The Truth in Jesus
By George MacDonald and Michael Phillips
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The Victorian author, poet, and theologian George MacDonald inspired some of the greatest writers of the early 20th century, including C.S. Lewis, who said MacDonald’s books were pivotal in leading him toward Christianity. But while MacDonald’s fiction remains popular—with such notable classics as Robert Falconer and At the Back of the North Wind—his theological nonfiction is often challenging for modern readers.
Now MacDonald scholar and biographer Michael Phillips addresses this difficulty with this expertly edited edition of MacDonald’s sermons and essays about God’s truth. Each selection is accompanied by Phillips’s illuminating commentary, providing readers with an essential road map into the expansive world of George MacDonald’s theological writings.
George MacDonald
George MacDonald (1824-1905) was a popular Scottish lecturer and writer of novels, poetry, and fairy tales. Born in Aberdeenshire, he was briefly a clergyman, then a professor of English literature at Bedford and King's College in London. W. H. Auden called him "one of the most remarkable writers of the nineteenth century."
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The Truth in Jesus - George MacDonald
The Truth in Jesus
The Nature of Truth
and How We Come to
Know It
George MacDonald;
Edited by Michael
Phillips
The Truth in Jesus
Copyright © 2006 by Michael Phillips
Scripture quotations are as MacDonald used them, from The Authorized Version, 1611, and the Revised Version, 1885.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
Electronic edition published 2018 by RosettaBooks
ISBN (Kindle): 978-0-7953-5177-8
www.RosettaBooks.com
WHAT READERS ARE SAYING ABOUT GEORGE MACDONALD'S
Your Life in Christ:
"I am reading through for the third time Your Life in Christ. Please continue to edit and print your insights as it most assuredly fills a need for me. Obedience is not a popular idea. Sonship is not a popular idea. I really relish MacDonald's writings and your comments."
—Dave Black
"I am grateful to have discovered you, and because of you, George MacDonald. I read about him in Surprised by Joy and was aware of Unspoken Sermons . . . but reading The Creation in Christ
was an experience unlike other reading—with the promise of more to come. . . . I'm sure I can spend the rest of my life endeavoring to allow God to make real in my life the truths and insights of this one book, Your Life in Christ. Thank you in the fullest possible sense."
—Jerrel Kee
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. The Truth
2. Insights Into The Truth
3. The Truth in Jesus
4. Insights Into The Truth in Jesus
5. Kingship
6. Insights Into Kingship
7. Light
8. Insights Into Light
9. The Child in the Midst
10. Insights Into The Child in the Midst
11. The New Name
12. Insights Into The New Name
13. The Knowing of the Son
14. Insights Into The Knowing of the Son
15. Righteousness
16. Insights Into Righteousness
The Authors
THE AUTHORS
GEORGE MACDONALD (1824-1905), Scottish Victorian novelist, began his adult life as a clergyman and always considered himself a poet first of all. His unorthodox views resulted in a very short career in the pulpit in the early 1850s, after which he turned to writing in earnest. He initially attracted notice for poetry and his adult fantasy, Phantastes (1855), but once he turned to the writing of realistic novels in the early 1860s, his name became widely known throughout Great Britain and the U.S. Over the next thirty years he wrote some fifty books, including, in addition to the novels, more poetry, short stories, fantasy, sermons, essays, and a full-length study of Hamlet. His influential body of work placed him alongside the great Victorian men of letters and his following was vast.
MacDonald died in 1905 and his reputation gradually declined in the 20th century. Most of his books eventually went out of print as his name drifted from memory. A brief flurry of interest in his work was generated in 1924 at the centenary of his birth, resulting in several new editions of certain titles and the first major biography of his life, George MacDonald and His Wife, by his son Greville MacDonald.
