| Benjamin B. Warfield |
| "For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." 1 Timothy 2:5 |
Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield (1851-1921) was a conservative Christian scholar, and professor of theology at Princeton Seminary from 1887 until his death in 1921. Warfield has engendered much influence in modern conservative Christian circles, and while he undoubtedly had many good things to say, as noted below, yet it is my sense, after reading much of what he has written, that Warfield himself was more than likely unregenerate, i.e., NOT born again. Those who wonder how I can arrive at this conclusion either need to be born again themselves, or garner some maturity in the Holy Spirit. As I said, this is just my SENSE from reading the works he has left us, but like Paul, I also have the Spirit of God. At any rate, eternity will tell, and in the meantime, the following quotations by Warfield are worthy of note.
"The proof-texts and passages do prove that Jesus was
esteemed divine by those who companied with Him; that He esteemed Himself
divine; that He was recognized as divine by those who were taught by the Spirit;
that, in fine, He was divine. But over and above this Biblical evidence the
impression Jesus has left upon the world bears independent testimony to His
deity, and it may well be that to many minds this will seem the most conclusive
of all its evidences. It certainly is very cogent and impressive." The Deity Of
Christ
"The Christian's conviction of the deity of his Lord does
not depend for its soundness on the Christian's ability convincingly to state
the grounds of his conviction. The evidence he offers for it may be wholly
inadequate, while the evidence on which it rests may be absolutely compelling."
The Deity Of Christ
"The very abundance and persuasiveness of the evidence of
the deity of Christ greatly increases the difficulty of adequately stating it...
The deity of Christ is in solution in every page of the New Testament. Every
word that is spoken of Him, every word which He is reported to have spoken of
Himself, is spoken on the assumption that He is God." The Deity Of Christ
"Because the deity of Christ is the presupposition of every
word of the New Testament, it is impossible to select words out of the New
Testament from which to construct earlier documents in which the deity of Christ
shall not be assumed. The assured conviction of the deity of Christ is coeval
with Christianity itself. There never was a Christianity, neither in the times
of the Apostles nor since, of which this was not a prime tenet." The Deity Of
Christ
"In three passages of Matthew, reporting words of Jesus, He
is represented as speaking familiarly and in the most natural manner in the
world of His Angels (13:41; 16:27; 24:31)... Who is this Son of man who has
angels, by whose instrumentality the final judgment is executed at His
command?... Who is this Son of man surrounded by His angels, in whose hands are
the issues of life?... Who is this Son of man at whose behest His angels winnow
men? A scrutiny of the passages will show that it is not a peculiar body of
angels which is meant by the Son of man's angels, but just the angels as a body,
who are His to serve Him as He commands. In a word, Jesus Christ is above angels
(Mark 13:32) -- as is argued at explicit length at the beginning of the Epistle
to the Hebrews." The Deity Of Christ
"There are three parables recorded in the fifteenth chapter
of Luke as spoken by our Lord in His defence against the murmurs of the
Pharisees at His receiving sinners and eating with them. The essence of the
defence which our Lord offers for Himself is, that there is joy IN HEAVEN over
repentant sinners! Why IN HEAVEN, before the throne of God?... He is
representing His action in receiving sinners, in seeking the lost, as His proper
action, because it is the normal conduct of heaven, manifested in Him. He is
heaven come to earth." The Deity Of Christ
"All the great designations are not so much asserted as
assumed by Him [Jesus] for Himself... If He calls Himself Messiah, He fills that
term, by doing so, with a deeper significance, dwelling ever on the unique
relation of Messiah to God as His representative and His Son. Nor is He
satisfied to represent Himself merely as standing in a unique relation to God:
He proclaims Himself to be the recipient of the divine fullness, the sharer in
all that God has (Matt. 11:28). He speaks freely of Himself indeed as God's
Other, the manifestation of God on earth, whom to have seen was to have seen the
Father also, and who does the work of God on earth. He openly claims divine
