I
came across this article by Alexander Thomson (1889-1966) discussing
how the word "Eternity" and phrases like "Forever and ever"
got into our English Bibles and shaped the face of modern orthodox
theology.
Although
this is a lengthy read for a Blog post I sincerely
encourage you to read it
carefully as it makes huge sense.
Part of the journey I've been on has led me to look into the origin of many religious forms in the Christianity I found myself in. One tradition I've been led to investigate is the theological concept of an "Eternal Hell" - How did we get here when there is no such word holding the same English definition as our "Hell" in Hebrew or Greek language OR concept. What other factors played a part in the moulding of Christianity as the early Church knew it to today's version of it - the Institutionalized Religion that we call "Christianity".
Part of the journey I've been on has led me to look into the origin of many religious forms in the Christianity I found myself in. One tradition I've been led to investigate is the theological concept of an "Eternal Hell" - How did we get here when there is no such word holding the same English definition as our "Hell" in Hebrew or Greek language OR concept. What other factors played a part in the moulding of Christianity as the early Church knew it to today's version of it - the Institutionalized Religion that we call "Christianity".
I have
been astounded having met many others that have found themselves on the same
journey of discovery, reaching the same conclusions!
Enjoy -
(and SHARE!!)
A.V
(Authorised Version) = KJV Bible
C.V.= The CONCORDANT
VERSION
by Alexander Thomson
The
inspired Scriptures never speak of eternity. They describe nothing as eternal.
They contain no term which in itself bears our time sense of everlasting. As
eternity is not a subject of revelation, our present object is to discover how
and when this unscriptural
term gained entrance into theology, with most disastrous results. As this is really
a historical investigation, it will be necessary to allude to a considerable
number of historical events, and to quote from a number of by-gone translators
and their versions. It is hoped that such a study, along with an examination of
various primitive words dealing with time, will dispel any doubts in the minds of those who
do not feel thoroughly assured regarding the use of the word eonian in place of eternal.
It may
be stated, without fear of contradiction, that the more one explores into the
early centuries of Christendom, the clearer does it become that a corrupt theology was alone responsible for
displacing the teaching regarding the eons by a dogma respecting
"eternity."
One
statement in English Bibles which perhaps more than
any other has led men's minds astray is found in Revelation 10:6. Wiclif (1380) rendered this, "Tyme
schal no more be," having been partly misled by the Latin Vulgate of Jerome (A.D. 380), which he used
as his basis. Could he have had the Greek text as a basis, the likelihood
is that he would
not have
used the word "time." Jerome rendered it, "Time
will not be further" tempus non erit amplius. While his
translation is on the whole a most faithful and excellent one, in some cases
the words he utilizes do not quite match the Greek he translates.The result was that Wiclif became the medium through whom inaccurate or false terms passed
into English theology and into our modern Bibles, where they have become
stereotyped. The consequences have been very far reaching and most deplorable.
Further examples will be cited anon.
The
Authorized Version reads,
"there should be time no longer." The CONCORDANT VERSION reads, "there will be
no longer delay." This makes clear and simple sense, and presents
no difficulty. But the erroneous rendering which has persisted for over five
hundred years since the time of Wiclif is quite out of harmony with the
context. Anyone can see that after the events detailed in the tenth chapter of
the Unveiling, there is an entire millennial period to follow, during which
"time" continues. The
Revised Version has a
reading similar to the A.V., but corrects this in the
margin to "there shall be delay no longer."
Nevertheless,
the false notion that Time must some day end and Eternity commence, still
clings to theology. All that the Scriptures reveal is that the eons will terminate (1 Cor.10:11;
Heb.9:26), but it seems clear that time of some kind or other must
continue.
When it
is revealed that certain things are to continue after the eons have terminated, or when anything is described
as being interminable, a distinct negative particle is used in the Greek to denote this, as in the
following examples:
Luke
|
1:
|
33
|
of His
kingdom there shall be no consummation
(ouk estai telos, NOT WILL-BE FINISH). |
1 Cor.
|
15:
|
42
|
it is
roused in incorruption
(aphtharsia, UN-COR-RUPTion). |
53
|
this
mortal must put on immortality
(athanasia, UN-DEATH, death-less-ness). |
||
1 Pet.
|
1:
|
4
|
an
allotment incorruptible and undefiled and unfading
(amaranton, UN-FADing). |
Heb.
|
7:
|
16
|
the
power of an indissoluble life
(akataluton, UN-DOWN-LOOSED). |
1 Tim.
|
1:
|
4
|
interminable genealogies
(aperanton, UN-OTHER- SIDE). |
As the eons (ages with a start and end
point) are to terminate, it follows that all that is eonian (age-during/relating to that
particular age) must finish, or be swallowed up in that which follows. Even
dooms, which are described as eonian, such as the fire of Matt.18:8, the extermination from the
face of the Lord, of 2 Thess.1:9, and the eonian judgment of Heb.6:2, shall terminate in due season. In vivid contrast to such
merely eonian doom stands the awful doom of the city of Babylon, as portrayed
in Rev.18:21- 23, where within the compass of three verses occurs the solemn
negative expression nevermore (ou mee eti, NOT NO STILL), no fewer than
six times:
"Thus,
Babylon, the great city, will be hurled down, and she may be found in
her nevermore. And the sound of the lyre
singers and entertainers, and flutists and trumpeters shall be heard in
you nevermore; and every artisan of every
trade may be found in you nevermore; and the sound of a millstone shall be heard in you nevermore; and the light of a lamp may be appearing in
you nevermore; and the voice of the
bridegroom and bride shall be heard in you nevermore."
|
Even to
God the Scriptures do not ascribe eternity. What need is there to describe Him
as eternal? Would it not be almost an affront to use such an epithet of One who
must, in order to be God, be eternal? We speak not of "wet rain"
falling from the clouds. Were it not wet, it would not be rain. In the
beginning of Genesis, the fact of God, and the existence of God, are taken for
granted. No attempt is made to explain Who God is and whence He came, or to
account for His existence. Nature demands His existence, and faith assumes Him.
That He is the "eonian
God" (Rom.16:26)
is a distinct and added revelation. Just as evil is a special feature of the eons, so God is seen as the "eonian
God" during the same time. While it is not possible for God to be more
than eternal, He is more than eonian. Upon a lead tablet found in
the necropolis at Adrumetum, in the Roman province of Africa, near Carthage,
belonging to the early third century, the following inscription is scratched in
Greek, "I am adjuring Thee, the great God, the eonian and more than eonian
(epai
αιωνιον) and
almighty, the One up-above the up-above gods." Deissmann requires to
render this as follows: "the eternal and more than eternal and almighty,
who is exalted above the exalted Gods."
The
Hebrew Scriptures are written almost entirely in pure Hebrew. There are very
few words which are not Hebrew. So with the Greek Scriptures. They contain few
words which are not of pure Greek. But our English Bible is very different. Had
it been rendered in simple, homely, native English words alone, it would have
read very differently. It is
true that numerically the great bulk of the words employed are pure English,
but many of the important doctrinal terms are words adopted either from Latin
or Greek. The
German Bible is very much more pure German than the English Bible is pure
English.
What is
the most important thing in the Scriptures for the sinner? Many will answer,
Salvation. Yet this important term only came into use in the English language
about the twelfth century, say eight hundred years ago. It is a purely Latin
word. At that time it bore the meanings both of safety or salvation, and of
health. The believer's salvation was his "health." Salvation occurs not once in the Anglo-Saxon Scriptures
(680-900 A.D.), or in Wiclif's version (1380 A.D.). Wiclif always uses the word
"health," although he uses the terms "make safe" and
"safe." The old word used for the Saviour was Haelend, or "Healer."
Not only does He make one safe, but He heals.
Tyndale,
in the year 1526 A.D., was
the first one to use the word salvation in the Scriptures, and he used it once only, in
John 4:22 ("for salvation commeth of the Jewes." Wiclif had,
"for heelthe is of Jewis"). Thereafter the fine old English word
"health" dropped out, and was completely displaced by the imported
but now most important Latin word "salvation."
While it
is true that the revival of learning and letters in the fifteenth century
greatly enriched the English language, it drove out thousands of very fine
English words. Previous to that time, it had sometimes been necessary to use a
double word to give the necessary meaning in the Scriptures. Thus, in the
Anglo-Saxon Gospels of about the time of King Alfred, about a thousand years
ago, the following expressions are met with: leorning-cnicht (learning-knight)
for disciple (a Latin word); hundredes ealdor- man (alderman of a hundred) for
centurion (also a Latin word); bocere (book-wer, bookman) for scribe (another
Latin word); big- spel (near-story, example, like German Bei-spiel) for the Greek parable.
Eternal is one of the many hundreds of
words which gained entrance into English during the Renaissance. Previous to that time, it was
completely unknown. No such word appears in any old English
scriptures. Instead
of it, there is found a simple little word with the meaning of eonian, or
something like that, spelt ece, of which more will be said later. In fact, it may be laid down as
a rule that no language had, for some time after the first century A.D., any
term to denote eternity.
