflections began to take,
and continued to take with cumulative power, a wider and intenser form.
In this Book alone I found the origin and destiny of all created things
and beings - here alone the nature of man, and his relations to God, the
universe and fellow man, out of which arise all of his obligations and
aspirations, and in conformity to which lie his usefulness and happiness.
This Book alone discloses man's chief good and chief end.
I saw it as the only living oracle, replying instantly and freely in simple, unambiguous
language to every interrogatory propounded by life's problems and perplexities.
In its presence the double-tongued oracles of the heathen became dumb,
their dubious utterances died into echoless silence and their idolatries
and superstitions were relegated to the moles and bats.
From this reflection there was an unconscious transition to the natural inquiry:
Are the people ignorant of the matter of this Book? And if informed somewhat,
how extensive and systematic is their knowledge? Investigation brought
an appalling answer to this inquiry: Very few were found to be students
of the Book. Fragmentarily, here and there, and from many sources, something
of its matter had been picked up by most men. Much of this in corrupt
form.
The inquiry passed from the pew to the pulpit, and here the disclosure was more startling.
These men by office and profession were the teachers of the Book. Surely
these preachers have studied earnestly, prayerfully, profoundly, and systematically
all of the messages they are appointed to teach! And if they have not
as yet, in some fashion, gone over the whole ground, surely they are habitually
and diligently prosecuting such a study! If every one of the sacred writings
is inspired of God, and is profitable for teaching what men ought to know
and believe, and for conviction and correction of all wrongdoing, and
instruction in all right doing to the end that the man of God may be complete,
thoroughly equipped unto every good work, surely a teacher of the Book
will neglect no part of it, and will hasten to acquaint himself with it!
But the amazing truth must be acknowledged that few preachers, learned or unlearned, actually
study the Bible itself, their supreme textbook, as a complete and well-ordered
system of divine truth. It does not square with the facts in the case
to limit this ignorance of the Bible to uneducated country preachers.
Some of them study the Bible itself more, and are better acquainted with
it, than many educated preachers. Too many of the latter class confine
their studies to the framework and background of the divine painting,
to the human outskirts and spurs of the mountain of revelation, to the
temporary and perishing scaffolding of the temple of truth. The scholastic
spirit drives out the Holy Spirit; the study of the myriad vagaries of
subtle and ever-shifting philosophies, and of the protean shapes of speculative
hypotheses and hairsplitting criticisms on text or history, becomes their
theological task. And to this task, what are the labors of Hercules? Even
searing with a hot iron does not stop the growth of new heads on this
Hydra.
A teacher in the public schools must stand a critical examination on his textbook
before receiving a certificate of efficiency. How many preachers could
stand such an examination on the Bible? Let any preacher with sufficient
honesty and courage to face the disclosure, make a candid examination
of his own ministry in any given period of years on three points:
Say in five years, what amount of habitual, systematic study have I devoted to the
Bible itself, and over how much of the whole ground of revelation have
I passed in this time? Is not the most of my study merely to get a sermon
for my next appointment?
Judging fairly
from the aggregate of all the texts from which I have preached in five
years, how much of the Bible itself have the people learned from me in
that time?
Has my practice
conformed to the example of the prophets and apostles and of our Lord,
the Great Teacher?
While standing in amazement before this ignorance of the Bible, in both pew and pulpit,
another question smote me like lightning leaping out of the bosom of a
cloud: Is there in all the world a school where all this Word of God is
taught in the mother tongue of the people?
To the most diligent investigation the answer came like the note of a funeral dirge:
There is not one in the world!
More than twenty-five years ago, before a great audience, I propounded this question:
What would be the power of a man who with only Cruden's Concordance as
a help, devotes three entire years to the reverent and prayerful study
of the English Bible? Let this application be as rigid as a course in
mathematics. Let him put aside for the time being all that he cannot understand
from a comparison of scripture with scripture; then construct by his own
analysis an orderly body of divinity.
Would not this man be a theologian? Would he not have an inexhaustible store of
Bible sermons? Would he not, other things being equal, tower among the
preachers like Saul, head and shoulders above his fellows?
Would he not be an original thinker? Would he not know how to handle the Bible?
Would he not be approved unto God as a workman that needeth not to be
ashamed, able to rightly divide the word of truth, giving to each hearer
his portion in due season?
The world is waiting for that man, ready to receive and honor him when he arrives.
We have in all history only one near approximation to this supposititious
man, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, who, by common consent, is acknowledged
to be the greatest preacher since apostolic times. I have seen 2,500 of
his published sermons. They we as plump as a par-tridge, and as full of
meat as an egg,. Now from several complete sets of these sermons you may
construct:
(a) A fairly good commentary on the whole Bible by arranging all of one set according
to the books from which the texts are taken.