prerogatives -- the reading of the heart of man, the forgiveness of sins, the
exercise of all authority in heaven and earth. Indeed, all that God has and is
He asserts Himself to have and be; omnipotence, omniscience, perfection belong
as to the one so to the other. Not only does He perform all divine acts; His
self-consciousness coalesces with the divine consciousness. If His followers
lagged in recognizing His deity, this was not because He was not God or did not
sufficiently manifest His deity. It was because they were foolish and slow of
heart to believe what lay patently before their eyes." The Deity Of Christ
"Every Christian has within himself the proof of the
transforming power of Christ, and can repeat the blind man's syllogism: Why
herein is the marvel, that ye know not whence He is, and yet He opened my
eyes... To deny that spiritual experience is as real as physical experience is
to slander the noblest faculties of our nature." The Deity Of Christ
"The supreme proof to every Christian of the deity of his
Lord is then his own inner experience of the transforming power of his Lord upon
the heart and life. Not more surely does he who feels the present warmth of the
sun know that the sun exists, than he who has experienced the re-creative power
of the Lord know Him to be his Lord and his God. Here is, perhaps we may say the
proper, certainly we must say the most convincing, proof to every Christian of
the deity of Christ; a proof which he cannot escape, and to which, whether he is
capable of analysing it or drawing it out in logical statement or not, he cannot
fail to yield his sincere and unassailable conviction. Whatever else he may or
may not be assured of, he knows that his Redeemer lives." The Deity Of Christ
"Wherever five 'advanced thinkers' assemble, at least six
theories as to inspiration [of the Bible] are likely to be ventilated. They
differ in every conceivable point, or in every conceivable point save one. They
agree that inspiration is less pervasive and less determinative than has
heretofore been thought, or than is still thought in less enlightened circles.
They agree that there is less of the truth of God and more of the error of man
in the Bible than Christians have been wont to believe. They agree accordingly
that the teaching of the Bible may be, in this, that, or the other, -- here,
there, or elsewhere, -- safely neglected or openly repudiated." The Works Of
Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The Bible
"The church-doctrine of inspiration [of the Bible] differs
from the theories that would fain supplant it, in that it is not the invention
nor the property of an individual, but the settled faith of the universal church
of God; in that it is not the growth of yesterday, but the assured persuasion of
the people of God from the first planting of the church until to-day; in that it
is not a protean shape, varying its affirmations to fit every new change in the
ever-shifting thought of men, but from the beginning has been the church's
constant and abiding conviction as to the divinity of the Scriptures committed
to her keeping." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of
The Bible
"Surely the seeker after truth in the matter of the
inspiration of the Bible may well take this church-doctrine as his
starting-point. What this church-doctrine is, it is scarcely necessary minutely
to describe. It will suffice to remind ourselves that it looks upon the Bible as
an oracular book, -- as the Word of God in such a sense that whatever it says
God says, -- not a book, then, in which one may, by searching, find some word of
God, but a book which may be frankly appealed to at any point with the assurance
that whatever it may be found to say, that is the Word of God." The Works Of
Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The Bible
"We know how, as Christian men, we approach this Holy Book,
-- how unquestioningly we receive its statements of fact, bow before its
enunciations of duty, tremble before its threatenings, and rest upon its
promises... Christendom has always reposed upon the belief that the utterances
of this book are properly oracles of God. The whole body of Christian literature
bears witness to this fact. We may trace its stream to its source, and
everywhere it is vocal with a living faith in the divine trustworthiness of the
Scriptures of God in every one of their affirmations." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The Bible
"Before all else, Protestantism is, in its very essence, an
appeal from all other authority to the divine authority of Holy Scripture." The
Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The Bible