Some of
the following facts may at first sight seem somewhat startling, yet that is
because they are not widely known. Had the old English Bibles been translated direct
out of the Greek, instead of from the Latin Vulgate Version of Jerome (380
A.D.), it is very probable that the word eternal would never have been found in
our modern Bibles and theological terminology at all. But for the Norman Conquest of
England in 1066 A.D., which brought many French words into the English language
(and French is largely decayed and corrupt Latin), and drove out many native
English words, we should most probably now be using not eternal, but ece, the old equivalent of eonian. On the other hand, had the
sack of Constantinople by hordes of Turks from Asia taken place prior to the
Norman Conquest, instead of in 1453, the likelihood is that we should have had
the Greek term eonian incorporated into English,
instead of the Latin eternal.
The
capture of Constantinople by the Turks was of enormous importance to Europe. It
was then the great center of learning, especially Greek learning, When it was
sacked, hosts of learned doctors were scattered abroad all over Europe,
carrying with them the knowledge of the Greek tongue and the treasures of Greek
literature. It is hard to believe that for over a thousand years, up till the
year 1453, Greek was almost unknown or forgotten in most of Europe. Even in
Italy, which formerly had been dominated by Greek, it became almost unknown.
Very few quotations from Greek poets are to be found in Italian writers from
the sixth to the fourteenth centuries. No Greek was taught publicly in England
until about 1484, when it began to be taught at Oxford University. Erasmus, the great Dutch scholar,
learnt Greek at Oxford and subsequently was Professor of Greek at Cambridge
from 1509 till 1514, during
which time Tyndale studied there. Erasmus issued his first Greek
New Testament in 1516. This was the first Greek New Testament printed for sale.
The first Greek grammar for well over a thousand years was published at Milan
in 1476, and the first lexicon four years later. As an English scholar
expressed it, "Greece had arisen from the grave with the New Testament in
her hand." About this time great German scholars even changed their names
to Greek ones, so fashionable had the study of Greek become. Schwartzerd (black
earth) became Melanchthon; Hausschein (house-shine) was discarded for
Oecolampadius; Gerhard attained fame as Erasmus; Horn took on more dignity as
Ceratinus.
HOW
THE LATIN LANGUAGE AFFECTED THEOLOGY
In order
to understand aright the word "eternal," it is
necessary to make a review of linguistic conditions in Greece and Italy before
and after the days of Paul.
The
classical Latin tongue was one out of many that were spoken by the early
inhabitants of Italy. At first it was only the dialect of a small area around
Rome. Other dialects which in the course of time mingled with it were of a very
different type, such as the Etruscan. Many colonies of Greeks existed in early
times in the south of Italy, so that this part was known as "Great
Greece." From the dawn of authentic history the Greek language may be seen
exerting a strong influence over Italy. When in B.C. 454 the Romans desired to
establish a code of laws, they dispatched commissioners to Greece to study and
report upon the laws of
Solon at Athens. What
in later times became the polished dialect of the district of Latium was not
the language of the common people, just as the classical Greek of the poets and
dramatists was not the common speech of the people. The everyday language of Greeks
was much the same as is found in the Greek Scriptures, known as the koinee, or
"common," or vulgar tongue. Latin was the speech of the patricians, of the
literary world, of the politicians, of a comparatively small section of the
people. It came to occupy the position of a partly artificial dialect amid many
other widely differing dialects.
One
effect of the rapid conquests
of Alexander the Great (B.C. 334-323) was that
Greek became the language of government and literature throughout most of the
then civilized world. It became the lingua franca of countries such as Palestine and Egypt.
About the year B.C. 280 Rome was mistress of all
Italy except some of the Greek cities in the south. These succumbed by B.C. 276. Sixty years later Rome
was interfering in the affairs of Greece itself, and by B.C. 189 Rome was mistress of
Greece.
Nevertheless, Greek continued to be the fashionable
speech in Italy for a long time. In the time of Dionysius Thrax (about B.C. 80)., the children of
gentlemen in Rome learnt Greek before they learnt Latin. Dionysius was the
author of the first Greek
school grammar ever
compiled in Europe, published in Rome in the time of Pompey (about B.C. 50), which became the basis of
all subsequent Greek grammars, and was the book used in schools for centuries.
This small and elementary work of only a few pages is still in existence. The
first history of Rome was written at Rome in Greek by
Fabius Pictor about B.C. 200.
In the
first two centuries A.D., Greek was very generally used in Rome. In addition to Latin, numerous
other dialects might be heard in the streets of Rome and throughout Italy, and the Greek language served as
a common medium whereby all might communicate with each other. For this reason, there was no
need for Paul to write his epistle to Rome in Latin. As he was much too sensitive
to write to them in a tongue they would not understand, it is clear that the
Roman church must have been quite at home with the Greek tongue. For a similar
reason, there
was no need for a Latin version of the Scriptures in Italy for about a hundred
years after Paul's time. It is of
profound significance to note, that when the first Latin version was made, it had its
origin, not in Italy, but in North Africa. Of the manuscripts extant
belonging to the Old Latin version, that is to say, the version in use before
the time of Jerome (380 A.D.), the majority may be
recognized as being of the "African"
type.
It is
here necessary to explain that what became the Roman province of
"Africa" was in early times the Canaanite colony of Carthage, in
North Africa, near Tunis. This colony was founded by the cities of Tyre and
Sidon, and some have sought to identify Carthage with Tarshish (as the Greek
version of Isa.23:1). Carthage ruled over the large islands of Sardinia and
Corsica, and over part of Sicily also. Warfare with the rising military power
of Rome was inevitable. Three long struggles, known as the Punic (or
Phoenician) Wars, took place between B.C. 264 and 146, culminating in the complete
subjugation of Carthage, which
now became a province of Rome.
Henceforth
the speech of this Roman colony was Latin, but it was the Latin dialect of
about the middle of the second century B.C. This is important. The Latin
dialect of this time was very different from what it became a hundred years
later.
Polybius,
the Greek historian, states, about B.C. 150, that the best informed Romans of that time could
not understand without difficulty the language of the former treaties entered
into between Rome and Carthage, less than a hundred years before. Horace, who died about the time
Christ was born, confessed that he could not understand the old Latin Salian
poems, and he infers that Latin had so greatly changed within a few hundred
years that no one else could understand them.
Quintilian
(born 40 A.D.) states that even the Salian
priests could scarcely follow their sacred hymns. The purest era of Latin in Rome
was during the hundred years before Christ came. It was then that the language
became fixed and polished.
Carthage,
however, being a colony, at a considerable distance from Rome, spoke a somewhat
different Latin than did Rome. It was free from the influence of Greek. Just as
the Scandinavian spoken in Norway and Sweden has diverged much from the old
Scandinavian of a thousand years ago still spoken in Iceland; as the
"taal" of the Boers in South Africa has diverged much from the Dutch
of Holland; as the English carried to America three hundred years ago has
preserved certain words and meanings and lost others, so the Latin transported
to Carthage came in course of time to diverge, in certain respects, from the
Latin spoken in Italy and Rome. As invariably happens in such cases, certain
old expressions and nuances were preserved which died out elsewhere, while in
other cases fresh nuances came into use.
It is to Tertullian, a Latin of Carthage, who lived from about 160 to
220 A.D., that we are indebted for our
first knowledge of the existence of the Old Latin version of the Scriptures. He
was the earliest of the Latin Fathers. The manuscripts of this version in
existence show that the Latin employed was very different from classical Latin,
being more vigorous, yet marked by solecisms (or improprieties in the language
used-what would appear to others as errors in grammar and violations of syntax
and idiom). It may have been originally a translation from the Greek made by
comparatively illiterate people, or the language may be due simply to the
differences in dialect between the Latin of Rome and the Latin of Carthage. So long as the Old Latin
scriptures remained in North Africa, they continued with little or no change,
but immediately they arrived on the soil of Italy, a great disturbance took
place. Old words in use in Carthage
were found to be unintelligible to the Romans, while new words coined there
were not understood. Words in both countries had, in the course of two or three
centuries, taken on distinctive and divergent nuances of their own. The
provincial solecisms and roughnesses of the African version were patched up and
corrected by means of the Greek version current in Italy, and in course of time
the result came to be indescribable confusion. There were said to be as many
versions as manuscripts, though this is no doubt somewhat of an exaggeration.
Upon Jerome fell the arduous task of
attempting to bring about harmony out of this confusion, and the outcome was
his version of the Latin scriptures which in after times, from the thirteenth
century onwards, was known as the "Vulgate."
Hitherto, for
about six hundred years, the Greek Septuagint version had held the field, and
there was intense and prolonged opposition to Jerome's version. This was the Bible which was to
dominate most of Christendom for a thousand years, right up to the Reformation. Jerome, however, in his revision,
while correcting obvious errors and setting right what seemed to be bad Latin,
was very conservative otherwise. Many expressions he left as he found them.
