COMMON ground
I have now, perhaps, sufficiently
proved my sympathy with the reluctance felt by many
to tolerate discussion upon such a subject as the
existence and nature of God. I trust that I may
have made the reader feel that he need fear no sarcasm
or levity in my treatment of the subject which I
have chosen. I will, therefore, proceed to
sketch out a plan of what I hope to establish, and
this in no doubtful or unnatural sense, but by attaching
the same meanings to words as those which we usually
attach to them, and with the same certainty, precision,
and clearness as anything else is established which
is commonly called known.
As to what God is, beyond the fact
that he is the Spirit and the Life which creates,
governs, and upholds all living things, I can say
nothing. I cannot pretend that I can show more
than others have done in what Spirit and the Life
consists, which governs living things and animates
them. I cannot show the connection between
consciousness and the will, and the organ, much less
can I tear away the veil from the face of God, so
as to show wherein will and consciousness consist.
No philosopher, whether Christian or Rationalist,
has attempted this without discomfiture; but I can,
I hope, do two things: Firstly, I can demonstrate,
perhaps more clearly than modern science is prepared
to admit, that there does exist a single Being or
Animator of all living things — a single Spirit,
whom we cannot think of under any meaner name than
God; and, secondly, I can show something more of
the persona or bodily expression, mask, and mouthpiece
of this vast Living Spirit than I know of as having
been familiarly expressed elsewhere, or as being
accessible to myself or others, though doubtless
many works exist in which what I am going to say
has been already said.
Aware that much of this is widely
accepted under the name of Pantheism, I venture to
think it differs from Pantheism with all the difference
that exists between a coherent, intelligible conception
and an incoherent unintelligible one. I shall
therefore proceed to examine the doctrine called
Pantheism, and to show how incomprehensible and valueless
it is.
I will then indicate the Living and
Personal God about whose existence and about many
of whose attributes there is no room for question;
I will show that man has been so far made in the
likeness of this Person or God, that He possesses all
its essential characteristics, and that it is this
God who has called man and all other living forms,
whether animals or plants, into existence, so that
our bodies are the temples of His spirit; that it
is this which sustains them in their life and growth,
who is one with them, living, moving, and having
His being in them; in whom, also, they live and move,
they in Him and He in them; He being not a Trinity
in Unity only, but an Infinity in Unity, and a Unity
in an Infinity; eternal in time past, for so much time
at least that our minds can come no nearer to eternity
than this; eternal for the future as long as the
universe shall exist; ever changing, yet the same
yesterday, and to-day, and for ever. And I
will show this with so little ambiguity that it shall
be perceived not as a phantom or hallucination following
upon a painful straining of the mind and a vain endeavour
[sic] to give coherency to incoherent and inconsistent
ideas, but with the same ease, comfort, and palpable
flesh-and-blood clearness with which we see those
near to us ; whom, though we see them at the best as
through a glass darkly, we still see face to face,
even as we are ourselves seen.
I will also show in what way this
Being exercises a moral government over the world,
and rewards and punishes us according to His own
laws.
Having done this I shall proceed to
compare this conception of God with those that are
currently accepted, and will endeavour [sic] to show
that the ideas now current are in truth efforts to
grasp the one on which I shall here insist.
Finally, I shall persuade the reader that the differences
between the so-called atheist and the so-called theist
are differences rather about words than things, inasmuch
as not even the most prosaic of modern scientists
will be inclined to deny the existence of this God,
while few theists will feel that this, the natural
conception of God, is a less worthy one than that
to which they have been accustomed.