登陆注册
5270500000064

第64章 CHAPTER XXVI(1)

OUR experiences are little worth unless they teach us to reflect. Let us then pause to consider this hourly experience of human beings - this remarkable efficacy of prayer. There can hardly be a contemplative mind to which, with all its difficulties, the inquiry is not familiar.

To begin with, 'To pray is to expect a miracle.' 'Prayer in its very essence,' says a thoughtful writer, 'implies a belief in the possible intervention of a power which is above nature.' How was it in my case? What was the essence of my belief? Nothing less than this: that God would have permitted the laws of nature, ordained by His infinite wisdom to fulfil His omniscient designs and pursue their natural course in accordance with His will, had not my request persuaded Him to suspend those laws in my favour.

The very belief in His omniscience and omnipotence subverts the spirit of such a prayer. It is on the perfection of God that Malebranche bases his argument that 'Dieu n'agit pas par des volontes particulieres.' Yet every prayer affects to interfere with the divine purposes.

It may here be urged that the divine purposes are beyond our comprehension. God's purposes may, in spite of the inconceivability, admit the efficacy of prayer as a link in the chain of causation; or, as Dr. Mozely holds, it may be that 'a miracle is not an anomaly or irregularity, but part of the system of the universe.' We will not entangle ourselves in the abstruse metaphysical problem which such hypotheses involve, but turn for our answer to what we do know - to the history of this world, to the daily life of man. If the sun rises on the evil as well as on the good, if the wicked 'become old, yea, are mighty in power,' still, the lightning, the plague, the falling chimney-pot, smite the good as well as the evil. Even the dumb animal is not spared. 'If,' says Huxley, 'our ears were sharp enough to hear all the cries of pain that are uttered in the earth by man and beasts we should be deafened by one continuous scream.' 'If there are any marks at all of special design in creation,' writes John Stuart Mill, 'one of the things most evidently designed is that a large proportion of all animals should pass their existence in tormenting and devouring other animals. They have been lavishly fitted out with the instruments for that purpose.' Is it credible, then, that the Almighty Being who, as we assume, hears this continuous scream - animal-prayer, as we may call it - and not only pays no heed to it, but lavishly fits out animals with instruments for tormenting and devouring one another, that such a Being should suspend the laws of gravitation and physiology, should perform a miracle equal to that of arresting the sun - for all miracles are equipollent - simply to prolong the brief and useless existence of such a thing as man, of one man out of the myriads who shriek, and - shriek in vain?

To pray is to expect a miracle. Then comes the further question: Is this not to expect what never yet has happened?

The only proof of any miracle is the interpretation the witness or witnesses put upon what they have seen.

(Traditional miracles - miracles that others have been told, that others have seen - we need not trouble our heads about.)

What that proof has been worth hitherto has been commented upon too often to need attention here. Nor does the weakness of the evidence for miracles depend solely on the fact that it rests, in the first instance, on the senses, which may be deceived; or upon inference, which may be erroneous. It is not merely that the infallibility of human testimony discredits the miracles of the past. The impossibility that human knowledge, that science, can ever exhaust the possibilities of Nature, precludes the immediate reference to the Supernatural for all time. It is pure sophistry to argue, as do Canon Row and other defenders of miracles, that 'the laws of Nature are no more violated by the performance of a miracle than they are by the activities of a man.' If these arguments of the special pleaders had any force at all, it would simply amount to this: 'The activities of man' being a part of nature, we have no evidence of a supernatural being, which is the sole RAISON D'ETRE of miracle.

Yet thousands of men in these days who admit the force of these objections continue, in spite of them, to pray.

Huxley, the foremost of 'agnostics,' speaks with the utmost respect of his friend Charles Kingsley's conviction from experience of the efficacy of prayer. And Huxley himself repeatedly assures us, in some form or other, that 'the possibilities of "may be" are to me infinite.' The puzzle is, in truth, on a par with that most insolvable of all puzzles - Free Will or Determinism. Reason and the instinct of conscience are in both cases irreconcilable. We are conscious that we are always free to choose, though not to act; but reason will have it that this is a delusion. There is no logical clue to the IMPASSE. Still, reason notwithstanding, we take our freedom (within limits) for granted, and with like inconsequence we pray.

It must, I think, be admitted that the belief, delusive or warranted, is efficacious in itself. Whether generated in the brain by the nerve centres, or whatever may be its origin, a force coincident with it is diffused throughout the nervous system, which converts the subject of it, just paralysed by despair, into a vigorous agent, or, if you will, automaton.

同类推荐
  • 解脱戒经

    解脱戒经

    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。
  • 法华十妙不二门示珠指

    法华十妙不二门示珠指

    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。
  • 草堂耨云实禅师语录

    草堂耨云实禅师语录

    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。
  • 餐樱庑随笔

    餐樱庑随笔

    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。
  • 法华玄赞义决

    法华玄赞义决

    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
  • 萧红作品集(1)(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    萧红作品集(1)(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    “中国现代文学名家作品集”丛书实质是中国现代文学肇基和发展阶段的创作总集,收录了几乎当时所有知名作家,知名作品的全部。
  • 天地之狱

    天地之狱

    神魔降临,带来新的力量。一场灾难,世界生灵涂炭。蒙蔽的人类知道一切,反抗的号角便即将吹响。天地如狱,顺道则昌;天地为牢,逆天则亡。在牢狱之中,人类又能走向何方?
  • 武动八荒