Whatever may have been his own views regarding the future, he does not appear to have
revised two Latin words, fraught with profound significance, which he found in
the old version.
These
are both words used to render the Greek word eon, as Latin, like Gothic and Armenian and English,
found two words necessary, seculum, from which we have our word "secular,"
and aeternus, from which have descended the fateful words "eternal"
and "eternity." Sometimes, as we shall see, the Greek αιων (eon) was rendered
by one of these two Latin words, and sometimes by the other. Not only so, but
when the Greek shows the word eon twice or thrice in one clause
(as in "for the eon, and for the eon of the eon"), the Latin
frequently shows both aeternusand seculum. This alone ought to be
sufficient to prove that the two Latin words could have the same meaning, more
or less, and it will be our present purpose to demonstrate that originally the
two words differed little in meaning, but that theology, chiefly through the
dominating influence of one man, imparted to aeternus a nuance alien to its derivation
and original usage.
We shall
now examine the derivation of these two Latin words, one of which was destined
to exercise such a profound influence over the minds of men for so long, an
influence not in accord with truth, and by no means for the glory of God.
ETERNAL
AND SECULAR
Seculum is defined in Latin dictionaries as meaning a generation, an age, the world,
the times, the spirit of the times, and a period of a hundred years. That which is secular pertains
to the present world, especially to the world as not spiritual.
In French the word has come to mean a century, besides meaning age, time, period, and world (siecle). The future siecle is the "life to come." In the French Bible, "for the eons of the
eons" is rendered by "to the siecles of the siecles," following the Latin
Vulgate.
The
other Romance languages follow the same construction, Italian using secoli, and Spanish siglos. Irish and Gaelic usesaoghal, Roumanian uses seculi, and even Basque has secula. That is to say, Bibles in
these languages render the
corrupt "for ever and ever" correctly, or nearly so.
Seculum is sometimes derived from the same root that gives "sequel," meaning time as "following." Before the rise of words to express eternity, time was viewed as flowing onwards, generation following generation into the dim future. Others derive seculum from the root that gives section, as meaning time cut off, divided, or decided.
Long ago in Rome, periodic games were held, which were called "secular" games. Herodian, the historian, writing in Greek about the end of the second or beginning of the third century, calls these "eonian" games. In no sense were the games eternal. Eonian did not mean eternal any more than a seculum meant eternity.
Seculum is sometimes derived from the same root that gives "sequel," meaning time as "following." Before the rise of words to express eternity, time was viewed as flowing onwards, generation following generation into the dim future. Others derive seculum from the root that gives section, as meaning time cut off, divided, or decided.
Long ago in Rome, periodic games were held, which were called "secular" games. Herodian, the historian, writing in Greek about the end of the second or beginning of the third century, calls these "eonian" games. In no sense were the games eternal. Eonian did not mean eternal any more than a seculum meant eternity.
Among
the many inscriptions in the Catacombs of Rome is one to the memory of a girl
of fifteen years who had died. It is inscribed to "Aurelia, our sweetest
daughter, who departed from the seculum" (or world,-quae de saeculo recessit). Some of the old Roman writers use the word in the sense of the utmost lifetime of man, a
century. It may
be said that every hundred years the race of man is completely changed. Some
people change little within a generation, but after a hundred years the entire
physical appearance of the race has altered.
The
famous Council
of Trent, in
Italy, sitting from 1545 to
1563,
decreed that "This
same ancient and Vulgate edition, which by the long use of so many centuries
has been approved in the church itself, is to be held authentic in public
readings, disputations, sermons and expositions; and no one is to dare or
presume to reject it under any pretext whatever." The word used for
"centuries" is saeculorum, seculums.
Trajan, who was emperor of Rome from 98 to 117 A.D., wrote to Pliny regarding the
conviction of those who professed the Christian faith. Such were not to be
specially sought out or hunted, yet if accused and convicted must bear the
punishment. He adds that accusations against them which were not signed were
not to be accepted on any account, as this was the "very worst example
that could be shown, and pertains not to our seculum."
Tertullian, born about 160 A.D., in one of his many writings,
referred to "a mighty shock impending over the entire world, and the conclusion of the seculum itself."
Lactantius, born about 260 A. D., speaks of the "learned
ones of this seculum."
Eusebius, the historian of the early
Church, born about 265 A.D., gives an account of the trial
of certain martyrs from Africa in the year 180. The martyrs showed a most
indomitable spirit when interrogated by the proconsul. Speratus, their leader,
replied, "The
empire of this seculum (world) I do not recognize." The proconsul pressed them to
take thirty days to reconsider. Speratus replied, "In a matter so
straightforward there is no reconsideration." Eusebius goes on to relate
that the martyrs would reign with God through "all the seculums of
the seculums."
Writing
about "Our Lord's Miracles," Eusebius alludes to "magicians who
have ever existed throughout the seculums." This is a reference to past ages.
These
examples are sufficient to show that seculum was used very much as the
Greek αιων (eon). No case
can be cited in which it, refers to endless time.
We shall
now consider its usage by Jerome
in the Latin Vulgate Version. Those who maintain that the Greek αιων(eon) signifies eternity or "for ever"
would do well to consider very carefully Jerome's renderings from Greek into Latin. Out of about 130 occurrences of eon in the Greek New
Testament, Jerome renders by seculum 101 times, while he
uses aeternum 27 times. If by the latter word he meant eternity, he is very inconsistent. It is to the Latin versions
that we must look for the origin of the pernicious system, or rather lack of
system, of giving to the Greek eon two diverse meanings. In every occurrence in the
Unveiling, of the expression "for the eons of the eons," Jerome has, "for the seculums
of the seculums," which Wiclif, with
studied carefulness, rendered by "in to worldis of worldis,"
just as five hundred years before Wiclif's time the Old English glosses of Latin
manuscripts gave "world" for seculum.
The
following are some of the expressions used by Jerome: "from the seculum," "from the seculums,"
"for the seculum," "for the seculums," "before the
seculums," "this seculum," "that seculum," "the
consummation of the seculum," "the consummation of the seculums,"
"the ends of the seculums," "in the seculum of the
seculum," "the future seculum," "the coming seculum,"
"the impending seculums," "the seculum of this world." In Jude 25 he renders by, "before the entire
seculum, and now, and for all the seculums of the seculums."
Wiclif here has, "bifor alle
worldis and now and in to alle worldis of worldis."
Tyndale, coming one hundred and fifty
years after Wiclif, has the utterly inadequate and
bald and totally erroneous "now and for ever," although the Rheims version (1582 A.D.) has, "befoer al worldes,
and now and for al worldes evermore."
In Eph.2:2, Jerome has "the
seculum of this world" (C.V. "the eon of this world").
Wiclif did not understand this, and
originated the guess, "the course of this world," which was slavishly copied by those who came after
him.
Turning
to the Greek
word eonian, which occurs seventy times in the New Testament, Jerome does not render about three quarters of them by the word secular, and one quarter by eternal, but no less than sixty-five
times does he use the latter (aeternum), while secular he uses only twice (2 Tim.1:9
and Titus 1:2), "before times secular" (ante tempora saecularia). As forty-three of the seventy
occurrences refer to
life, he was
unable to say, "secular life," and therefore
invariably puts "eternal life."
We thus
see that Jerome's renderings of the Greek αιων(eon) completely shake our
confidence in him here. By his inconsistency he really contradicts himself. Had Jerome been as consistent in rendering
the Greek into Latin as Wiclif was in rendering Jerome into English, we should never have had our Authorized Version (KJV) in its present form. In every
case where Jerome uses seculum to represent the Greek αιων(eon), Wiclif uses "world,"
while in place of Jerome's eternum for this word, Wiclif always has "without
end." For this adjective, eonian, Wiclif well nigh invariably for Jerome's eternum puts everlasting."
An
examination of Jerome's (Gallican) version of the Psalms from the Greek Septuagint reveals further strange
inconsistencies. Generally speaking, he renders the Greek "for the eon" (eis ton αιωνα) by "into eternity"
(in
aeternum), while
the compound occurrences of eon, such as "for the eon of the eon," he renders by "for
the seculum of the seculum." It was not expedient for him to say,
"into the eternity of the eternity," or "into the eternities." The expression "for
the eons" (eis tous αιωνας) he was obliged to render "for the seculums" (in saecula), as in Psalm 61:4; 72:17. In the same way, in Psalm 145:13 he renders by "a kingdom
of all seculums," which corresponds to the Hebrew and the
Greek and the A.V. margin.