"It is our special felicity, that as Reformed Christians,
and heirs of the richest and fullest formulation of Reformed thought, we possess
in that precious heritage, the Westminster Confession, the most complete, the
most admirable, the most perfect statement of the essential Christian doctrine
of Holy Scripture which has ever been formed by man. Here the vital faith of the
church is brought to full expression; the Scriptures are declared to be the word
of God in such a sense that God is their author, and they, because immediately
inspired by God, are of infallible truth and divine authority, and are to be
believed to be true by the Christian man, in whatsoever is revealed in them, for
the authority of God himself speaking therein." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The Bible
"The church has always believed her Scriptures to be the
book of God, of which God was in such a sense the author that every one of its
affirmations of whatever kind is to be esteemed as the utterance of God, of
infallible truth and authority." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The
Inspiration Of The Bible
"In the whole history of the church there have been but two
movements of thought, tending to a lower conception of the inspiration and
authority of Scripture, which have attained sufficient proportions to bring them
into view in an historical sketch. The first of these may be called the
Rationalistic view. Its characteristic feature is an effort to distinguish
between inspired and uninspired elements within the Scriptures. With forerunners
among the Humanists, this mode of thought was introduced by the Socinians, and
taken up by the Syncretists in Germany, the Remonstrants in Holland, and the
Jesuits in the Church of Rome." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The
Inspiration Of The Bible
"Although this legacy from the rationalism of an evil time
still makes its appearance in the pages of many theological writers, and has no
doubt affected the faith of a considerable number of Christians, it has failed
to supplant in either the creeds of the church or the hearts of the people the
church-doctrine that the Bible is inspired not in part but fully, in all its
elements alike, -- things discoverable by reason as well as mysteries, matters
of history and science as well as of faith and practice, words as well as
thoughts." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Inspiration Of The
Bible
"It was no part of the task of the fathers at Chalcedon to
invent a new doctrine, and the doctrine which they formulated had no single new
element in it. Least of all was the doctrine of the Two Natures itself new...
The doctrine of the Two Natures formed the common basis on which all alike
stood; their differences concerned only the quality or integrity of the two
natures united in the one person, or the character or effects of the union by
which they were brought together." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III,
The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"To discover a one-natured Christ, we must turn to the
outlawed sects of the Docetists on the one hand, and the Ebionites with their
successors, the Dynamistic Montanists, on the other. Whatever else the church
brought with it out of the apostolic age, it emerged from that, its formative,
epoch with so firm a faith in the Two Natures of its Lord as to be incapable of
wavering." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And
Recent Christological Speculation
"So fixed in the Christian consciousness was the conception
of the Two Natures of the Savior, that nothing could dislodge it. We shall have
to come down to the radical outbreak which accompanied the Reformation --
Transcendental or Socinian -- for the first important defection from it after
the early Dynamistic Monarchianism; and it was not until the rise in the
eighteenth century of the naturalistic movement known as the Enlightenment that
there was inaugurated any widespread revolt from it." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"The constancy with which the church has confessed the
doctrine of the Two Natures finds its explanation in the fact that this doctrine
is intrenched in the teaching of the New Testament. The Chalcedonian
Christology, indeed, in its complete development is only a very perfect
synthesis of the biblical data. It takes its starting-point from the New
Testament as a whole, thoroughly trusted in all its declarations, and seeks to
find a comprehensive statement of the scriptural doctrine of the Person of
Christ, which will do full justice to all the elements of its representation...