Obscure though his name gradually became, however, MacDonald was read and revered by an impressive gallery of well-known figures, both in his own time and in the years since. A few of these include G.K. Chesterton (who called him one of the three or four greatest men of the 19th century
), W.H. Auden (who said that MacDonald was one of the most remarkable writers of the 19th century
), Oswald Chambers (…how I love that man!
), and most notably C.S. Lewis. In spite of such a following, however, MacDonald’s reputation gradually declined throughout the 20th century.
Lewis acknowledged his spiritual debt to MacDonald as so great that he published an entire anthology of quotations by MacDonald in hopes of turning the public toward his spiritual mentor in large numbers. Lewis’s efforts, however, were but modestly successful, and for the most part only in literary circles. Notwithstanding Lewis’s laudatory words, MacDonald’s name continued to fall out of the public consciousness. Most of MacDonald’s books eventually went out of print as his name drifted from memory. By the 1960s nearly all his work, except for a few stories and fairy tales, was out of print, though his inclusion, along with Lewis and his inkling
friends, in the newly established Marion Wade Center at Wheaton College promised that he would never be forgotten.
A resurgence of interest in this forgotten Victorian, primarily in the United States, began to mount in the 1970s and 1980s, given initial impetus by the work of Wheaton professor Dr. Rolland Hein, and then exploding into public view from the efforts of MacDonald redactor and biographer Michael Phillips. Phillips’ work resulted in new generations of readers discovering anew the treasures in MacDonald’s work, and led to a renewed publication of MacDonald’s books on an unprecedented scale not seen since his own lifetime.
MICHAEL PHILLIPS (1946-), Californian writer and novelist, is one of the key figures responsible for reawakening worldwide public interest in George MacDonald through publication of his edited and original editions of MacDonald’s books.
Phillips first discovered MacDonald’s work in the early 1970s. Dismayed to learn that all MacDonald’s major fiction, as well as most other titles, were unavailable, Phillips embarked on an ambitious lifetime project to re-introduce the world to the remarkable Victorian author through many different means. Toward this end, he began to produce edited versions of MacDonald’s dialect-heavy Scottish novels. The purpose of redacting these masterpieces was a practical one—hopefully to interest a contemporary publisher (skeptical about a dense 500 page Victorian tome) to publish and promote them, and also to make MacDonald’s stories and spiritual wisdom attractive and compelling to a new and less literarily patient reading audience.
Phillips began his initial editing of MacDonald’s Malcolm in the mid 1970s. Though it took five years and rejections by thirty houses to find a publisher to believe with him that MacDonald could speak to new generations, the eventual publication of Phillips’ redacted editions was so successful and received so enthusiastically by the reading public and the MacDonald community, that it led to more than two million new editions by George MacDonald being circulated worldwide in several languages. The 20th century MacDonald renaissance had begun!
Over the next twenty years, Phillips expanded his efforts, producing original full length editions of MacDonald’s work to accompany the redacted novels, and writing an acclaimed biography, George MacDonald, Scotland’s Beloved Storyteller, and also producing a series of books and studies about MacDonald. During this time Phillips’ own stature as one of the leading Christian novelists of the late 20th century was also rising. He penned dozens of novels of his own that were as well received as had been his work with MacDonald, leading many to compare his output and spiritual insight and vision with that of his literary and spiritual mentor.
Phillips is today generally recognized as one of the foremost experts on MacDonald’s life and work, a man with a keen insight into MacDonald’s heart and message As his own volume of work reaches a stature of significance in its own right, he is regarded by many as the successor to MacDonald’s vision and spiritual legacy for a new generation.
Phillips has continued through the years to illuminate MacDonald’s vision of the divine Fatherhood. His ongoing MacDonald studies and research have produced the titles: Discovering the Character of God, Knowing the Heart of God, George MacDonald’s Spiritual Vision, George MacDonald and the Late Great Hell Debate, George MacDonald’s Transformational Theology of the Christian Faith, Bold Thinking Christianity, The Commands, and The Commands of the Apostles.
