登陆注册
14726200000013

第13章

THE LIKENESS OF GOD

In my last chapter I endeavoured [sic] to show that each living being, whether animal or plant, throughout the world is a component item of a single personality, in the same way as each individual citizen of a community is a member of one state, or as each cell of our own bodies is a separate person, or each bud of a tree a separate plant. We must therefore see the whole varied congeries of living things as a single very ancient Being, of inconceivable vastness, and animated by one Spirit.

We call the octogenarian one person with the embryo of a few days old from which he has developed. An oak or yew tree may be two thousand years old, but we call it one plant with the seed from which it has grown. Millions of individual buds have come and gone, to the yearly wasting and repairing of its substance; but the tree still lives and thrives, and the dead leaves have life therein. So the Tree of Life still lives and thrives as a single person, no matter how many new features it has acquired during its development, nor, again, how many of its individual leaves fall yellow to the ground daily. The spirit or soul of this person is the Spirit of God, and its body-for we know of no soul or spirit without a body, nor of any living body without a spirit or soul, and if there is a God at all there must be a body of God-is the many-membered outgrowth of protoplasm, the ensemble of animal and vegetable life.

To repeat. The Theologian of to-day tells us that there is a God, but is horrified at the idea of that God having a body. We say that we believe in God, but that our minds refuse to realise [sic] an intelligent Being who has no bodily person. "Where then," says the Theologian, " is the body of your God?" We have answered, "In the living forms upon the earth, which, though they look many, are, when we regard them by the light of their history and of true analogies, one person only." The spiritual connection between them is a more real bond of union than the visible discontinuity of material parts is ground for separating them in our thoughts.

Let the reader look at a case of moths in the shop-window of a naturalist, and note the unspeakable delicacy, beauty, and yet serviceableness of their wings; or let him look at a case of humming-birds, and remember how infinitely small a part of Nature is the whole group of the animals he may be considering, and how infinitely small a part of that group is the case that he is looking at. Let him bear in mind that he is looking on the dead husks only of what was inconceivably more marvellous [sic] when the moths or humming-birds were alive. Let him think of the vastness of the earth, and of the activity by day and night through countless ages of such countless forms of animal and vegetable life as that no human mind can form the faintest approach to anything that can be called a conception of their multitude, and let him remember that all these forms have touched and touched and touched other living beings till they meet back on a common substance in which they are rooted, and from which they all branch forth so as to be one animal. Will he not in this real and tangible existence find a God who is as much more worthy of admiration than the God of the ordinary Theologian-as He is also more easy of comprehension?

For the Theologian dreams of a God sitting above the clouds among the cherubim, who blow their loud uplifted angel trumpets before Him, and humour [sic] Him as though He were some despot in an Oriental tale; but we enthrone Him upon the wings of birds, on the petals of flowers, on the faces of our friends, and upon whatever we most delight in of all that lives upon the earth. We then can not only love Him, but we can do that without which love has neither power nor sweetness, but is a phantom only, an impersonal person, a vain stretching forth of arms towards something that can never fill them-we can express our love and have it expressed to us in return. And this not in the uprearing of stone temples-for the Lord dwelleth [sic] in temples made with other organs than hands-nor yet in the cleansing of our hearts, but in the caress bestowed upon horse and dog, and kisses upon the lips of those we love.

同类推荐
  • 风骚旨格

    风骚旨格

    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。
  • 张文祥刺马案

    张文祥刺马案

    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。
  • 忠肃集

    忠肃集

    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。
  • 乙巳占

    乙巳占

    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。
  • 食疗方

    食疗方

    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。
热门推荐
  • 四库全书精编1

    四库全书精编1

    《四库全书》可以称为中华传统文化最丰富最完备的集成之作。中国文、史、哲、理、工、医,几乎所有的学科都能够从中找到它的源头和血脉,几乎所有关于中国的新兴学科都能从这里找到它生存发展的泥土和营养。
  • 此界妖修

    此界妖修

    它们曾经只是一只只的野兽,直到那一天,神秘的力量降临,之后,他们便称自己为“妖!”
  • 重生之我是阿斗

    重生之我是阿斗

    谁说阿斗是扶不起的?我还需要人扶吗?我被誉为三国时期第一博学多才之人,诸葛亮、司马懿都对我赞誉有加。什么?木牛流马?那是什么原始人用的破烂,我九年义务教育加3年高中加4年大学,怎么也懂一点机械知识吧,随便拿点出来就秒杀诸葛亮、马均啦。
  • 天玄三界

    天玄三界

    混沌初开,鸿蒙之始。四极废,九州裂,天不兼覆,地不周载,分以天地人三界,以鸿蒙之气化为深渊,无法逾越。数个世纪后,妖孽群出,群雄争霸,仙,神,佛,妖,冥各大法流传于世,世界幻入兜罗绵,恍见洪荒万万古。一代魂尊叶玄因获洪荒塔被围攻天神山,以身祭塔,战死山顶,灵魂得上古神器庇护,得以重生。看一代杀神重回天界,令众生颤抖,,,,,,我要这天,再遮不住我眼,要这地,再埋不了我山,要这众生,都明白我意,要那诸佛,都烟消云散,,,,,,
  • 盖世牛魔王

    盖世牛魔王

    一梦华胥,且当一回“牛魔王”!少年足踏九州,混迹仙、妖、魔三道,书写盖世神话,成就新一代牛魔王!
  • 宅男至尊路

    宅男至尊路

    看宅男吴天一步步成就至尊之路。第一次写,喜欢的朋友请多多支持!
  • 高士传

    高士传

    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。
  • 赤蔷薇

    赤蔷薇

    夜深了,你看到了吗,那朵悄然绽放的,如血般的赤色蔷薇。
  • 恋上kiss

    恋上kiss

    帅气,有着冷酷的外表,优雅的气质,散发着恶魔与王子魅力的完美男生与有着一对双眼皮,眼睛大而明亮,睫毛像洋娃娃般细长,自然向上卷曲着,长长的秀发略带棕色,垂荡在身后的完美女生的浪漫邂逅,一场充满梦幻色彩的party,埋下了两人的爱情种子......
  • 说好三点见

    说好三点见

    当你闭上一只眼睛上帝便把你的世界拿割走一部分可你又把眼睛睁开了上帝便把割走的世界还你这是上帝和你之间的一个游戏规则尽管你永远不会发现有一次上帝失误让一个男人看到了柔膝桃面和粉唇上帝暴怒取了他一只眼睛又要永远永远不归还