The final statement is not a product of the study, therefore, but of life; and
was arrived at, externally considered, through protracted and violent
controversies, during the course of which every conceivable construction of the
biblical data had been exploited, weighed, and its elements of truth sifted out
and preserved, while the elements of error which deformed it were burned up as
chaff in the fires of the strife." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III,
The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"Arising out of the embers of the Arian controversy, there
is first vigorously asserted, over against the reduction of our Lord to the
dimensions of a creature, the pure deity of his spiritual nature
(Apollinarianism); by this there is at once provoked, in the interests of the
integrity of our Lord's humanity, the equally vigorous assertion of the
completeness of his human nature as the bearer of his deity (Nestorianism); this
in turn provokes, in the interests of the oneness of his Person, an equally
vigorous assertion of the conjunction of these two natures in a single
individuum (Eutychianism): from all of which there gradually emerges at last, by
a series of corrections, the balanced statement of Chalcedon, recognizing at
once in its 'without confusion, without conversion, eternally and inseparably'
the union in the Person of Christ of a complete deity and a complete humanity,
constituting a single person without prejudice to the continued integrity of
either nature... This key unlocks the treasures of the biblical instruction on
the Person of Christ as none other can, and enables the reader as he currently
scans the sacred pages to take up their declarations as they meet him, one after
the other, into an intelligently consistent conception of his Lord." The Works
Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent Christological
Speculation
"The doctrine of the Two Natures is not merely a synthesis
of all data concerning the Person of Christ found in the New Testament; it is
the doctrine of each of the New Testament books in severalty. There is but one
doctrine of the Person of Christ inculcated or presupposed by all the New
Testament writers without exception... all are at one in the inculcation or
presupposition of the common doctrine of the Two Natures." The Works Of Benjamin
B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"To say that Christ Jesus is 'in the form of God' is then
to say not less but more than to say shortly that he is God: for it is to
emphasize the fact that he has in full possession and use all those
characterizing qualities which make God the particular Being we call 'God'; and
this mode of expression, rather than the simple term 'God,' is employed here
precisely because it was of the essence of the Apostle's purpose to keep his
reader's mind on all that Christ was as God rather than merely on the abstract
fact that he was God." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two
Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"In effect, the Old Testament divine names, Elohim on the
one hand, and Jehovah and Adhonai on the other, are in the New Testament
distributed between God the Father and God the Son with as little implication of
difference in rank here as there." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III,
The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"It is probable that Paul's appropriation specifically of
the divine designation 'Lord' to Christ was in part at least occasioned by his
conviction that he, as God-man, has become the God of providence in whose hand
is the kingdom... In a word, the term 'Lord' seems to have been specifically
appropriated to Christ not because it is a term of function rather than of
dignity, but because along with the dignity it emphasizes also function." The
Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent
Christological Speculation
"The Christology of the Synoptic Gospels is
indistinguishable from that of Paul, and this is as true of the Christology of
Mark as of that of Matthew or of Luke... The Synoptic conception of the Person
of Christ is just that doctrine of the Two Natures which, as we have seen, is
given expression in Paul's Epistles and is everywhere presupposed in them as the
established faith of the Christians of the middle of the first century, and of
any earlier date to which the retrospective testimony of this body of Epistles
may be allowed to extend." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two
Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"It is undeniable that the Christ of the whole body of New
Testament writers, without exception, is a Two-Natured Person -- divine and
human... The doctrine of the Two Natures of Christ is not merely the synthesis
of the teaching of the New Testament, but the conception which underlies every
one of the New Testament writings severally; it is not only the teaching of the
New Testament as a whole but of the whole New Testament, part by part.