In
keeping with these apparent rules, he renders the compound Greek expression, "for the eon and for the eon of the eon," by the Latin "into eternity and into the seculum of the seculum" (in aeternum et in
saeculum saeculi), as in Psa.9:5; 10: 16; 45:17; 48:14;
52:8; and 148:6. Yet the same Greek expression, "for the eon, and for the eon of the eon," he renders simply by
"into eternity" in 72:19, while it is rendered in 119:44; 145:1,2, 21, by "into the seculum, and into the seculum of the seculum." Exceptions to the
seeming rule are found in 44:8,
52:9, and 75:9, where the Greek "for the eon" is rendered "into seculum" (in saeculum), while in 73:12 it is rendered "in seculum" (in saeculo). In the last mentioned verse,
even Jerome could not bring himself to
believe that the ungodly prospered "for eternity."
In Psa.90:2 he renders the Greek "from the eon till the eon" (A.V. "from everlasting to everlasting Thou art God") by "from seculum and till seculum." Yet the very same Greek
expression he renders in 103:17 by "from eternity and till eternity" (ab aeterno et usque in
aeternum).
Probably Jerome was only translating after the
system of the Old Latin version, which had existed for two hundred years before
his time. If that is so, he must have had serious misgivings, if in aeternum meant "for eternity" or "into eternity." In Micah 5:2, where the Old Latin had "from
the days of seculum," Jerome altered to "from the days of eternity" (a diebus aeternitatis).
We shall
now bring forward verses in which the two Latin words we are studying seem to be equated. In 1 Chron.29:10 the A.V. reads, "Blessed be Thou,
Lord God of Israel our father, for ever and ever." The Hebrew and the Greek both read, "from the eon and until the eon."
In Neh.9:5 the Hebrew and the Greek have the same reading as in 1 Chron.29:10 (A.V. "Bless the Lord your God for ever and ever."). In both of these verses the Vulgate has, "from eternity until eternity." Yet in Jer.7:7 and 25:5, where the A.V. speaks of dwelling in "the
land that I gave to your fathers, for ever and ever," and the Hebrew and the Greek both have "from the eon and until the eon," the Vulgate has, "from seculum and into seculum."
How did
the Vulgate translate those verses which
speak of "the eon and beyond?"
This
expression, Dean Farrar tells us, was decisive to Origen, and so it ought to be
to all who wish to believe God. In Isa.45:17, the A.V. reads, "ye shall not be ashamed nor
confounded world without end." The Hebrew reads, "for the eons of the future." The Greek has, "till the eon further." The Vulgate has, "until the seculum of the seculum."
An
extraordinary surprise awaits us when we consider two verses wherein the Vulgate is, to say the least,
bewildering.
(Allow
me - Andrew - at this point to remind you why it is so important that we see
these translation errors in Jerome's latin Vulgate all those years ago. The
Wiclif Translation (English) was translated from Jerome's Vulgate (Latin) and
was hugely instrumental in the writing of the King James Version 1611 which now
stands as the caller of Orthodox Christian Theology.
When
people say.... "lets just stick to the Bible" we need to know that
there is a HUGE difference between our English translations of the Bible
and what the original writers intended.
Those
with the God-given inclination must do our "homework" so to speak if
we are to continue to be a part of this Gospel Reformation.... A Revolution
exposing Religion and unveiling the most spectacular Love that the world has
only dreamed about.
The traditions of man have nullified the effects of Jesus having his way in and through His children. Peoples minds have a different picture of Father, a horrific incorrect picture that bad theology has painted.
The traditions of man have nullified the effects of Jesus having his way in and through His children. Peoples minds have a different picture of Father, a horrific incorrect picture that bad theology has painted.
Its
time..... the Gospel is the Power of God unto the manifestation of the LIFE of
God through all who see something of a clear portrail of His Majesty and Trust
Him. Its Good News!)
We have
been reckoning the Latin in aeternum of Jerome's day as meaning "for
eternity" or "into eternity," whatever it
may have meant two or three hundred years before his time. It stands beyond all doubt that by seculum Jerome meant a limited period of time, an eon, but by aeternum he seems to have meant something
different. Did he mean "eternity?" Or was this Latin word
still used in the loose way it had been used long before his time, as meaning indefinite future time? Farrar says that even the Latin Fathers who had a competent knowledge of Greek knew that aeternum was used in the same loose way, for an
indefinite period, in Latin writers, as (αιωνιον) was used in Greek. Exodus 15:18 reads in the A.V.: "The Lord shall
reign for ever and ever." The Hebrew carefully limits this reign to "the eon and further." The Septuagint expands this into "the eon, and still more an eon, and further." Jerome astounds by actually rendering
by "into eternity and beyond" (in aeternum et ultra). The same Latin reading is also found in Micah 4:5 (A.V. "We will
walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever.") where the Hebrew reads, "for the eon and further," and the Greek reads, "for the eon and beyond,"
It is
now necessary to examine the origin of the word "eternal."
Whatever the Latin word meant in the time of Jerome, it certainly did not signify endless three hundred years earlier.
Professor Max Muller said of the root of this word, that it originally signified life or time, but had given rise to a number
of words expressing eternity, the very opposite of life and time. He says the Latin aevum (which corresponds almost
letter for letter with the Greek αιων, eon, thought to have been
originally aivon),
became the name of time, age, and its derivative aeviternus, or aeternus, "was made to express
eternity." These are the words of an
authority who was quite unbiased in this matter.
This
statement resembles one made by Phavorinus in the sixteenth century in the
famous "Etymologicum Magnum," a large tome giving the derivations of
all Greek words, as handed down from a
very much earlier time. The word αιων (eon) is defined, among other things,
as "the life of mankind," and there is cited "the seven eons from the creation of the heaven
and earth until the general resurrection of humanity." Phavorinus, the
editor, adds "αιων(eon) is the imperceptible (aidios) and the unending (ateleuteetos), as it seems to the
theologian!" What he meant was that originally the word never meant
unending, but
this meaning had been injected by
theology.
Indeed, he spoke truth, as it is theology, and theology alone, which in any
language has imported into time-words the thought of endlessness.
Before
returning to the Latin, we shall cite one more similar
yet very instructive case. The Emperor Justinian was the greatest of the
Eastern (Byzantine) Emperors. He reigned from 527 to 565 at Constantinople. In
the year 534 he published in fifty volumes the world famous "Justinian Code"
of Laws. This was a digest of the Greek and Roman constitutions, ordinances,
and legal decisions, culled from two thousand manuscript volumes, and it forms
the basis of most medieval and modern codes of law. In the year 540, Justinian made arrangements
for the calling together of the famous local council of four years later. He was determined that certain
doctrines must be suppressed. In setting forth the position when writing to
the Patriarch Mennas of Constantinople, he discussed the doctrines with great
ability. In particular, he wished it made very plain that the life of the
saints was to be everlasting, and that the doom of the lost was to be likewise.
Yet he did not argue that the word eonian meant everlasting. Nor did he claim
that the word eonian had hitherto been misunderstood. In setting forth the
orthodox position of the Church of that time, he did not say, "We believe
in eonian punishment,"
as this was exactly what Origen, three hundred years before,
had maintained and believed. In fact, Origen, who exulted in the truth of the reconciliation
of the universe, definitely
used the word eonian with reference to fire and doom as meaning a limited time. But writing in the very
expressive Greek language, Justinian says, "The holy church of Christ teaches
an endless eonian (ateleuteetos αιωνιος) life for the just, and endless (ateleuteetos) punishment for the wicked." Justinian knew quite well
that by itself eonian did not signify endless, and he therefore added a word
the meaning of which is quite unequivocal, a word not found in the Scriptures. This letter of Justinian,
which is still in existence, ought to convince anyone who is in doubt,
regarding the true scriptural meaning of the word eonian. It may be added, that the
Council, though expressly convened in order to stigmatize the teachings of Origen, one of which was that punishment
was only temporary, condemned his views generally, but did not anathematize his
teaching regarding the reconciliation of all. It was not until the year 696, at Constantinople, that a
Council publicly condemned this doctrine of Origen for the first time, the glorious teaching being
called "drunken racking as to the future life of the dead."
We must
now return to the Latin word aevum. This is defined in dictionaries as meaning, lifetime, life, age, mankind
living at a particular time. From this word, through the form aeviternus, comes the adjective aeternus, which is our "eternal." Aevum is never found in Latin standing for endless time. In the Roman Catacombs is the
tomb of Albana, who died at the age of forty- five. Her sorrowing husband,
Placus, marked her resting place with the following words, "This grief
will always semper be mine, during
lifetime (in aevo)." Further on is inscribed, "Lie in peace-in
sleep-you will arise." Neither of these two words, therefore, semper, from which comes sempiternal, and aevum, from which comes eternal, here meant endless.
Another stone bears the inscription, "eternal home" (domus eternalis). This is on the tomb of a believer, so that this could not be his everlasting resting-place. Another stone states that Aurelius Felix, who died in January at the age of fifty-five, was "snatched home eternally" (raptus eterne domus). The author of a book on the Catacombs is obliged to explain that such inscriptions "do not imply any want of belief in the resurrection on the part of those who erected them," because a word apparently meaning "eternal" is found on them. He did not see that this word only meant "eonian," although he refers to a similar expression in Ecc.12:5, "man goeth to his long home" (C.V. "to his eonian house.").
