ANALYSIS OF INTRODUCTION.
[For the sake of the general reader who may desire to pass at once to
the practical applications, the following outline of the
Introduction—devoted rather to general principles—is here presented.]
PART I.
NATURAL LAW IN THE SPIRITUAL SPHERE. 1. The growth of the Idea of Law.
2. Its gradual extension throughout every department of Knowledge. 3.
Except one. Religion hitherto the Great Exception. Why so? 4. Previous
attempts to trace analogies between the Natural and Spiritual spheres.
These have been limited to analogies between Phenomena; and are useful
mainly as illustrations. Analogies of Law would also have a Scientific
value. 5. Wherein that value would consist. (1) The Scientific demand of
the age would be met; (2) Greater clearness would be introduced into
Religion practically, (3) Theology, instead of resting on Authority, would
rest equally on Nature.
PART II.
THE LAW OF CONTINUITY.
A priori argument for Natural Law in the spiritual world. 1. The Law
Discovered. 2. The Law Defined. 3. The Law Applied. 4. The objection
answered that the material of the Natural and Spiritual worlds being
different they must be under different Laws. 5. The existence of Laws in
the Spiritual world other than the Natural Laws (1) improbable, (2)
unnecessary, (3) unknown. Qualification. 6. The Spiritual not the
projection upwards of the Natural; but the Natural the projection
downwards of the Spiritual.
"This method turns aside from hypotheses not to be tested by any known
logical canon familiar to science, whether the hypothesis claims support
from intuition, aspiration or general plausibility. And, again, this
method turns aside from ideal standards which avow themselves to be
lawless, which profess to transcend the field of law. We say, life and
conduct will stand for us wholly on a basis of law, and must rest entirely
in that region of science (not physical, but moral and social science),
where we are free to use our intelligence in the methods known to us as
intelligible logic, methods which the intellect can analyse. When you
confront us with hypotheses, however sublime and however affecting, if
they cannot be stated in terms of the rest of our knowledge, if they are
disparate to that world of sequence and sensation which to us is the
ultimate base of all our real knowledge, then we shake our heads and turn
aside."
FREDERICK HARRISON.
"Ethical science is already for ever completed, so far as her general
outline and main principles are concerned, and has been, as it were,
waiting for physical science to come up with her."—Paradoxical Philosophy.
I
NATURAL Law is a new word. It is the last and the most magnificent
discovery of science. No more telling proof is open to the modern world of
the greatness of the idea than the greatness of the attempts which have
always been made to justify it. In the earlier centuries, before the birth
of science, Phenomena were studied alone. The world then was a chaos, a
collection of single, isolated, and independent facts. Deeper thinkers
saw, indeed, that relations must subsist between these facts, but the
Reign of Law was never more to the ancients than a far-off vision. Their
philosophies, conspicuously those of the Stoics and Pythagoreans,
heroically sought to marshal the discrete materials of the universe into
thinkable form, but from these artificial and fantastic systems nothing
remains to us now but an ancient testimony to the grandeur of that harmony
which they failed to reach.
With Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler the first regular lines of the
universe began to be discerned. When Nature yielded to Newton her great
secret, Gravitation was felt to be not greater as a fact in itself than as
a revelation that Law was fact. And thenceforth the search for individual
Phenomena gave way before the larger study of their relations. The pursuit
of Law became the passion of science.
What that discovery of Law has done for Nature, it is impossible to
estimate. As a mere spectacle the universe to-day discloses a beauty so
transcendent that he who disciplines himself by scientific work finds it
an overwhelming reward simply to behold it. In these Laws one stands face
to face with truth, solid and unchangeable. Each single Law is an
instrument of scientific research, simple in its adjustments, universal in
its application, infallible in its results. And despite the limitations of
its sphere on every side Law is still the largest,
richest, and surest source of human knowledge.
It is not necessary for the present to more than lightly touch on
definitions of Natural Law. The Duke of Argyll[3]
indicates five senses in which the word is used, but we may content
ourselves here by taking it in its most simple and obvious significance.
The fundamental conception of Law is an ascertained working sequence or
constant order among the Phenomena of Nature. This impression of Law as
order it is important to receive in its simplicity, for the idea is often
corrupted by having attached to it erroneous views of cause and effect. In
its true sense Natural Law predicates nothing of causes. The Laws of
Nature are simply statements of the orderly condition of things in Nature,
what is found in Nature by a sufficient number of competent observers.
