登陆注册
4614900000009

第9章

If, on the other hand, the person of God exists in some sphere outside the earth, his human flesh again proves to be of an entirely different kind from all other human flesh, for we know that such flesh cannot exist except on earth; if in space unsupported, it must fall to the ground, or into some other planet, or into a sun, or go on revolving round the earth or some other heavenly body-or not be personal. None of those whose opinions will carry weight will assign a position either in some country on this earth, or yet again in space, to Jesus Christ, but this involves the rendering meaningless of all expressions which involve his personality.

The Christian conception, therefore, of the Deity proves when examined with any desire to understand our own meaning (and what lawlessness so great as the attempt to impose words upon our understandings which have no lawful settlement within them?) to be no less a contradiction in terms than the Pantheistic conception. It is Atheistic, as offering us a God which is not a God, inasmuch as we can conceive of no such being, nor of anything in the least like it. It is, like Pantheism, an illusion, which can be believed only by those who repeat a formula which they have learnt by heart in a foreign language of which they understand nothing, and yet aver that they believe it.

There are doubtless many who will say that this is possible, but the majority of my readers will hold that no proposition can be believed or disbelieved until its nature is understood.

It may perhaps be said that there is another conception of God possible, and that we may see him as personal, without at the same time believing that he has any actual tangible existence.

Thus we personify hope, truth, and justice, without intending to convey to anyone the impression that these qualities are women, with flesh and blood. Again, we do not think of Nature as an actual woman, though we call her one; why may we not conceive of God, then, as an expression whereby we personify, by a figure of speech only; the thing that is intended being no person, but our own highest ideal of power, wisdom, and duration.

There would be no reason to complain of this if this manner of using the word "God" were well understood. Many words have two meanings, or even three, without any mischievous confusion of thought following. There can not only be no objection to the use of the word God as a manner of expressing the highest ideal of which our minds can conceive, but on the contrary no better expression can be found, and it is a pity the word is not thus more generally used.

Few, however, would be content with any such limitation of God as that he should be an idea only, an expression for certain qualities of human thought and action. Whence, it may be fairly asked, did our deeply rooted belief in God as a Living Person originate? The idea of him as of an inconceivably vast, ancient, powerful, loving, and yet formidable Person is one which survives all changes of detail in men's opinion. I believe there are a few very savage tribes who are as absolutely without religious sense as the beasts of the field, but the vast majority for a long time past have been possessed with an idea that there is somewhere a Living God who is the Spirit and the Life of all that is, and who is a true Person with an individuality and self-consciousness of his own. It is only natural that we should be asked how such an idea has remained in the minds of so many - who differ upon almost every other part of their philosophy-for so long a time if it was without foundation, and a piece of dreamy mysticism only.

True, it has generally been declared that this God is an infinite God, and an infinite God is a God without any bounds or limitations; and a God without bounds or limitations is an impersonal God; and an impersonal God is Atheism. But may not this be the incoherency of prophecy which precedes the successful mastering of an idea? May we not think of this illusory expression as having arisen from inability to see the whereabouts of a certain vast but tangible Person as to whose existence men were nevertheless clear? If they felt that it existed, and yet could not say where, nor wherein it was to be laid hands on, they would be very likely to get out of the difficulty by saying that it existed as an infinite Spirit, partly from a desire to magnify what they felt must be so vast and powerful, and partly because they had as yet only a vague conception of what they were aiming at, and must, therefore, best express it vaguely.

We must not be surprised that when an idea is still inchoate its expression should be inconsistent and imperfect-ideas will almost always during the earlier history of a thought be put together experimentally so as to see whether or no they will cohere.

Partly out of indolence, partly out of the desire of those who brought the ideas together to be declared right, and partly out of joy that the truth should be supposed found, incoherent ideas will be kept together longer than they should be; nevertheless they will in the end detach themselves and go, if others present themselves which fit into their place better. There is no consistency which has not once been inconsistent, nor coherency that has not been incoherent. The incoherency of our ideas concerning God is due to the fact that we have not yet truly found him, but it does not argue that he does not exist and cannot be found anywhere after more diligent search; on the contrary, the persistence of the main idea, in spite of the incoherency of its details, points strongly in the direction of believing that it rests upon a foundation in fact.

But it must be remembered there can be no God who is not personal and material: and if personal, then, though inconceivably vast in comparison with man, still limited in space and time, and capable of making mistakes concerning his own interests, though as a general rule right in his estimates concerning them. Where, then, is this Being? He must be on earth, or what folly can be greater than speaking of him as a person? What are persons on any other earth to us, or we to them? He must have existed and be going to exist through all time, and he must have a tangible body. Where, then, is the body of this God? And what is the mystery of his Incarnation?

It will be my business to show this in the following chapter.