    武动八荒

    一年前他以绝世之资傲立同代,却在王者之路试炼中惨遭陷害,被逐出门派,一年后他以妖族之体重临巅峰!这一次他要畅心如意,凡是对自己露杀意的,杀!凡是阻挡自己前行的,杀!凡是阻挡自己拯救妹妹的,杀!杀它个天翻地覆,杀它个日月轮转!且看少年如何从微末之地杀出一条通天大道!
  • 东海若解

    东海若解

    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。
  • 萌宠小狐狸:竹马少年,太妖孽

    萌宠小狐狸:竹马少年,太妖孽

    “千年前,我欠了一个人一生都还不完的债。”灰耳九尾狐淡淡道“何债?”少年微微有些疑惑地看着它“五分命债,两分恩债,三分……”说着灰耳九尾狐微微顿住“那还有三分是什么?”说着便看着它它眼中微恙淡淡道:“情债,最难还。却也最还不起。”
  • 河畔之星

    河畔之星

    这是“五一”长假中一个风和日丽的日子,正是出游的好时候。珍珠泉公园里到处都是游人。高军和李路带着儿子也来珍珠泉公园踏青。季节正是春天,公园里花红柳绿,雀飞鸟叫。游人们三三两两在一起散步、拍照。每个游乐项目都有人在排队买票。市郊的珍珠泉公园,不光“五一”这种长假,每个周末都有很多市民来玩儿。为此,市公交总公司专门开辟了一条公交线路,从市中心的鼓楼直达珍珠泉公园。这条线路没有数字名字,比如:三十六路、九十一路。它只是按起止地点叫做鼓珍线。虽然珍珠泉公园一带早就被纳入城市范围内,但这条公交线路一直没有改名。
  • 王爷的小小小新娘

    王爷的小小小新娘

    我,十一岁的某真真(未免父母得知后伤痛,忽略姓氏不写),居然于一次溺水身亡后来到一个陌生的朝代,成为蔚真真,某地一七品小官刚出生的孙女。那就算了,让我安安稳稳地过完一生就好了嘛,可是……可是,为什么会先有一个像牛皮糖一样的家伙残害我的幼小童年,接着又有个不让人省心的家伙要来时时刻刻牵引我的心,最最过分的是,为什么还有一个莫名其妙的家伙要在我七岁时要求我当他的妻子!无语问苍天啊!请问,到底有没人来拯救我?!…………………………^^……………………………………………………^^……………本文的写作宗旨与方向是希望可以逃离复杂与喧嚣,从而最终走向宁静。现代生活的熙熙攘攘很容易让我们忘记很多事情,每日单调的生活与学习,往往让我们不得不变得世故与虚假,很多时候我们怀念过去,开始向往乡村的宁静与和谐。虽然明知自己不可能真正过上那种生活,但还是让我们在书中得到一些寄托吧!坚持就是胜利,我要努力写!嘿嘿!希望大家喜欢。秋第一次写长篇,而且思维有些跳跃,可能有些地方漏洞百出,还请大家多多为秋指出。鞠躬……大家可以在会员中心注册,网址是潇湘的优秀作品很多,编辑们总不能厚此薄彼,有很多好的文章还需要通过首页这一平台让大家的眼睛可以看到。因此,如果你对这本书感兴趣,觉得可以一看,可以去注个册,是免费的,且并不耗时。那样,你就可以将自己喜欢的作品收入你的书架,随时掌握作者更新与否,并投票支持你所喜欢的作者了。希望大家可以收藏我的作品,并投票支持我!你的支持,便是我最大的动力!致谢……58253735,58253735,58253735,十分寂寞的一个群,就是传说中俺的读书群,大家如果感兴趣可以加一下……
  • 洪昭光谈心血管病防治

    洪昭光谈心血管病防治

    本书首先介绍了人类现阶段健康的基本状况,随后又介绍了危害生命的种种病状,特别是心血管疾病,并提出了维护健康的基本方法。本书会给中老年朋友在健康、养生方面提供帮助。
  • 医妃冠天下

    医妃冠天下

    (文文已完结)她,王牌杀手,医冠天下,毒霸九州。她,名门嫡女,草包废物,外加白痴二货一个,没才没貌,没爹没娘,寄人篱下。当她成为她,草包废物?笑话!没才没貌?扯淡!白痴二货?乱讲!乱世风云起,金戈铁马来,乱世浮沉中,她华丽转身,风华绝代,医术无双,毒倾天下。他,一字并肩王,绝色倾城,狠绝毒辣,病弱之躯,废人一个,无人愿嫁。一旨赐婚,一场羞辱,她嫁与他为妻。大婚夜,盖头揭开,看着传闻中的男人,语笑嫣然:“白痴配残王,绝配!”他但笑不语。当杀手遇上魔王,当狡诈遇上腹黑,他们又将上演怎么样的激情?当他们一起褪去伪装,站在众人面前大放异彩时,又将是怎样的惊艳天下?
  • 绝色天医:鬼帝,请矜持

    绝色天医:鬼帝,请矜持

    意外穿越,云玖不仅失去记忆,还由天才跌落成废物。族人陷害,世人欺凌,偏偏那个人人谈而色变的鬼帝大人,视她如命,护她若宝。他说,这世间,若有人动她一根头发,他便削了对方脑袋,若有人胆子敢惹她不开心,便剜了对方心肝!据悉鬼帝从不近女色……可是,这个酷爱对她上下其手的又是什么鬼?--情节虚构,请勿模仿