(b) Then by topical arrangement of another set you may obtain a complete body of
systematic theology.
(c) From another set you may construct a system of practical theology, or of homiletics,
or of some other department, until you virtually cover the whole ground
of theological equipment in its practical phases, and as adapted to the
exigencies of everyday life.
These sermons show that he reverently and prayerfully studied the whole Bible, honestly
regarding it as inspired of God from Genesis to Revelation, and by simple
childlike faith accepting all of it as the word of God. With what result?
More fruit ripened on that tree than on any other that has blossomed since
the apostles died.
The world heard, and accepted, and honored the man; orphans were sheltered, clothed,
fed, and educated; aged widows found asylums in the clouded sunset of
life; thousands upon thousands in many lands were converted to God; colporteurs
pushed out their wagons laden with wholesome books; schools and churches
sprang up as by magic; preachers and teachers kindled their torches at
his fire, and diffused in worldwide waves the light of the spiritual conflagration.
These reflections, substantially in the order stated, led me to seek light on a school model
in the book itself. Here is what I found:
The school of the prophets established by Samuel, and further developed by Elijah
and Elisha. These men were not priests. They had no part in the ritual
of the Temple service. They were teachers of God's Word. They constituted
the only breakwater against the incoming floods of empty formalism and
of multitudinous idolatries. They were the axes with which God hewed off
the excrescences of national life, and his trumpets of judgment against
social, religious and political corruption. They were the forerunners
of a faithful ministry of a later day.
I found the school established by our Lord Jesus Christ. One day he looked out on
multitudes of the people and was moved with compassion. He saw them scattered
and helpless as sheep without a shepherd. He saw them wandering, groping,
stumbling, and falling a prey to every ravenous beast. He turned to his
disciples with an exhortation to prayer: "Pray ye to the Lord of
the harvest that he send more labourers into the harvest." Then he
called to him twelve men as his first class. They were neither from the
ranks of the great, the learned, nor of the rich. They were poor men,
ignorant Galilean fishermen. He kept them with him for instruction for
three years. His Sermon on the Mount was his first great lesson. Then
from a boat he taught them in matchless similitudes which later he expounded
more privately. The lessons were followed by the question: "Have
ye understood all these things?" and with the declaration: "Every
scribe instructed in the kingdom of heaven is a householder who brings
out of his treasure things new and old."
He continued his instructions to the night of his betrayal, opening and expounding
all the things concerning himself written in the Law and the Prophets
and the Psalms, and yet later enduring them with the spiritual power to
shake the world.
I found the example of the Holy Spirit in recruiting new students: "For ye see
your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not
many mighty, not many noble are called: but God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak
things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base
things of the world which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things
which are not to bring to naught things that are: that no flesh should
glory in his presence."
I found that when he called a great and learned man, Saul of Tarsus, this man relied
not on his earthly wisdom and learning, but himself said: "And I,
brethren, when I came unto you, came not with excellency of speech or
wisdom, declaring unto you the testimony of God. For I determined not
to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified. And
I was with you in weakness, and in fear, and in much trembling. And my
speech and my preaching were not with enticing words of man's wisdom,
but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power: that your faith should
not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God."
From these Bible examples I turned to history and found four significant facts established
by its univocal testimony:
The great majority of the preachers in every age had but little learning except
what they gathered from the Bible.
That the
great majority of the people in every age had to content themselves with
the ministry of this unlearned class.
That schools were established at great expense to highly equip the comparatively small
but much-needed class of preachers who became mighty in learning. I rejoice
at this wise provision, while deploring the sometime perversion of it.
I found no provision for the great majority to be helped in Bible study.
From history I turned to Baptist polity and found, as I have already shown, that Baptist
polity and history are in accord with these statements, viz.: that the
ministry should not be restricted to the learned and socially great, but
should include as many of every class as God himself shall call.
Then I narrowed the vision to Texas and saw:
About three thousand Baptist preachers.
That about fifty of these annually go abroad to theological seminaries in other states.
That provision is made in Texas schools to advance the literary education of several
hundred more.
That neither in literary schools here, nor in theological seminaries abroad, is there
provision for a course of study in the English Bible itself, anyway nearly
approaching the course outlined in this chapter. No one who has ever taken
what. is called the English course in a theological seminary will claim
any such thing. If he does, he will be contradicted by his classmates.
