Thursday, March 17, 2022

William G. T. Shedd on the "Twelve" in the New Testament Not being Taken at Face Value (e.g., Revelation 21:14)

  

It is important, in this connection, to remember that the phrase twelve apostles is employed technically in the New Testament to denote the apostolic college. In two instances, the “Twelve” are respectively thirteen and eleven. In Rev. 21:14 it is said that the foundations of the New Jerusalem has “in them the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.” It is not supposable that the name of St. Paul, who was second to no apostle in founding the Christian church, was omitted. Here the apostolic college is meant, which contained thirteen persons called and set apart by Christ. Again, in 1 Cor. 15:5 St. Paul calls eleven apostles the Twelve (cf. Matt. 28:16). If the Twelve may be thirteen or eleven, they may also be four. Any part of the college acting officially for the body may be denominated the Twelve. The four gospels, composed by or under the superintendence of the four to whom they have been ascribed from the very first, are thus the gospels of the Twelve and have the authority of the whole circle. (William G. T. Shedd, Dogmatic Theology: Complete and Unabridged, Volumes 1-3 [Reformed Retrieval, 2021], 71)

 

Further Reading


Revelation 21:14—Evidence against LDS Ecclesiology?


Qumranic Parallels to Revelation 21:14


On the Symbolic Nature of the Heavenly City in Revelation 21

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