同类推荐
  • 孙子遗说

    孙子遗说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 王弼老子注

    王弼老子注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 婆薮槃豆法师传

    婆薮槃豆法师传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞玄金玉集

    洞玄金玉集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天玉经

    天玉经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 忘仙录

    忘仙录

    长生歌,歌传万界;弦起,夺你仙缘;弦落,断你三生。世间皆俱,缘起缘灭;魔前端坐诉佛理,回首天尘不做仙;悠悠千载,万古皆空;燃灯常伴,宿醒千万夜;求仙路,奏一曲长生歌。少年身世之谜到底能否解开;禁区黑暗轮回的杀戮能否平息;一双拳头,击破万古;岁月七杀,举世皆敌。
  • 别样青春之佳人如期

    别样青春之佳人如期

    三年前的校园初见,三年后……一场意外的见面成为了他们两个人开始心的路程。他们会走到一起吗?谈了恋爱还在坚持自己的梦想。一切都很安静。家庭的变动,爱情也面临问题她怎样做出选择?直到一天她知道他的陪伴从来都是他在帮她为她而做。她做了一个决定……没有你的幸福都与我无关!没有你的世界我已不再是我!世界上原本一对的人需要找到另一半才是真正的自己,茫茫人海中我错过了三年不会再错过余生!
  • 盛年不待人

    盛年不待人

    宅女被踢出家门,老妈说不勾个男人回来就不用回来了。于是,二十八岁大龄单身女青年走出家门进入职场。跟一帮小白花竞争岗位,综合竞争力那么差,能不能养活自己?她说:不能靠脸,不能靠经验,我还可以靠厚脸皮。于是厚脸皮的她成功睡到了老板。男人:你以为我爱你吗?女人:没关系,我也不爱你。咱们啊,就凑合过吧!言而总之,这就是一个我以为我不爱你的故事。
  • 琴瑟无端

    琴瑟无端

    孙频,女,1983年出生于山西交城,毕业于兰州大学中文系,现任杂志编辑。至今在各文学期刊发表中短篇小说一百余万字,代表作有中篇小说《同屋记》、《醉长安》、《玻璃唇》、《隐形的女人》、《凌波渡》、《菩提阱》、《铅笔债》等。
  • 绝世灵武帝尊

    绝世灵武帝尊

    穿越后,在次燃起雄心之火,修炼志上,笑看腥风血雨……。在这个混乱的世间,成就了无上霸业,创就了无上神通……。
  • 甜心暖妻:高冷总裁宠上天

    甜心暖妻:高冷总裁宠上天

    自从遇到苏慕凉——这个披着高冷外衣的腹黑又逗比的大总裁,顾小苗的人生就没有正常过。“爱妻号”总裁每分每秒都在“关爱”这个可爱小秘书,奇招乱出,毫无底线,偶尔也搬起石头砸一砸自己的脚。不过,大总裁,你怎么关爱到人家床上来了!某男生扁扁嘴:老婆,为了你,为夫愿意为你霸占整个金融界和娱乐圈!顾小苗:别跟我卖萌,我不吃这套!总裁:你别穿上衣服就不认账!来,咱们再研究一下昨晚姿势的改进,多生几个宝宝……全文甜宠,走积极励志正能量路线。不虐,一萌到底!
  • Prester John

    Prester John

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 遇见,傅先生

    遇见,傅先生

    (超甜)父母偏心,闺蜜陷害,走投无路之下,叶繁星嫁给了坐在轮椅上的傅先生。他会教她弹钢琴,送她花,将她宠成了这个世界上最幸福的人。某天,同学聚会,她被人嘲笑,说她老公是个残废,他风度翩翩出现,让所有笑话她的人哑口无言。在人生最灰暗的时光里,有他牵引着她积极向阳而生,从而有了灿烂的人生。遇见你真好,我的傅先生。
  • 佛说大孔雀王杂神咒经

    佛说大孔雀王杂神咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 不乖,哈佛导师的自我突破心理学

    不乖,哈佛导师的自我突破心理学

    从小,被大人教导的我们都深信:“乖巧”就有理,“听从”便无罪。长大以后恍然发现,童年时期关于被表扬的经历,居然都只与满足了大人的期待有关——而不是你本来就很好。一直在压抑真实的自己,灵魂深处的不安感要如何摆脱?哈佛心理导师加藤谛三在本书中深层剖析了“乖孩子”在长大以后自我认同度低、迷茫、委曲求全、不敢走出舒适区等种种负面心理背后的深层心理成因,追溯到童年成长过程中抽丝剥茧,分析了家庭环境、父母的态度对成年后的你心理所造成的影响,提出了找回自信、实现自我价值的处世智慧,鼓励读者摆脱父母和他人的期待,接受不完美却真实的自己,喜欢上自己,勇敢追求自己所向往的生活。