Another stone bears the inscription, "eternal home" (domus eternalis). This is on the tomb of a believer, so that this could not be his everlasting resting-place. Another stone states that Aurelius Felix, who died in January at the age of fifty-five, was "snatched home eternally" (raptus eterne domus). The author of a book on the Catacombs is obliged to explain that such inscriptions "do not imply any want of belief in the resurrection on the part of those who erected them," because a word apparently meaning "eternal" is found on them. He did not see that this word only meant "eonian," although he refers to a similar expression in Ecc.12:5, "man goeth to his long home" (C.V. "to his eonian house.").
The old Latin writers used aeternum in the same sense as Greek writers used aionion, as meaning eonian. Thus Cicero, who died B.C. 43, says of the future,
"Springtime will be aeternum," that is, enduring, eonian. At present springtime is
brief, fleeting, seasonal. He was referring to a spring which will endure. He
also refers to God by the same term, as the enduring One. Ovid, who flourished about 9 A.D., speaks of warfare in the same
sense.
As the
word eon is really a transliteration of
the Greek aion, its
nearest English equivalent may be found in the word "age."
The origin of this word is very interesting. It traces its descent back to the Latin 'aevum',
which is the equivalent of the Greek 'aion'. Aevum produced aevitas, which became shortened
to aetas. From
this was formed another form, aetaticum, a Low Latin term. In France this was slurred
into edage, then
into aage, which
arrived in England
as 'age'.
How
then, did the Latin 'aeternum' and the Greek 'aionion', which both originally referred
to that which is eonian, come to signify "eternal"
in our modern sense?
There is
no doubt that these words have been "made to express"
what is eternal, the instrument in every case
being theology. The process seems to have been somewhat as follows.
There
have always been some among the sects who have held harsh views regarding the
doom of the sinner. The Pharisees and the Essenes are said to have believed in
conscious future punishment. The Essenes believed in unintermittent (adialeipton) and "deathless"
punishment. It is natural for those in whose hearts the love of God has not
been dynamically shed abroad to look upon death as the end of all for mankind.
The truth of the eons became lost very quickly after
the time of the apostle Paul. No one after him appears to say a word about it.
Even Origen believed that this present world or eon was the conclusion of many eons. He inferred that there are
still many eons to come, not only two.
On the
other hand, there arose the Gnostic
sects, one of
which was that of the Valentinians, named after Valentine, a native of Egypt. They
flourished in the second century. According to them, the original source of all
existence was the abyss, out of which, when life was developed, sprang the eons, male and female, through whom God revealed
Himself. These eons, along with God Himself, together made up the fullness
or ploroma. "Matter" they looked upon as evil, and
the harmony of the ploroma had been upset by God's having come into contact with matter. In order to restore harmony,
there was a new emanation of two eons, Christ and the Holy Spirit. At
the conclusion of the world, Christ would introduce His Bride along with all
the spiritual ones into the Fullness, and all matter, by which is evidently meant
all evil, would return to its original nothingness.
Another
sect taught that seven
eons proceeded
forth out from God. Eusebius says that Tatian also invented "some
invisible eons like the Valentinians," but Tatian may have preserved some relics
of primitive truth. Even in this darkness one can perceive glimmerings of the
truth. God made the eons through His Son (Heb.1:2).
God planned out the eons, and is now utilizing them as
His scaffolding. The eons seem to synchronize with the
presence of evil, when it requires to be coped with.
The
collapse of the truth of the eons left the way open for pagan error to re-assert itself and foist
itself upon scripture teaching. So long as the Greek language was well
understood in Italy, so long would aionion retain its force as meaning "eonian,"
and not only so, but it would tend to keep its Latin equivalent aeternum tied down to the same
signification, in Italy. But an influence was arising in the second century in
North Africa which was to change everything, and compel these terms to bear, in theology, a
meaning they never had originally. It is more than probable that the Latin 'aeternum' bore in North Africa a sense
slightly divergent from what it bore in Rome. It may have signified not only
"eonian," but something in addition, or something more
vague. It seems by that time to have been coming to signify what it later
signified everywhere, not only that which has no seen or revealed limit, but also that which
is actually without a limit. With us, that which is "endless"
may be either that which for the present or for the time being is without an
end, or of which the end is not observed, or it may signify that which never
can or will have an end. The following illustration will make this clear.
Leading into the city of Chester in England is an old Roman highway, which, for
about three miles, is quite straight, as Roman roads very often were, besides
being very flat and monotonous. At the conclusion of a thirty mile walk one
day, this part of the road was, to the eye, and to the feelings of the
traveler, endless. It was possible to look along
the road for over a mile, and observe traffic and pedestrians, but no end to it
could be seen. In one sense, the road
was endless, yet
all the time the city to which it led could be discerned in the distance. The
Roman roadmakers were intensely practical. As often as possible, their roads
did not deviate by a foot, even though they had to traverse hills, and their
roads all led to a definite destination. In the same way, the Latin-speaking
theologians of the early centuries abhorred what was indefinite, or liable to
be misunderstood. Speculation they shunned and banned. The statements of the
Creeds which issued forth from the early Roman Church are noted for their
extreme brevity. The requisite facts were stated in black and white so that
there might be no dubiety as to what people must believe. Roman Law, and the
Roman military power, functioned like machines-authority must be obeyed. So in
the Roman Church individualism
of thought was not encouraged. As there was much speculation concerning the eons and the future, the position must needs be
stated categorically and dogmatically. Theology had lost the punctuation marks
of future time, and something must be put in their place. Moreover, it was
humbling to the Latin Fathers not to be able to delineate the
future. If no one was able to chart the ocean of time, why not simply declare
that it was boundless? Would not the Church wield far more power if it
proclaimed in authoritative
terms that
eternal destiny was fixed here on earth? Was it not much more flattering to man
to think that the life he obtained upon believing was eternal life, while that which his faith had
saved him from was an eternal
doom? Who
could believe in a special life for the eons, when all the facts concerning these eons had become obscure and blurred?
As the truth regarding the eons was completely lost, we ought to be very
suspicious regarding the dogma which became "orthodox" and catholic in a steadily
apostatizing Church.
TERTULLIAN
At this
point we must turn to Carthage
in North Africa, and in
particular to Tertullian, and take careful note of their
profound and lasting influence over Christendom. Tertullian lived from about 160 to 220 A.D. Born at Carthage, he became a
well-read scholar, an attractive orator and writer, a keen controversialist,
and a clever lawyer. What Origen was, about the same period, to Greek or Eastern Christianity, Tertullian was to Latin or Western Christianity. He was the first one to set
about systematically to explain the Scriptures in the Latin tongue of North
Africa, and the first theologian to establish a technical Latin terminology for
Christianity. It is no exaggeration to say that the choice of terms of this
Latin scholar has profoundly affected all succeeding theological thought. It is to Tertullian that we owe
such terms as trinity, substance, person, redemption, justification,
sanctification, sacrament, and many more, including probably such as perdition,
perish, destroy, punish, torment, damnation, dispensation, predestination,
revelation, priest, mediator, minister, congregation, propitiation,-all terms
from the Latin, although it is possible some of these may be due
to Jerome. These terms are all different
from the Greek words used, although some of the meanings correspond fairly
well. Tertullian was the first writer to set out
to expound the difficult doctrine of the "trinity," and to use
this term, which, however, he does not use as a name for God. Dr. Glover says, "He was the first man
of genius of the Latin race to follow Jesus Christ, and to reset his ideas in
the language native to that race." Archbishop Benson says, "When Tertullian began to write, theological
Latin had to be formed." Harnack says, "What influenced the
history of dogma was not
his Christianity, but
his masterly power of framing formulae." Up till his time Roman Christianity had been
essentially Greek in form, but when he embraced it, Latin terms and thoughts were
introduced, which gradually but steadily altered the whole character of its
teaching, and paved the way for the Roman Catholic system of dogma. Dr. Swete says, "The Church in North
Africa was the first Christian community so far as we know which offered the
Eucharist for the benefit of the departed." One of the terms introduced by Tertullian was "satisfaction." Harnack says, "He was the first
to regard definitely such ascetic performances as `satisfaction' as
propitiatory offerings by which the sinner could make amends to God."
According to Tertullian, a comparatively brief ascetic
punishment inflicted by the believer on himself took the place of what the
damned were awarded-eternal punishment. It should prove
instructive to glance at some of his other views.
