
									
									THE SHORT COURSE SERIES
									
									Edited by Rev. John Adams, B.D.
									
									
									Belief and Life
									
									Studies in the Thought of the Fourth Gospel
									
									By W. B. Selbie, MA., D.D.
									
									Foreword
									
										
											
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This little volume consists of eight short studies on 
subjects characteristic of the thought of the Fourth Gospel. They do not in any 
sense constitute an exposition of the teaching of the Gospel, nor do they raise 
the many critical questions connected with it. The present writer believes that 
the Gospel represents the witness of John the son of Zebedee to Jesus Christ as 
communicated to and set down by a disciple or disciples of His. It is thus at 
least two removes from the actual life and teaching of our Lord, but in spite of 
that it very frequently preserves the authentic note. Though the words are often 
those of the beloved disciple, or his reporter, the ideas are as often those of the 
Master. In its presentation of the work of Jesus Christ, and His relations both 
with God and men, it conveys a message that is as needed in these days as when 
it was fresh delivered. The aim of this book is to set forth some aspects of 
this message in modern terms.  
W. B. SELBIE.  
Oxford, August 1916.  
 
	
		
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			 THE FOURTH GOSPEL is the 
			work of one . . . who had long been conscious, we may be sure, of 
			the presence of the Paraclete within him, guiding him into all truth 
			. . . not perhaps without some admixture of ancestral disdain for 
			the materialistic superstition of the masses, both of believers and 
			unbelievers. And now in his old age, when the popular expectations 
			had proved false . . . he finds himself confronted by new dangers 
			from the other side. Other thinkers, more spiritual (as they would 
			consider) than he, are saying that the Son of God was not a real man 
			at all, for flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God. This 
			to the Evangelist was the greatest error: to deny the coming of 
			Jesus Christ in the flesh was the doctrine of Antichrist. The Fourth 
			Gospel is written to prove the reality of Jesus Christ. But the 
			Evangelist was no historian: ideas, not events, were to him the true 
			realities, and if we go to his work to learn the course of events we 
			shall only be disappointed in our search.  
			Prof. F. C. BURKITT                
			 
			In The Gospel History and 
			its Transmission  | 
		 
	 
	   
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