Page:The kernel and the husk (Abbott, 1886).djvu/223

Letter 18] emphatic a statement, to consider how St. Mark, the earlier of the two narrators of this miracle, sets forth the comment of Jesus? The comments run thus in the first two Gospels, and I will add a parallel saying from the third Gospel, not attached to any miracle:

You see then that the more authoritative (because earlier) of our two witnesses omits those very words on which you lay so much stress, the "express reference to something done, and done miraculously." And ought not this fact to make you pause and ask yourself "Am I really to suppose that the Lord Jesus encouraged His disciples to command material mountains to be cast into the sea, and material trees to be destroyed? Did He Himself so habitually act thus that He could naturally urge His disciples to do the like? Does it not seem, literally taken, advice contrary not only to common sense but also to a reverent appreciation of the law and order of nature?" I would suggest to you that you might weigh the inherent improbability of the words in St. Matthew (literally taken), as well as the external probability—which I will now endeavour to shew—that the whole passage was metaphorical.

We know from St. Paul's works, as well as from Rabbinical literature, that "to move mountains" was a