DAVID
DARE:

CONVERTED
SCEPTICS
THE EMERSON FAMILY had comfortably seated themselves and greeted a
few friends, but it was not quite time for the lecture to begin.
“I can’t help admiring the workmanlike way in which David Dare
has gone about his task,” observed Lucile.
“Instead of simply saying that many prophecies cannot be
denied or explained away by unbelievers, he produces them and invites
the unbeliever to do his worst. And, frankly, so far the unbeliever hasn’t done very
much.”
“That’s a fact,” agreed her brother.
“And instead of saying sceptics admit Christ to be the
greatest character of all time, he has dad on the platform reading it out of
the sceptic’s very own books. I
call that a clever move. I
wonder who the converted infidels are he promised to tell us about
tonight.”
“You may be sure,” said Mrs. Emerson, “that they are more than
ordinary unbelievers.”
“I agree with you all,” said Mr. Emerson, smiling.
“Mr. Dare is handling this whole discussion in a most original and
pleasing manner. He has
indulged in no cheap sarcasm, has given every speaker a fair, courteous
hearing, and has answered all questions in a clear, convincing manner.
And — but there he goes to the platform.”
The lecturer nodded to several with whom he had become acquainted,
among them the Emerson’s, and began:
“Two infidels once sat in a railway car discussing Christ’s
wonderful life. One of them
said, ‘I think an interesting romance could be written about Christ.’
“The other replied, ‘You are right; and you are just the man to
write it. Set forth the correct view of His life and character.
Tear down the prevailing sentiment as to His divinity, and paint Him
as He was — a mere man among men.’
“The suggestion was acted on, and years later the romance appeared. The man who made the suggestion was Colonel Robert Ingersoll,
the world-famous infidel; the author was General Lew Wallace; and the book
was ‘Ben Hur.’
“In studying his sources — the Gospels — for material to write
the romance, General Wallace found himself facing the unaccountable Man
Jesus. The more he studies Christ’s life and character, the more
profoundly he was convinced that He was more than a man among men.
“He was amazed by the fact that out of an obscure Galilean village,
so mean and low that its very name was a reproach, came this young man,
versed in neither Greek nor Hebrew — a young carpenter who had hardly been
outside His province, but whose first public utterance, the Sermon on the
Mount, is the most original and revolutionary address on practical morals
the world has ever heard.
“Lew Wallace, like the rest of the world, wondered at His words.
Age has not dimmed their light, lessened their appealing sweetness,
or diminished their force. Familiarity
has not spoiled their freshness or destroyed their fragrance.
His words shine out peerless as ever, the sweetest, calmest, wisest
words ever spoken to men.
“Lew Wallace discovered Christ to be the person that literature
feels to be its loftiest ideal, philosophy its highest personality,
criticism its supreme problem, theology its fundamental doctrine, religion
its cardinal necessity, and man his closest Friend.
“He found Christ to be the great central fact in the world’s
history. To Him everything looks forward or backward; all lines of
history converge in Him and radiate from Him.
At last, unable to resist the evidence, Lew Wallace, the infidel
friend of the infidel Ingersoll, was constrained to cry, like the centurion
under the cross, ‘Truly this was the Son of God.’
So in the writing of ‘Ben Hur,’ a book that was to exhibit
Christ merely as a human man, Lew Wallace was converted, and painted Him as
the Son of God.
“About ten years ago Europe was thunderstruck by a book about
Christ. The author had been noted as a most rabid atheist.
He says that he ‘affronted Christ as few men before him have ever
done.’ He wrote sneering
books, letting his ‘mad and voluble humour run wild along all the roads of
paradox’ and ‘negation’ to arrive at ‘perfect atheism.’
“He went on to say that he did not turn to Christ ‘out of
weariness, because his return to Christ made life become more difficult and
responsibilities heavier to bear; not through the fears of old age, for he
could still call himself a young man [he was forty]; and not through desire
for worldly fame, because as things go nowadays he would receive more
commendation if he continued in his old ideas.’
In short, after one has written books attacking Christ and
Christianity, and is noted as a leader of infidels, it is indeed hard to
turn around and confess he has been mistaken.
“But this is what Giovanni Papini, the renowned and self-proclaimed
atheist, did. His ‘Life of
Christ’ so amazed the world that it has been translated into all the
modern languages. I read it
with tingling delight.”
Mr. Emerson stood and obtained recognition.
“I have not interrupted, because I desired to hear your stories of
‘converted infidels’ fairly complete.
But these men never left their own countries to investigate.
They merely read the Bible, a few histories, and changed their minds.
Although it is evidence that unbelievers do become believers —
which we knew before — it is hardly convincing.”
“You admit that Lew Wallace, Papini, and others changed their views
after reading the Bible and a few histories,” replied Dare.
“Well, few sceptics bother to make that much research, and not one
in a thousand ever reads the evidence on both sides.
But I will now tell you about an unbeliever who electrified the
doubting as well as the Christian world by announcing that he was going to demonstrate
that the Bible could not be true.
“Sir William Mitchell Ramsay, in 1881, was a young man of sterling
integrity, unimpeachable character, culture, and high education.
He had a sincere desire to know the truth. He had been educated in an atmosphere of doubt, which early
brought him to the conviction that the Bible was fraudulent.
