Excerpt from Landmarks of New Testament Morality
Our aim in this volume has been to compress into a few connected chapters what seemed to us to be the distinctive and salient principles of New Testa ment Morality. In pursuance of this aim we have striven to keep the book strictly within the limits prescribed by its title. We have therefore kept in abeyance all subjects of dogmatic Theology. The questions relating to the theological nature of sin, the origin of sin, the punishment of sin, and the atonement for sin, are outside the scope of the present treatise; for, however much they touch the moral sphere, they contain an additional or transcendental element which demands a separate mode of study.
We have only to add that as the drift of the work is not historical, we have made few references to the opinions of others, and these have gradually disappeared as we have come into contact with those familiar sources from which alone such a work must be ultimately derived-the books of the New Testament itself.
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George Matheson was a Scottish theologian and preacher.
He was educated at the University of Glasgow, where he graduated first in classics, logic and philosophy. In his twentieth year he became totally blind, but he held to his resolve to enter the ministry, and gave himself to theological and historical study.
However, he was academically gifted, and his sisters learned Latin, Greek, and Hebrew to help him study. He graduated from the University of Edinburgh (MA 1862), then became a minister in the Church of Scotland. He pastored in the resort town of Innelan for 18 years; due to his ability to memorize sermons and entire sections of the Bible, listeners were often unaware he was blind. In 1886, Matheson became pastor of St. Bernard's Church in Edinburgh, where he served 13 years. He spent the remaining years of his life in literary efforts.
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