Like
many today, he could never come to grasp the important yet elementary fact that
God is spirit. That God was conciliated was quite unknown to him and to those
who followed in his steps. Being well trained in Roman law he looked on God much more as
the Judge who gives the law and must
be obeyed, than
as the Father
of all. All
relations between God and man partake of the nature of legal transactions, and thus a good act by man
brings satisfaction to God and merit to man. But the fundamental relationship is
that of fear on
man's part. The
great difference between the Greek
Church and the Latin Church consisted in this, that the Greek Church looked upon revelation as
expressing God in His relation to man, while the Latin Church began with man, and saw primarily man as in relation to God. God's measureless love and
grace were viewed as at the disposal of man, or man
was viewed as the fallen and guilty rebel measured up before the Judge. The one commenced with God and
His love, operating all things in accord with the counsel of His will from past
ages for the ultimate good of the race, ever seeking to draw man to Himself and
instruct him with a view to his well-being and growth in grace. The other saw man as on
probation, and God as the magistrate. Instead of men being gradually instructed
in the ways and mind of God, they must subscribe without question or discussion
to the Creed, the rigid and crystallized expression of the Latin Church's
views. As Farrar says, the centre of Origen's system was God and hope, while that of Augustine's was punishment and sin; whereas Origen yearns for a final unity, Augustine almost exultingly acquiesces in
a frightful and abiding dualism.
It was
reserved for three great Carthaginians, Tertullian, Cyprian, and
Augustine, so to
influence the Latin
Church that it
deflected and declined into a system of dogmatic hierarchy and spiritual
despotism. But Tertullian was the individual who set this
current in motion. Through his powerful instrumentality Christendom, at the
critical juncture, took the wrong turn, and his influence still prevails.
Neander says of him, that his mind was
often at a loss for suitable forms of phraseology, as he had more within him
than he could express, and for this purpose he was obliged to create a language
for the new spiritual matter, out of
the rude Punic Latin. It has been said that Tertullian often makes use of words not
found in general use outside of the very early writers, and that he often
imparts to words a new or
unusual force.
This,
then, is the man in the hollow of whose hands lay the clay which was to be
moulded into concrete Latin dogma. This is the man in whose hands reclined the
fate of the word 'eternal'. What meaning did he give to it? Its old meaning,
akin to the Greek eonian, or something beyond that?
Being quite devoid of any understanding of the eons of Scripture, destitute of a real perception
of the fact that God is love, unable to view God but as a stern Judge who must somehow or other be "Satisfied" or placated, how was it possible
for him to look on the mass of mankind otherwise than as damned?
Augustine, who later outdid Tertullian and his doctrines, maintained
that the whole human race was "one damned batch and mass of
perdition"(conspersis damnata, massa perditionis), out of which a few are
elected to salvation, while
all the remainder are lost for ever. He beheld evil as a force integral in a universe
apart from God, while Origen believed that all is out from
God, even evil, which God must undo and banish. One who has no place for eons to come must needs look on the future as
a shoreless eternity. Having failed to grasp what
God had revealed concerning the eons, Tertullian had no alternative but to impart
to the Latin word 'eternal' that sense which it now bears. Not only so, but this special
meaning of the Latin word, taking advantage of the
steady decline of Greek as the language of theology and
the rise and ascendancy of Latin, reacted upon, and was imposed upon, its Greek equivalent eonian, which henceforth in theology
was "made to express" the meaning of everlasting.
At this
point it will be interesting to bring forward the evidence of the ancient
versions made from the Greek, and see whether they
corroborate the conclusions to which we have come.
HOW
THE OLD VERSIONS RENDERED AION
The Old Syriac version is thought to have been made
from the Greek about the end of the first century or some time during the second century. The language is closely akin to Hebrew, and was very like the Aramaic which was spoken in Palestine
side by side with Greek in the first century. To translate the Greek eon and eonian it uses olm, which is exactly the word used in the
Hebrew Scriptures, meaning
"obscure," or "obscurity," that
is, eonian and eon. The same constructions as
occur in the Greek are shown, such as, from the eon mn olm, for the eon l-olm, this eon, that eon, for the
eons to come, for the eon of the eons l-olm olmin, the conclusion of the eons.
To prove
that olm did
not and could not stand for eternity, it may be stated that the Greek word kosmos(world) is generally rendered in
the Syriac version by olm, as in John 1:10 (thrice), John 17:24, where the Syriac has, "preceding the
disruption of the eon." The Syriac Version knew nothing about an eternity, and nothing in it is called eternal.
The ancient Gothic version is of peculiar interest to the English-speaking and German-speaking peoples. In it are
preserved the sole relies of a Germanic tongue spoken round 350 A.D., which was very closely akin
to the old
German and old English spoken about that time. It was
translated direct from the Greek, although only fragments have survived,
mostly of the New Testament. It is a very faithful and literal rendering, and
at times even reproduces the pronunciation of Greek words, where these are
transliterated. Needless to say, being entirely free from the influence of Jerome's Latin version, it does not contain Latin terms such as perish, damnation, perdition,
torment, eternal, punishment. It uses exclusively what were then native German words, very simple and
elementary. The
Gothic is the
first rendering of the Scriptures into any Teutonic tongue. The Goths were a very virile people from
the North of Europe, who dominated most of Europe about the time this version
was produced by Wulfila. Spreading southwards, they
overran Greece
and Italy, and
captured Rome in 410 A.D. Eventually they seem to have
died out of the Mediterranean countries, and as a distinct people they became
lost to history.
To show
how close Gothic comes to modern English, it may be pointed out that the
following words are either spelt or sounded exactly the same in each: all, arm,
blind, brother, corn, daughter, door, dumb, finger, full, grass, hand, heart,
hard, lamb, land, light, little, lust, while, white, year, young.
Very
often the Gothic preserves the truth where modern English and German versions have become corrupt. Thus where
the Anglo-Saxon version and the Authorized Version often put 'life' instead
of 'soul', the Gothic has soul (saiwal), as Wiclif generally has also. In Luke 6:1, where the A.V. has, "on the second sabbath
after the first" (C.V. "on the second first sabbath"), Wiclif has "in the secunde first
saboth," the Anglo has "on the after rest- day
first," while the Gothic, one thousand years before Wiclif's time, has, "in sabbath second
first" (in sabbato antharamma frumin). The
Vulgate is also here correct. Similarly, in Mark 16:9, the Vulgate
and the Gothic support the C.V. ("in the morning, in the first
sabbath"), the Gothic reading "in morning, in
first sabbath" (in maurgin frumin sabbato). Wiclif here departs from the Vulgate by
putting, "erly in the first day of the wouk," while Tyndale is also wrong, with "the
morowe after the sabboth daye."
How then
does the Gothic render the Greek eon and eonian? For the adjective it has in every one out of twenty-four
occurrences 'aiweinos', not very dissimilar from the
Greek 'aionios'. For the noun aion it shows aiws (or aivs) twenty out of twenty-five times, once it has 'life' libains, and elsewhere two other
expressions. Aiws is
the exact equivalent of the Latin 'aevum' and the Greek 'aion'. The following expressions are
met with: du aiwa (to or for the eon), in aiwins (in the eon), und aiw (until the eon), fram aiwa (from the eon), this aiwis (this eon), yainis aiwis (yon eon, that eon), in
the eon to come, from the beginning of
the eon. In 2 Tim.1:9 the Gothic reads, faur mela aiweina (before eonian times),
and in 2 Cor.
4:4, guth this aiwis (the god of this eon).
Unfortunately,
we are not able to tell how the Gothic read in most of Paul's epistles and the
Unveiling (Revelation), as little has come down to us except parts of the four
Gospels.
The
Coptic version, made
probably about the end of the second
century, for
use in Egypt, and still used there, appears
to render the Hebrew 'olm' and the Greek 'aion' by 'eneh', a word which is defined in Coptic dictionaries as meaning nothing more than
"time."
The
Armenian version is
ascribed to Mesrop (354-441 A.D.) and others. Conybeare says it "fits the Greek of the Septuagint as a glove the hand that wears
it; keeping so close to the Greek that it has almost the same value for us as
the Greek text itself, from which the translator worked, would possess."
For the Greek 'aion' it generally uses yavidyan, a word meaning eon. Sometimes ashkharh, meaning "world,"
is used instead. In
Eph.2:2 (C.V. "the eon of this world") the two
words are used together,yavidyeni ashkharhis, meaning the same as does the C.V. All the special expressions in
the Greek containing aion (which are unknown to classical Greek) are found reproduced in the Armenian. In the Psalms, the same
expressions which are found in the Septuagint occur in the Armenian, such as "for the eon and for the eon of the eon."
The root
of the word yavidyan is yaved, which is shown in Armenian dictionaries as meaning "more,
at most, a great deal." There is a verb, yavyeloum, which means to "add,
increase, augment, grow."Yavidyan is defined as "age, life,
world," but when used in a theological sense, it is obliged to take on the opposite meaning, of "eternity,
perpetuity."