I doubt that any theological seminary would admit such a course into its
curriculum. It may be they are wise in this. I am not controverting but
merely slating a fact. I am merely tracing the origin and development
of the idea concerning the course here and now announced, and suggesting
the reasons which led to its adoption in the present form.
I saw ever before me two multitudes: the multitude of unlearned preachers; and the
far greater multitude who can never have any other ministry. I confess
my heart goes out to them. My natural instincts incline me to an aristocracy.
But Jesus Christ made me a democrat. I use the term in its etymological,
not political sense. I have longed for years to see a school for the study
of the English Bible.
I cannot shut out of my mind the three thousand preachers of Texas, while rejoicing
that fifty can go abroad to attend theological seminaries.
It is respectfully submitted that help toward a literary education in a college, and help
toward a theological education in a seminary, both of which are advocated
and commended, do not exhaust the meaning of ministerial education. There
is a need not yet supplied for a greater number than can profit by either
of these provisions.
For the establishment of this course, we deem conclusive the following
REASONS
There is no school of the kind on earth.
It follows the example set by our Lord himself, and accords with the Holy Spirit's
choice of men to preach the gospel.
It accords with settled Baptist polity.
It is needed for both the learned and the unlearned.
Not being restricted to preachers, it will aid in the training of Sunday school
teachers of both sexes.
It encourages the study of God's Word by the pew, which must, under divine law, judge
the soundness in doctrine of the preacher himself.
Not more than one in a thousand will study the whole Bible, or any part of it systematically,
apart from the requirements of a regular course.
Shall we not with joy and enthusiasm labor together to make this work a crowning
glory to our seminary?
Upon the enterprise let us invoke the favor of men and the blessings of God.
QUESTIONS
1. What history of the English Bible is commended?
2. What is the proposed course in the English Bible, and the time required for completing
it?
3. Why will it be valuable to take even a small part of this course?
4. What minimum literary qualifications required?
5. What textbooks required?
6. Helps suggested?
7. Considering the restricted scope of the course, and the minimum literary qualifications,
what things are necessarily assumed? State briefly and substantially.
8. State briefly and substantially the general rules governing the course.
9. Why does the Bible, from a literary standpoint, deserve a larger place in a course
of study looking to a liberal education?
10. Why from the standpoint of its inspiration?
11. Are the people generally well informed as to Bible teaching?
12. Do preachers generally study it systematically?
13. Is there a school in the world where the whole Bible is taught?
14. What may be constructed from several sets of Spurgeon's published sermons and
addresses?
15. What does this show as to his study of the Bible?
16. State briefly the result on human life and character of his Bible study and
preaching.
17. What example of a Bible school have we in the Old Testament?
>18. What good was accomplished by this school of the prophets?
19. What school in the New Testament?
20. From what classes generally does the Holy Spirit recruit his preachers?
21. What four significant facts does history declare?
22. What is Baptist polity with reference to educated and uneducated preachers?
23. How many Baptists in Texas?
24. What proportion of the Baptists of the world?
25. How many Baptist preachers in Texas?
26. About what number annually go abroad for theological education?
27. About how many annually seek literary advantages in Texas schools?
28. What proportion of these in Baylor University?
29. Is the course in the English Bible limited to preachers?
30. Why should Baptist laymen study the Bible?
31. What reasons led to the opening of this course?
In addition to an Interpretation of the English Bible, we are preparing to add the
following valuable bonus works to the Works of B. H. Carroll:
Discussions and Sketches
Ecclesia (The Church) by B. H. Carroll
Written to prove the that the New Testament Church is to be considered
as local and visible and not universal and invisible. A very strong defence
of the New Testament Church
Dr. B. H. Carroll - The Colossus of Baptist History by his brother Dr. J. M. Carroll, and others
A symposium of estimates from a number of people who knew one of the most
important Baptists best.
The Inspiration of the Bible by B. H. Carroll
A Discussion of the Origin, the Authenticity and the Sanctity of the Oracles
of God.
The Holy Spirit by B. H. Carroll
Comprising a Discussion of the Paraclete, the Other Self of Jesus, and
other Phases of the Work of the Spirit of God.
The Way of the Cross Comprising a luminous discussion of both the Law
and the Gospel, by B. H. Carroll
Comprising a Luminous Discussion of Both The Law and the Gospel.
The Seven Churches of Asia by B. H. Carroll
The Three Baptisms Water, Spirit, Fire, and Life Sketch by B. H. Carroll
Sermons and Pulpit Messages
Messages on Prayer Comprising pungent and penetrating sermons on a
subject perennially vital to every Christian, by B. H. Carroll
Christian Education and Some Social Problems - sermons by B. H. Carroll
Sermons that relate to Christian Education in our homes, schools, churches
and everyday life. Supplemented with sermons that deal with social problems
that can be dealt with by the means of Christian Education.
