The Religious Use of Archeology
Mark 13:1-2
And as he went out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him, Master, see what manner of stones and what buildings are here!…


What is the true religious aspect of archaeology? We must all profit by that warning voice which did for a moment check the enthusiasm of the antiquarian disciple. The admiration for stones and buildings, however innocent and useful, is yet not religion. The regard for antiquity and the love of the past, if pushed to excess, have often been the ruin of religion. Christianity is not antiquarianism, and antiquarianism is not Christianity. There must be times and places when antiquity must give way to truth, and the beauty of form to the beauty of holiness, and the charm of poetic and historic recollections to the stern necessities of fact and duty. It is well to remember that there is something more enduring than the stones of the temple. If archaeology is not everything, it is at least something.

I. IT AWAKENS THAT LOVE OF THE PAST WHICH IS SO NECESSARY A COUNTERPOISE TO THE EXCITEMENT OF THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE. "I have considered," says the Psalmist, "the days of old, the years of the ancient time." They were to him as a cool shade, a calm haven. The study of them carries us back from the days of the man to the days of the child; it opens to us a fresh world; it makes us feel that we do not stand alone in our generation on the earth, but that under God, we are what we are because of the deeds and thoughts of those who have lived before us, and to whom we thus owe a debt which we have constantly to repay to our posterity. How this insight into the past has been increased in our own age. Not only Greeks and Romans, but Egyptians and Assyrians, are familiar to us in this century.

II. THE IMPORTANCE OF THESE STUDIES IN DEVELOPING THOSE RAREST OF GOD'S GIFTS TO MAN, A LOVE OF TRUTH, AND A LOVE OF JUSTICE — the will and the power to see things as they really are, and in their just proportions to one another.

III. The more thoroughly we can understand these ancient forms, the more eagerly we can restore and beautify ancient buildings, so MUCH THE BETTER IS THE FRAMEWORK PREPARED FOR THE RECEPTION OF NEW THOUGHTS AND NEW IDEAS. It has been sometimes said that the great periods of building and of admiration for the past have been the precursors of the fall of the religion of the nations which they represented. It has been said, for example, that the burst of splendid architecture under the Herods, immediately preceded the fall of Judaism; that the like display under the Antonii preceded the fall of Paganism; that the like display at the beginning of the sixteenth century preceded the fall of the Church of the middle ages. There is no doubt a truth in this. There is a tendency in an expiring system to develop itself in outward form, when its inward spirit has died away. But this is not at all the whole truth, and the higher truth is something quite different, namely, that these magnificent displays of art, these profound investigations into the past, in those eras of which I have spoken, were part of the same throes, of the same mind and spirit, which accompanied the birth of the new and higher religion, which in each case succeeded. Those Augustan buildings suggested to the apostles' hearts the imagery by which they expressed the most sublime of spiritual truths. "The chief cornerstone;" the stones joined and compacted together; the pillars which were never to be moved; the whole idea of what the apostles called "edification," — that most expressive word when we understand it rightly — the architecture, so to speak, of the Christian soul — all these images were drawn from the superb edifices which everywhere rose before the apostles' eyes. And so in the last great efflorescence of mediaeval architecture, religion, instead of dying out with that effort, took a third start throughout Europe. Oh! may God grant that the glory of the third temple, the glory of the living temple, may as much exceed the glory of the second, as the glory of the second exceeded the glory of the first! Cast not away the old, but see what it means, see what it embraces, see what it indicates, "See what manner of stones and what buildings are here," and then, as in the case of sacred and of ancient words, so also in the case of sacred and ancient edifices, they will become as Luther said of words, not dead stones but living creatures with hands and feet; living stones which will cry out with a thousand voices; stones which will be full of "sermons;" dry bones which when we prophesy over them, will stand on their feet an exceeding great army; ancient, everlasting gates, which shall turn upon their rusty hinges and lift up their hoary doors that the Lord of Hosts may come in; a heavenly city within the earthly city, a city which hath foundations deeper than any earthly foundations, a city whose builder and maker is God!

(Dean Stanley.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And as he went out of the temple, one of his disciples saith unto him, Master, see what manner of stones and what buildings are here!

WEB: As he went out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him, "Teacher, see what kind of stones and what kind of buildings!"




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