The
Ethiopic version, in the
semitic language formerly spoken in Abyssinia, is thought to have been made in the fourth or fifth century, from the Greek. It reproduces the usual Greek expressions containing eon. The word used is olm, exactly the same as in Hebrew and Syriac. In Jude 25 it reads, "and for all the eons" u-l-kul olmth, showing the plural form. In Heb.9:26 it reads, "at the
conclusion of the eon" (l-chlqth olm). In Eph.3:21 it reads, "in every
generation and for the eon of the eon" b-kl-thuld u-l-olm olm). In the Psalms it has a few times, as in 45:17, 48:14, and 52:8, "for the eon and for the eon of the eon" l-olm, u-l-olm olm. That this word olm assuredly could not signify "eternity"
is placed beyond all doubt by the
fact that it is also used to represent the Greek word for world (kosmos) generally, as
throughout John 17. It also stands for the Greek word for 'era' (kairos), as in Mark 10:30 and Luke 18:30, and even for 'generation'
(genea) as
in Luke 16:8.
Old
English versions were
made not from the Greek, but from
the Latin Vulgate, between the years 680 and 995. The four Gospels were done, and
probably other parts. The Latin adjective aeternum (which Jerome used for eonian) is always rendered by the
little word ece. Where Jerome for the noun hasseculum, the Old English uses worulde (world) in all sixteen cases. Where Jerome has in aeternum, the Old English eight times has ecnysse, five times never (with a negative in the Latin), and once ever. The two words, ece and world, will amply repay a little
investigation.
The once
very common English word ece, which can be traced down till
about 1260 (although it disappeared as an
adjective soon after that), is stated to come from the Old English verb ecan, meaning to "prolong,
augment, increase." The word survives as a verb, to eke, meaning to add, lengthen, and as an adverb, meaning, also, in addition. A nickname was originally "an
eke name," that is, an added name. In Scottish Law, an eik is an addition to a legal document.
The
reason why the simple word ece was forced out of English probably was that it was too
equivocal. Theology was trying to make it stand for "everlasting,"
whereas it only meant "lasting." These latter terms
were to take its place, as in Cursor
Mundi (The
Course of the World, a metrical version of Bible history, written about 1320), which has the line,
"Through Jesus come to life
lasting"
(Thoru Jhesu com to liif lastand). Soon after this time, the word everlasting took the place of ece and lasting, a transition which made a very great deal of difference.
In present day English, we may use the word "world"
in two senses. We may speak of the world before the Flood as meaning the race of mankind that lived
then, or society as it then existed, or we may speak of it as meaning
the physical earth as it then was. The latter sense was quite
unknown in Old English, and only began to creep in about the year 1200, when it was so used in the
long poem, The
Ormulum. Prior
to that time, 'world' meant only the lifetime of man, the living generation of men,
society as a whole at any time. It answered well to the Latin 'seculum', and was used from about the
year 700 to translate it. Then it came to
mean the physical earth on which the generations of men
lived, and in much more recent times it came to be used of others planets also.
It might
here be remarked that an extraordinary change was going on in English speech
between the twelfth
and the fourteenth centuries. Up till the year 950 there was very little
admixture of Latin or Danish words. The result of the Danish invasion meant that thousands of
fine old poetic words became lost. From 1200 to 1280 was the most disastrous of all
periods. A great many prose words disappeared, and the upper classes discarded English for French. For about eighty years after
1280 there was a vast inroad of French words to take the place of English words
driven out of circulation, or forced to become merely dialectal. From about
1360 a new standard of English was spoken at Court, and French ceased to be
fashionable. It was what has been described as this "wild anarchy of
speech" that was raging in England from 1300 to 1500 that caused many words to take
on new meanings or lose their old meanings. These facts have been noted briefly merely
because of their connection with John Wiclif, and so that we may understand more clearly his
usage of the word 'world'."
WICLIF AND HIS VERSION
John
Wiclif was probably the first person to translate the whole Bible
into the English tongue. He was born about 1320, at the time when the language
of England was in the melting-pot. He commenced by translating the Unveiling (Revelation) in 1356, and, with the help of
collaborators, finished the entire Bible by 1382. Two years later he died. Well did he live up to
one of his sayings, that "Christian men ought to travail night and day
about text of holy writ." He is noteworthy as having been described as the
one Englishman who during the past eleven hundred years was able to mold
Christian thought on the continent of Europe. Not only was his private life
irreproachable, but in his opposition to the claims of the Roman Church he was
without fear of any man. In addition, he was a true scholar, and wrote a great
many books, mostly in Latin. These became very popular in Bohemia (now part of the modern
Czecho-Slovakia), as King Richard II of England had married the devout Princess
Anne of Bohemia, a lover of the Scriptures. While at Prague university, John Huss came under the influence of Wiclif's writings, and in 1415 he was burnt at the stake for
his faith. The followers of Huss became very numerous, and
long-continued wars against them failed to extirpate them. Their powerful
influence spread to the neighboring parts of Germany, including Saxony, where Martin Luther was born, who became a fearless champion
of the Scriptures.
The
Latin Vulgate version
dominated Europe for the thousand years which lay between Jerome and Wiclif, and longer. No one seems to
have thought in those times of a Greek original, and in any case, the Greek language was all but forgotten
in Europe. The
Catholic Church used Latin in its services, and Latin had displaced Greek
completely as the universal language of courts and clergy and scholars. It will therefore be of great
interest to observe how Wiclif rendered the Latin of the Vulgate, and to note his views
concerning the
future. We
shall find that his language differs
markedly from that used by the various translations which were made from the
time of Tyndale, one hundred and fifty years after Wiclif, including Coverdale's (1535),
Cranmer's (1539), the Genevan (1557), and the Rheims (1582), down to the Authorized of 1611. Never once does Wiclif use the expression "for
ever," or "for ever and ever." Though he
uses "everlasting," he never uses "eternal." Had the Authorized Version been the next English version
to be made after Wiclif's it would never have found
acceptance. As it was, it enjoyed the
benefit of following closely on the lines of a number of fairly similar
versions, which thus paved the way for it. Though the expressions used by Wiclif are far from perfect, great is
the decline manifested in the next English version to be published, Tyndale's. Tyndale brought in "for ever,"
"for ever and ever," "for evermore,"
where Wiclif expressed no such thought. Instead of the Reformation and
the revival of learning bringing in added light regarding the times to come,
they brought about gross
darkness and confusion.
As has
been stated, Wiclif used "world"
to represent the Latin
'seculum', which Jerome used for the Greek 'aion'. Instead of the modern "for ever"
and "for ever and ever," twenty-nine times he has "in to worldis"
or "in to worldis of worldis." In Luke 1:70 he has "from the
world," where the A.V. has "since the
beginning of the world" (C.V. "from the eon"). In Eph.3:9 he has "fro worldis,"
where the A.V. has "from the
beginning of the world" (C.V. "from the eons"). In Rev.15:3 he has "king of
worldis," where the A.V. has "king of saints" (marg.
nations, or ages. C.V. "king of the eons"). In Heb.1:8 he has "in to the
world of world" for the Latin "into the seculum of the seculum," where the A.V. has "for ever and
ever" (C.V. "for the eon of the eon"). The following renderings from Eph.3:21 may be contrasted:
Wiclif:
|
"in
to alle the generaciouns of the worldis."
|
Tyndale:
|
"thorowout
all generacions from tyme to tyme."
|
Geneva:
|
"throughout
all generations forever."
|
Rheims:
|
"unto
al generations world without end."
|
Coverdale:
|
"at
all times for ever and ever."
|
A.V.:
|
"throughout
all ages, world without end."
|
C.V.:
|
"for
all the generations of the eon of the eons."
|
In Heb. 9:26 Wiclif has "in the endyng of
worldis," where the Rheims version also retains the plural, "in the consummation
of the worldes." Tyndale, Coverdale, Cranmer and the
Genevan all corrupt this into "in the ende of the worlde," which is followed by the A.V. (C.V "at the conclusion
of the eons"). Similarly, in Heb.11:3, Wiclif and the Rheims preserve the plural "worlds,"
corresponding to the
Vulgate 'seculums' (C.V.
"the eons"). In Heb. 13:8, Wiclif alone preserves some semblance
of the truth, reading "in to worldis," where the later English versions have "continueth
for ever" (A.V. "for ever;" C V. "for the eons").
In 1 Peter 4:11, Wiclif has "in to the
worldis of worldis." Tyndale wished to bring in eternity, and at the same time retain
"world." He therefore rendered by "for ever
and whyll the worlde stondeth." The other versions of about his
time relapse into "for ever and ever."
In Psalm 90:2 anyone can see how much more
faithful Wiclif is to the Hebrew, which reads, "from olam until olam Thou art Deity."