Historically, this means that not only has the doctrine of the Two Natures been
the invariable presupposition of the whole teaching of the church from the
apostolic age down, but all the teaching of the apostolic age rests on it as its
universal presupposition." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The Two
Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"The critic comes to his task with a settled conviction, a
priori established, that Jesus was a mere man, and must have been thought of by
his followers as a mere man; and sets himself to search out in the extant
literature modes of expression which he can interpret as 'survivals' of such an
'earlier' point of view. Meanwhile, there is no evidence whatever that these
modes of expression are 'survivals,' or that there ever existed in the Christian
community an 'earlier' view of the person of Christ than that given expression
in the New Testament writings." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The
Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"In a word, not only is the doctrine of the Two Natures the
synthesis of the entire body of Christological data embodied in the pages of the
New Testament; and not only is it the teaching of all the writers of the New
Testament severally; but the New Testament provides no material whatever for
inferring that a different view was ever held by the Christian community. The
entire Christian tradition, from the beginning, whatever that may be worth, is a
tradition of a two-natured Jesus, that is to say, of an incarnated God. Of a
one-natured Jesus, Christian tradition knows nothing, and supplies no materials
from which He may be inferred." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol III, The
Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"If Jesus was both the Son of God, in all the majesty of
true deity, and a true child of man, in creaturely humility -- if, that is, He
was both God and man, in two distinct natures united, however inseparably and
eternally, yet without conversion or confusion in one person -- we have in His
person, no doubt, an inexhaustible mystery, the mystery surpassing all
mysteries, of combined divine love and human devotion." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"For the Christ of history was not unconscious, but
continually conscious, of His deity, and of all that belongs to His deity. He
knew Himself to be the Son of God in a unique sense -- as such, superior to the
very angels and gazing unbrokenly into the depths of the Divine Being, knowing
the Father even as He was known of the Father... Of this Jesus, the only real
Jesus, it cannot be said that His consciousness was entirely human; and a Jesus
of whom this can be said has nothing in common with the only historical Jesus,
in whom His divine consciousness was as constant and vivid as His human. The
doctrines of the Two Natures supplies, in a word, the only possible solution of
the enigmas of the life-manifestation of the historical Jesus... It is, indeed,
the self-testimony of our Lord Himself, disclosing to us the mystery of His
being. It is, to put it briefly, the simple statement of the fact of Jesus, as
that fact is revealed to us in His whole manifestation. We may reject it if we
will, but in rejecting it we reject the only real Jesus in favor of another
Jesus -- who is not another, but is the creature of pure fantasy. The
alternatives which we are really face to face with are, Either the two-natured
Christ of history, or -- a strong delusion." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield,
Vol III, The Two Natures And Recent Christological Speculation
"The upshot of it all is that it is very generally felt
that, somehow, in the Old Testament development of the idea of God there is a
suggestion that the Deity is not a simple monad, and that thus a preparation is
made for the revelation of the Trinity yet to come... The Old Testament may be
likened to a chamber richly furnished but dimly lighted; the introduction of
light brings into it nothing which was not in it before; but it brings out into
clearer view much of what is in it but was only dimly or even not at all
perceived before... Thus, the Old Testament revelation of God is not corrected
by the fuller revelation which follows it, but only perfected, extended and
enlarged." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol II, The Biblical Doctrine Of
The Trinity
"Without special revelation, general revelation would be
for sinful men incomplete and ineffective, and could issue, as in point of fact
it has issued wherever it alone has been accessible, only in leaving them
without excuse (Romans 1:20). Without general revelation, special revelation
would lack that basis in the fundamental knowledge of God as the mighty and
wise, righteous and good, maker and ruler of all things, apart from which the
further revelation of this great God’s interventions in the world for the
salvation of sinners could not be either intelligible, credible or operative."