This compilation of selection from MacDonald’s sermons is published in conjunction with the 38-volume series from Michael Phillips, The Cullen Collection of the Fiction of George MacDonald, which includes his new biography, George MacDonald A Writer’s Life.
The books of Michael Phillips and George MacDonald are available from TheCullenCollection.com, WisePathBooks.com, FatherOfTheInklings.com, and from Amazon. Most are now also available on Kindle.
INTRODUCTION
When a man recognized as perhaps the most influential Christian author of the twentieth century speaks of his spiritual master,
one might naturally assume the elder to be as well known as his protégé. Curiously, this has never been the case in the spiritual relationship between C. S. Lewis (1898–1963) and George MacDonald (1824–1905). Though Lewis persistently pointed to MacDonald not only as the man whose writings began his own pilgrimage out of atheism toward Christianity but also as his lifelong literary spiritual mentor, the name and writings of MacDonald have remained in relative obscurity, comprising but a footnote in most Lewis studies.
Millions of readers the world over are fascinated with and enamored by Lewis's ideas, spiritual perspectives, and method of communication. Yet few seem curious about where his outlooks and insights and his wide-ranging breadth as a writer and thinker came from.
How did C. S. Lewis become the man he was?
The answer is a simple one, and we have it from his own lips. He became the man he was, the Christian he was, the writer he was, from learning at George MacDonald's feet. From MacDonald he learned faith, he learned doctrine, he learned obedience, he learned a perspective on Scripture, he learned of God's character, he learned the power of communicating through fiction and fairy tale. This is not to say that Lewis would not have been a literary force in his own right. But MacDonald's influence is so pervasive through his thought and writings that it is impossible to separate Lewis's own gifts from their roots. He credits MacDonald as foundational in every book he ever wrote.
With this series, begun in 2005 to commemorate the centenary of George MacDonald's death, modern readers are presented for the first time with newly formatted editions of MacDonald's powerful nonfiction, drawn mostly from his volumes of Unspoken Sermons, about which Lewis commented, My own debt to this book is almost as great as one man can owe to another.
It is my sincere hope and prayer that these editions will exercise an impact in the lives of their readers equal to that of these ideas in the life of C. S. Lewis. For MacDonald's life-changing message is one that must be told anew to every generation. The call of his life and the essential cry of his heart through the body of his work is a call to a knowledge of God's truth, a call to a lifestyle of simplicity and obedience, and a call for Christians to step into their destiny as the sons and daughters of a good and loving Father.¹
The editing of the selections that follow in The Truth in Jesus is as minimal as I have been able to make it. However, extracting the ore from MacDonald's writings does require some effort. There are those who take exception to the idea of editing
another's work at all. But the fact that MacDonald's nineteenth-century originals are cumbersome seems justification enough. There may be some who do not find them so, but I am not one of them. I find them difficult. Thus my goal is to make his wisdom and prophetic insight about God readable and graspable to anyone willing to put in the effort to understand his groundbreaking and occasionally controversial ideas. It is my hope that the minimal editing I have employed with these writings will help you discover these rich veins within MacDonald's thought.
This is not to say, even now, that this will be a light read. MacDonald's ideas and processes of thought are occasionally so profound that nothing makes them easy. We are not used to having to think quite so hard for our spiritual food. We live in a superficial age where doctrinal formula and personal experience are the parameters by which spirituality is judged.
MacDonald's outlook and approach do take some getting used to. I find that many passages require two or three readings. But I also find spiritual gold awaiting me, sometimes buried deep but always ready to shine out brilliantly from the page when suddenly I see it.
Some may still wonder why such editing is necessary. For two reasons: the complex progression of MacDonald's ideas, and the elaborately entangled grammatical constructions in which he expresses these ideas.
I would not presume to call MacDonald's logic other than straightforward. I think I am on safe ground to say, however, that as his logic progresses it brings in its train multitudinous tangential modifiers and explanations and offshoots that occasionally make it difficult to follow the primary sequence of ideas. Once or twice a page, it seems, I have to stop to read a lengthy section four or five times simply to get it.