“He had spent years deliberately preparing himself for the
announced task of heading an exploration expedition into Asia Minor and
Palestine, the home of the Bible, where he would ‘dig up the evidence’
that the Book was the product of ambitious monks, and not the Book from
heaven it claims to be. He
regarded the weakest spot in the whole New Testament to be the story of
Paul’s travels. These had
never been thoroughly investigated by one on the spot.
So he announced his plan to take the Book of Acts as a guide, and by
trying to make the same journeys Paul made over the same routes that Paul
followed, prove that the apostle could never have made them as described.
“The enemies of the Bible were enthusiastic over what they were
confident would prove a complete and final refutation of the Book; and it
must be admitted that some believers trembled at the prospect.
For this was the boldest attempt to disprove the Bible since the days
that Julian, the emperor of Rome in the fourth century, set himself with his
wealth to annihilate belief in the Bible by deliberately breaking its
prophecies — a project that miserably failed, as Gibbon the infidel
historian admits.
“The factor that made the Ramsay expedition unique was the
confidence that its leader inspired from opposing camps.
Here was a man who was not a boisterous blasphemer, content to sit in
Paris, London, or Berlin, and from these remote points assail a book that
had its origin and setting in ancient Palestine.
He had the courage of his convictions and the intellect and physical
equipment to carry out his purpose to make investigation.
So all parties believed in Ramsay, and when he said he would publish
his findings just as he discovered things to be, his word was accepted.
“Equipped as no other man had been, he went to the home of the
Bible. Here he spent fifteen years literally ‘digging for the
evidence.’ Then in 1896 he
published a large volume on ‘St. Paul, the Traveller and the Roman
Citizen.’
“The book caused a furore of dismay among the sceptics of the
world. Its attitude was utterly unexpected, because it was contrary
to the announced intention of the author years before. The chagrin and confusion increased, as for twenty years
more, book after book from the same author came from the press, each filled
with additional evidence of the exact, minute truthfulness of the whole New
Testament as tested by the spade on the spot.
The evidence was so overwhelming that many infidels announced their
repudiation of their former unbelief and accepted Christianity.
And these books have stood the test of time, not one having been
refuted, not have I found even any attempt to refute them.
“Quotations cannot do justice to forty years’ exploration and
writing, but I cannot refrain from a few extracts.
Speaking of the Book of Acts, Ramsay, on page 238 of his ‘St.
Paul,’ says:
“ ‘The narrative never makes a false step amid all the many
details, as the scene changes from city to city.’
And on page 240: ‘Every
minute fact stated in Acts has its own significance.’
“ ‘The characterization of Paul in Acts,’ says Ramsay on pages
21, 22, ‘is so detailed and individualized as to prove the author’s
personal acquaintance. Moreover,
the Paul of Acts is the Paul that appears to us in his own letters, in his
ways and his thoughts, in his educated tone of polished courtesy, in his
quick and vehement temper, in the extraordinary versatility and adaptability
that made him at home in every society, moving at ease in all surroundings,
and everywhere the centre of interest, whether he is the Socratic
dialectician in the agora of Athens, or the rhetorician in its university,
or conversing with kings and proconsuls, or advising in the council on
shipboard, or cheering a broken-spirited crew to make one more effort for
life. Wherever Paul is, no one
present has eyes for any but him.’
“Turn now to one of his later books, ‘The Bearing of Recent
Discovery on the Trustworthiness of the New Testament,’ published in
1914. In the introduction, page
v, he says: ‘My aim. . . is to show through the examination, word by word
and phrase by phrase, of a few passages which have been exposed to hostile
criticism, that the New Testament is unique in the compactness, the
lucidity, the pregnancy, and the vivid truthfulness of its expression.
That it is not the character of one or two only of the books that
compose the New Testament; it belongs in different ways to all alike.’
“ ‘From Strauss to Schmiedel, what a series of distinguished and
famous scholars have blindly assumed that their inability to estimate
evidence correctly was the final and sure criterion of truth.’ — Page
262.
“ ‘Such progress as the present writer has been enabled to make
in discovery is largely due to the early appreciation of the fact that Luke
is a safe guide.’ (Page 259). ‘Wherever
the present writer followed Luke’s authority absolutely, . . . he was
right down to the last detail.’ — Page 262.
“And so it happened that Sir William Ramsay, who set out to destroy
belief in the Bible, has done more than any other one man in modern times to
establish, to demonstrate beyond possibility of cavil, the absolute, minute
trustworthiness and truth of the New Testament.
“Also I would like to tell you of Adolf Deissmann, the great young
German scholar whose findings rank second only to those of Ramsay.
He began his investigation in mood similar to Ramsay’s. After years of exploration he arrived, as had Ramsay, at a
settled belief in the very Bible he had expected to disprove.
Deissmann’s ‘Light From the Ancient East’ is the most
revolutionary book on the Bible of this century as Ramsay’s was of the
last century. Together these
two men, who set out as doubters determined to explore and prove for
themselves the unreliability of the Bible, have erected an indestructible
Gibraltar of evidence in its favour. Until
the evidence of these two men has been overcome, the cause of unbelief is
lost.
“This subject has only been touched; and now I must close.
But I commend to you the
thrill of joy you will certainly experience if you follow these men in their
fascinating adventures of exploration in Bible lands and truths.
“Next week we will consider what the sceptic has to offer us.”

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