The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"The religion of the Bible is a frankly supernatural
religion." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of
Revelation
"The religion of the Bible thus announces itself, not as
the product of men's search after God, if haply they may feel after Him and find
Him, but as the creation in men of the gracious God, forming a people for
Himself, that they may show forth His praise. In other words, the religion of
the Bible presents itself as distinctively a revealed religion." The Works Of
Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"There is the revelation which God continuously makes to
all men: by it His power and Divinity are made known. And there is the
revelation which He makes exclusively to His chosen people: through it His
saving grace is made known... The one is addressed generally to all intelligent
creatures, and is therefore accessible to all men; the other is addressed to a
special class of sinners, to whom God would make known His salvation. The one
has in view to meet and supply the natural need of creatures for knowledge of
their God; the other to rescue broken and deformed sinners from their sin and
its consequences." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea
of Revelation
"On the entrance of sin into the world, destroying this
communion with God and obscuring the knowledge of Him derived from Nature,
another mode of revelation was necessitated, having also another content,
adapted to the new relation to God and the new conditions of intellect, heart
and will brought about by sin. It must not be supposed, however, that this new
mode of revelation was an ex post facto expedient, introduced to meet an
unforeseen contingency. The actual course of human development was in the nature
of the case the expected and the intended course of human development, for which
man was created; and revelation, therefore, in its double form was the Divine
purpose for man from the beginning, and constitutes a unitary provision for the
realization of the end of his creation in the actual circumstances in which he
exists." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of
Revelation
"One of the most grievous of the effects of sin is the
deformation of the image of God reflected in the human mind, and there can be no
recovery from sin which does not bring with it the correction of this
deformation and the reflection in the soul of man of the whole glory of the Lord
God Almighty." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of
Revelation
"We should bear in mind that the intellectual or spiritual
quality of a revelation is not derived from the recipient but from its Divine
Giver. The fundamental fact in all revelation is that it is from God." The Works
Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"The completely supernatural character of given in
theophanies is obvious. He who will not allow that God speaks to man, to make
known His gracious purposes toward him, has no other recourse here than to
pronounce the stories legendary." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The
Biblical Idea of Revelation
"In the view of the Scriptures, the completely supernatural
character of revelation is in no way lessened by the circumstance that it has
been given through the instrumentality of men. They affirm, indeed, with the
greatest possible emphasis that the Divine word delivered through men is the
pure word of God, diluted with no human admixture whatever." The Works Of
Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
The process of revelation through the prophets was a
process by which Jehovah put His words in the mouths of the prophets, and the
prophets spoke precisely these words and no others." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"It is quite clear from the records which the prophets
themselves give us of their revelations that their intelligence was alert in all
stages of their reception of them." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I,
The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"God is Himself the author of the instruments He employs
for the communication of His messages to men and has framed them into precisely
the instruments He desired for the exact communication of His message." The
Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"The Spirit is not to be conceived as standing outside of
the human powers employed for the effect in view, ready to supplement any
inadequacies they may show and to supply any defects they may manifest, but as
working confluently in, with and by them, elevating them, directing them,
controlling them, energizing them, so that, as His instruments, they rise above
themselves and under His inspiration do His work and reach His aim... Although
the circumstance that what is done is done by and through the action of human
powers keeps the product in form and quality in a true sense human, yet the
confluent operation of the Holy Spirit throughout the whole process raises the
result above what could by any possibility be achieved by mere human powers and
constitutes it expressly a supernatural product." The Works Of Benjamin B.
Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"It is supposed that all the forms of special or redemptive
revelation which underlie and give its content to the religion of the Bible may
without violence be subsumed under one or another of these three modes —
external manifestation, internal suggestion, and concursive operation. All, that
is, except the culminating revelation, not through, but in, Jesus Christ. As in
His person, in which dwells all the fulness of the Godhead bodily, He rises
above all classification and is sui generis; so the revelation accumulated in
Him stands outside all the divers portions and divers manners in which otherwise
revelation has been given and sums up in itself all that has been or can be made
known of God and of His redemption. He does not so much make a revelation of God
as Himself is the revelation of God; He does not merely disclose God’s purpose
of redemption, He is unto us wisdom from God, and righteousness and
sanctification and redemption. The theophanies are but faint shadows in
comparison with His manifestation of God in the flesh. The prophets could
prophesy only as the Spirit of Christ which was in them testified, revealing to
them as to servants. one or another of the secrets of the Lord Jehovah; from Him
as His Son, Jehovah has no secrets, but whatsoever the Father knows that the Son
knows also. Whatever truth men have been made partakers of by the Spirit of
truth is His (for all things whatsoever the Father hath are His) and is taken by
the Spirit of truth and declared to men that He may be glorified." The Works Of
Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical Idea of Revelation
"The entirety of the New Testament is but the explanatory
word accompanying and giving its effect to the fact of Christ. And when this
fact was in all its meaning made the possession of men, revelation was completed
and in that sense ceased. Jesus Christ is no less the end of revelation than He
is the end of the law." The Works Of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol I, The Biblical
Idea of Revelation