Jesus the Christ by B. H. Carroll
A Compilation of Sermons Concerning our Lord and Savior and Touching upon
the Mountain-peaks of His Ministry, His earthly Life and his Messiahship.
Baptists and Their Doctrines by B. H. Carroll
Sermons on Distinctive Baptist Principles.
The Faith that Saves by B. H. Carroll
A Compilation of Pungent Pulpit Messages on the Vitalities of Scripture
Teaching.
The Providence of God by B. H. Carroll
Comprising Heart-Searching Sermons on Vital Themes Concerning God and
His Overruling Providence Among Men.
Christ and His Church by B. H. Carroll
Containing Great Sermons Concerning the Church of Christ, Elaborate Discussions
of the Baptist View of the Lord's Supper and a Heart-Searching Analysis
of the Church Covenant.
Sermons and Life Sketch by B. H. Carroll
Revival Sermons by B. H. Carroll
About B.H.Carroll
(b. near Carrolton, Carrol County, Miss., Dec. 27, 1843; d. Fort Worth, Tex., Nov.
11, 1914). Pastor, teacher, denominational leader, author. He led in the
founding of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, and served as president
of the seminary until his death. He was one of 12 children born to Benajah
and Mary Eliza (Mallard) Carroll. His father was a Baptist minister who
supported his family by farming. He moved with his parents to Arkansas
in 1848 and to Burleson County, Tex., in 1858.
At 16 he entered Baylor University, then located at Independence, Tex. When the
Civil War began, he enlisted in the Texas Ranger service to guard the
Texas frontier. In 1862 he enlisted in the regular army. First assigned
to the Seventeenth Regiment of Texas infantry, he served to the end of
the war.
Although his college career was interrupted by the war, Baylor University granted
him the B.A. degree. In later years he received honorary M.A. and D.D.
degrees from the University of Tennessee and the LL.D. degree from Keatchie
College, La.
He was converted in 1865, following a period of bitter struggle with skepticism, as he
later recorded in his famous sermon, "My Infidelity and What Became
of It." The same year he united with the Baptist church of Caldwell,
Tex. He was ordained to the gospel ministry the following year.
In 1866 he was married to Ellen Virginia Bell. To them were born nine children: Hassie,
Ellen, Hallie, Jimmy, Guy Sears, B. H., Jr., Charles, Katherine, and Annie
Louise. After the death of his first wife, he married Hallie Harrison
in 1899. To them was born one son, Francis Harrison.
Following the war years, he preached to small churches in Burleson County and found
it necessary to teach school for three years in order to pay debts incurred
during the war. He served as pastor of Providence Church, Burleson County,
and New Hope Church, McLennan County. In 1870 he was called to the pastorate
of First Baptist Church, Waco, where he served until 1899 when he was
elected corresponding secretary for the Texas Baptist Education Commission.
Always intensely interested in higher education, he taught theology and Bible in Baylor
University from 1872 to 1905. He organized the Baylor Theological Seminary
in 1905, and led in the founding of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary,
whose charter was granted Mar. 14, 1908. At this time he became president
of the seminary where he served until his death. The seminary was moved
to Fort Worth in 1910.
He was known
as an influential denominational leader. He served on several state and
Southern Baptist Convention committees, making notable addresses in the
interest of various areas of denominational work. He gave particular emphasis
to evangelism, prohibition, Christian education, and the work of home
missions.
The published works of Carroll total 33 volumes, comprising special addresses, doctrinal
discussions, sermons, and expositions. His best known work is An Interpretation
of the English Bible, a commentary of 13 volumes. Outstanding books of
sermons are Jesus the Christ, Baptists and Their Doctrines, and Christ
and His Church. There are yet 15 volumes of unpublished materials.
He possessed an outstanding personality. Towering several inches over six feet, he
made a commanding appearance. In later years he wore a flowing white beard.
Endowed with a powerful and pleasing voice, he was widely known for his
oratorical ability. Many stories are told concerning his unusual intellectual
ability and especially with regard to his gift of memory. Certain spiritual
experiences which he related indicate the depth and fervor of his piety
and devotion to Jesus Christ. Shortly before his death he summoned Lee
R. Scarborough, whom he had suggested to become his successor as president
of Southwestern Seminary, and said to him, "Lee, lash the Seminary
to the heart of the Saviour." He died Nov. 11, 1914, and was buried
in Oakwood Cemetery, Waco, Tex.
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