A.V.:
|
"from
everlasting to everlasting, thou art God."
|
Coverdale:
|
"thou
art God from everlastinge and worlde with out ende."
|
Wiclif:
|
"from
the world and into the world thou art God."
|
We have
seen that the Latin
Vulgate had an
extraordinary reading in Exodus
15:18, "into
eternity and further." (Kind of like Buzz lightyear's moto, "To
Infinity and Beyond!!" that we laughed at). This must have seemed very
strange to Wiclif and his assistants. They might
have compromised by putting what the later versions put, "for ever
and ever." But they wished to be as faithful as their light
allowed them. Considering that they understood by "world"
what we now understand by eon, it is greatly to their credit
that we should find them rendering this, five hundred and fifty years ago by,
"The Lord schal regne in to the world, and ferth'e"
(further).
A
rendering of Wiclif which it is stated "many
will find preferable to the Authorized
Version"
is found in John
11:26, "Eehe
that lyveth and bileveth in me schal not die withouten ende" for "shall
never die." Only three
times does Wiclif use the word never. None of these has any reference
to life or salvation. In Mark
11:14 and John 13:8 he had:
Wiclif:
|
"Now never ete ony man fruyt of thee more."
|
C.V.:
|
"No
longer may anyone be eating fruit of you for the eon."
|
Wiclif:
|
"Thou
schalt never waische my feet."
|
C.V.:
|
"Under
no circumstances should you be washing my feet for the
eon."
|
But in
the revision of Wiclif's Bible by Purvey (1388) this is altered to "now
no more with outen ende" in the former case, while the latter
reads, "Thou schalt not waische to me the feet in to with outen ende."
In fact, Purvey altered about half or more of
the occurrences of "withouten ende" into "in
to with outen ende." It would therefore appear that both Wiclif and Purvey did not feel satisfied regarding the
expression "without end," which might be, and certainly
later was, misunderstood. They must have had more than a suspicion that "without
end" was not an adverbial phrase, equivalent to "endlessly,"
but really a noun, as in Latin and Greek, meaning a period of time whereof the end
was not disclosed. Just
as the periods or olams in Hebrew are "obscure"
in duration, so Wiclif looked on the coming eons as periods whose ends were not
defined. What
we call the eon he called the "with
outen ende."
"THE
WORLD"
What did Wiclif understand by this word? We have
seen that about his time the word was coming to take on a new meaning which it never had before, that of the physical world, whereas formerly it had only
referred to the transient
world of humanity as seen in connection with the passing course of time. Wiclif used it in the old primitive sense, as
equivalent to eon. This was the sense in which the word was used in
the Old English versions, for seven hundred years before Wiclif. To express the 'physical
world' or 'earth', Old English, and also Old German, used another term, middan-geard (middle-yard or ward), which was
the middle region between heaven
above and the region below. A sermon on Matt.24:43 once much preached by Dan Michel of Northgate (1340), but very popular
long before his time, contains the words, "Those that dwell in Thine
house for worlds of worlds" (tho thet wonyeth ine thyne house in
wordles of wordles). No one
could have understood "worlds
of worlds" as
meaning a succession of new earths or of planets. The words meant ages, or eons.
Wiclif, it would seem, came near to
restoring a great truth to its proper place. Had he had the Greek text before him, there is little
doubt that he would have accomplished this. As it was, the inconsistency of the Latin Vulgate obliged him also to be somewhat
inconsistent, and this may be the reason why versions which came after his time
most unfortunately used "world" in a sense different from his usage. By Tyndale's time, world had come to be used as meaning a state or place, rather than a limited period of time.
In his
"Synonyms of the New Testament," Archbishop Trench draws a contrast between kosmos (world) and aion (eon), both of which are
rendered in the Authorized
Version by
"world." In the case of aion he thinks more use might
have been made of "age." He regrets that the
translators did not somehow mark the difference between kosmos (mundus), the world
contemplated under aspects
of space,
and aion(seculum),
the same contemplated under aspects
of time, as Latin, like Greek, has two distinct words, where
we have, or have acted as though we had, but one. In a note he shows that the word "world,"
etymologically regarded, more
nearly represents aion than kosmos. Our old word weorulde is composed of two
distinct parts, and where the primitive pronunciation is preserved, two very
distinct syllables are still heard. The former part of the word consists of wer, a man (like the Latin 'vir', as in virile, and the -er in words like speaker, also the wer- in werwolf, the man-wolf). The latter
part of the word is ald,
or elde,
meaning age or generation. 'World' is therefore defined as "the
generation of men." That there is a close connection between
the old word "world" and "eon" was beautifully shown by the old Gothic version, which, in 2 Tim.4: 10 has, for "this
present world" (C.V. "the current eon"),
the reading, tho nu ald, meaning, "this now age."
Quite
apart from the manner in which Wiclif translated the Scriptures,
however, we are not left in any doubt as to his views regarding future time. Among his voluminous works in Latin, there is one called Trialogus, or a discussion between three
parties, whom
he calls Truth,
Liar, and Prudence. This
contains a dissertation on the distinction between eternity, eons, and time, extending to over a thousand
words. He says, "It is one matter for a thing to exist always, and another for a thing to be eternal; the world exists always,
because at every time, and yet it is not eternal, because it is created, for
the moment of creation must have a beginning, as the world had." Between
God and the world he draws a sharp distinction as regards their mode of
existence. God alone can be eternal, without change or mutation, without fore
and after. The world, on the other hand, has a mutable existence, including a
fore and an after. The world experiences the continual succession of time. Yet for the saints, and
spiritual beings, such as angels, he perceived a third form of existence,
the aevum life,
which we should term eonian
life. He
supposed that in this life there would be no succession of time. Neither would
it be the brief fleeting life of this world, nor would it be eternal. It would
be something in between these. Doubtless Wiclif did not have full light regarding the eons to come, yet it seems extraordinary
that he could have seen so much as he did, when we consider that he had to
depend altogether on the blurred light and inconsistent evidence of the Latin Vulgate. Many there are today, who,
with all the clear evidence of the Greek Scriptures set out before them, deliberately reject the terms
which God has seen fit to use, and fall back on expressions which are certainly not found in the Scriptures. They imagine that the teaching
regarding the eons is a modern invention. One such,
an educated man, who passes for a scholar, and has written a book dealing with
the Greek language, recently made the charge
regarding the term eonian in the CONCORDANT
VERSION that it
is a word "which looks as if it had been coined for the purpose!" It
required to be pointed out to him that this was exactly the expression used by
God frequently in the Scriptures, and that the terms he preferred, such as
"eternal" and "everlasting," had really no authority in
revelation.
One fine
old book, published in 1761 and entitled "Universal Restitution,"
consists of well over four hundred pages showing forth proofs that "eonian"
is the proper scriptural term to use.
We shall
close our review by giving a few extracts. "Christ is the very God of the
aeons, and may be called the aeonian God and King, not on account of his
eternal nature, but because he shall reign aeonianly, as universal king; and
because he is most strictly speaking the God of the aeonian life....and also
because the ages or aeons are all under his government and direction"
"In this view of things death, and hell, and pain, and sorrow, appear to be (not as usually
looked upon, accidental creatures that stole into existence by a sort of
chance, or some kind of inadvertency in God, but) the provisionary creatures of
God's wisdom, and goodness; preordained, by reason of a fitness in their
nature, to produce, in the contingent casualties fore-seen, the great events of
his benevolence, and communicative inclinations; which, when they shall have
fully served (being creatures of a temporary, and aeonian consistence) they
must vanish and be no more."
Thus
briefly would we summarize the conclusions we have arrived at. The facts of
revelation regarding the eons having been early obscured and
lost, and the Greek
Church having
declined, the Latin
Church, with
its own version, rose into prominence. The Latin version was only a translation, and was therefore not
inspired. It changed the import of certain very important inspired time-words as found in the Greek, and gave them a different shade of meaning. The effect was sufficient to
produce an utterly distorted outlook on the entire future, and to make God appear to be at
one and the same time both a loving Father and a cruel and capricious
monster-in fact, no God at all.
The
Reformation, which was a reformation along certain lines only, instead of
undoing and reversing this grievous error of the Latin Church, actually confirmed it and
established it. On the other hand, every ancient version of the Scriptures, and
every modern or medieval translation, either by its consistency where it is
consistent, or by its inconsistency, proves the CONCORDANT VERSION to be correct in its renderings
of the words under examination. Every translation which does not consistently
use the words "eon" and "eonian,"
or "age" and "age-abiding," or
some such terms, is obliged to make use of at least two mutually contradictory
expressions.
Verily
indeed, it is a strong claim which we make on behalf of the CONCORDANT VERSION, but we make it without fear of its being
refuted, and without fear of any opposition, that it is the only version,
which, by its system, adequately recognizes the Scriptures as
God-breathed.
This article was originally serialized in Unsearchable Riches magazine (Vol. 26, Nos. 5 & 6, Sept. and Nov. 1935). They were later reprinted in booklet form, with some alterations from this text, under the title "Whence Eternity?"
Much
Love
Andrew
Here is a link to more history of how we got what we have today regarding our English bible translations:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.greatsite.com/timeline-english-bible-history/