Additionally, MacDonald's grammar and syntax can become extremely involved and can impede understanding. Sentences of one hundred to one hundred twenty words are common, occasionally reaching even two hundred. His paragraphs can run to five or six pages.
For example, the following single sentence from The Truth,
this book's first entry, originally comes to us with one hundred eighty-seven words, thirteen commas, six semicolons, and three dashes:
When the man bows down before a power that can account for him, a power to whom he is no mystery as he is to himself; a power that knows whence he came and whither he is going; who knows why he loves this and hates that, why and where he began to go wrong; who can set him right, longs indeed to set him right, making of him a creature to look up to himself without shadow of doubt, anxiety or fear, confident as a child whom his father is leading by the hand to the heights of happy-making truth, knowing that where he is wrong, the father is right and will set him right; when the man feels his whole being in the embrace of self-responsible paternity—then the man is bursting into his flower; then the truth of his being, the eternal fact at the root of his new name, his real nature, his idea—born in God at first, and responsive to the truth, the being of God, his origin—begins to show itself; then his nature is almost in harmony with itself.
Obviously we understand what MacDonald is expressing. At the same time, with some minor restructuring and reordering, his thoughts become more straightforward and accessible. This is especially important when one is attempting to interest new readers in MacDonald's ideas, or when one is encountering him for the first time.
In the first chapter you will find the above quotation not shortened but actually lengthened to two hundred ten words, and restructured into four sentences. This may be a poor example in that one of those four sentences comprises eighty-seven words, and even that is usually too long. In other instances I might break up such a single complex sentence into six or eight shorter ones. But it is important that you see what I am seeking to do: The important point is, nothing has been "left out." Most of what I have done is more structural than editorial. Clarity, not brevity, has been the goal. I hope to make MacDonald's mind and heart more accessible to us all.
His ideas are here expressed, therefore, in something very close to the manner in which he wrote them. Where his originals are clear and straightforward, they are reproduced without change. Where the word-thickets are complicated and the sentences long, my editing has yet kept most of his actual words intact.
Finally, the subheadings within the text are my own additions. These too are provided as an aid to understanding without materially altering the text.
Michael Phillips
Eureka, California
THE TRUTH
George MacDonald
I am the truth.
—
John
14:6
When a man of the five senses speaks of truth, he regards it as an assertion of something that can be either historically or scientifically proved a fact. If he allows that for anything he knows there may exist yet higher truth, since he cannot obtain proof of it historically or scientifically, he is justified in considering himself under no conceivable obligation to seek other evidence concerning it.
Whatever appeal might be made to the highest region of his nature, the realm of spiritual being, such a one behaves as if the wise man ought to pay such realm no heed because it does not come within the scope of the lower powers of that nature.
According to the word of the Man, however, truth means more than fact, more than the relation of facts or persons, more than the loftiest abstraction of spiritual existence.
Rather, it means being and life, will and action. For he says, I am the truth.
I hope to help those whom I may to understand more of what is meant by the truth, not for the sake of definition, or to split logical hairs, but so that when they hear the word from the mouth of the Lord, the right idea will rise in their minds. I desire that the word may neither be a void sound, nor call up either a vague or false notion of what he meant by it. If he says, I am the truth,
it must, to say the least, be well to know what he means by a word so important that he would use it to identify himself.
And immediately we may suppose that he can mean nothing merely intellectual, such as may be set forth and left there. He means something vital—so vital that the whole of its necessary relations are subject to it, so vital that it includes everything else which, in any lower plane, may go or have gone by the same name.
Let us, then, endeavour to arrive at his meaning by a gently ascending stair.
Fact and Truth
If a thing is so, then the word that says it is so is the truth—a true expression of reality. But the fact may be of no value in itself, and our knowledge of it of no value either.
Of most facts it may be said that the truth concerning them is