What these Laws are in themselves is not agreed. That they have any
absolute existence even is far from certain. They are relative to man in
his many limitations, and represent for him the constant expression of
what he may always expect to find in the world around him. But that they
have any causal connection with the things around him is not to be
conceived. The Natural Laws originate nothing, sustain nothing; they are
merely responsible for uniformity in sustaining what has been originated
and what is being sustained. They are modes of operation, therefore, not
operators; processes, not powers. The Law of Gravitation, for instance,
speaks to science only of process. It has no light to offer as to itself.
Newton did not discover Gravity—that is not discovered yet. He discovered
its Law, which is Gravitation, but that tells us nothing of its origin, of
its nature, or of its cause.
The Natural Laws then are great lines running not only through the
world, but, as we now know, through the universe, reducing it like
parallels of latitude to intelligent order. In themselves, be it once more
repeated, they may have no more absolute existence than parallels of
latitude. But they exist for us. They are drawn for us to understand the
part by some Hand that drew the whole; so drawn, perhaps, that,
understanding the part, we too in time may learn to understand the whole.
Now the inquiry we propose to ourselves resolves itself into the simple
question, Do these lines stop with what we call the Natural sphere? Is it
not possible that they may lead further? Is it probable that the Hand
which ruled them gave up the work where most of all they were required?
Did that Hand divide the world into two, a cosmos and a chaos, the higher
being the chaos? With Nature as the symbol of all of harmony and beauty
that is known to man, must we still talk of the super-natural, not as a
convenient word, but as a different order of world, an unintelligible
world, where the Reign of Mystery supersedes the Reign of Law?
This question, let it be carefully observed, applies to Laws not to
Phenomena. That the Phenomena of the Spiritual World are in analogy with
the Phenomena of the Natural World requires no restatement. Since Plato
enunciated his doctrine of the Cave or of the twice-divided line; since
Christ spake in parables; since Plotinus wrote of the world as an imaged
image; since the mysticism of Swedenborg; since Bacon and Pascal; since "Sartor
Resartus" and "In Memoriam," it has been all but a commonplace with
thinkers that " the invisible things of God from the creation of the world
are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made." Milton's
question—
Be but the shadow of heaven, and things therein
Each to other like more than on earth is thought? "
is now superfluous. "In our doctrine of representations and
correspondences," says Swedenborg, " we shall treat of both these
symbolical and typical resemblances, and of the astonishing things that
occur, I will not say in the living body only, but throughout Nature, and
which correspond so entirely to supreme and spiritual things, that one
would swear that the physical world was purely symbolical of the spiritual
world.[4]" And Carlyle: " All visible things are
emblems. What thou seest is not there on its own account; strictly
speaking is not there at all. Matter exists only spiritually, and to
represent some idea and body it forth."[5]
But the analogies of Law are a totally different thing from the
analogies of Phenomena and have a very different value. To say generally,
with Pascal, that "La nature est une image de la grace," is merely to be
poetical. The function of Hervey's "Meditations in a Flower Garden," or,
Flavel's "Husbandry Spiritualized," is mainly homiletical. That such works
have an interest is not to be denied. The place of parable in teaching,
and especially after the sanction of the greatest of Teachers, must always
be recognised. The very necessities of language indeed demand this method
of presenting truth. The temporal is the husk and framework of the
eternal, and thoughts can be uttered only through things.[6]
But analogies between Phenomena bear the same relation to analogies of
Law that Phenomena themselves bear to Law. The light of Law on truth, as
we have seen, is an immense advance upon the light of Phenomena. The
discovery of Law is simply the discovery of Science. And if the analogies
of Natural Law can be extended to the Spiritual World, that whole region
at once falls within the domain of science and secures a basis as well as
an illumination in the constitution and course of Nature. All, therefore,
that has been claimed for parable can be predicated a fortiori of
this—with the addition that a proof on the basis of Law would want no
criterion possessed by the most advanced science.
That the validity of analogy generally has been seriously questioned
one must frankly own. Doubtless there is much difficulty and even
liability to gross error in attempting to establish analogy in specific
cases. The value of the likeness appears differently to different minds,
and in discussing an individual instance questions of relevancy will
invariably crop up. Of course, in the language of John Stuart Mill, "when
the analogy can be proved, the argument founded upon it cannot be
resisted."[7] But so great is the difficulty of proof
that many are compelled to attach the most inferior weight to analogy as a
method of reasoning." Analogical evidence is generally more successful in
silencing objections than in evincing truth. Though it rarely refutes it
frequently repels refutation; like those weapons which though they cannot
kill the enemy, will ward his blows. . . . It must be allowed that
analogical evidence is at least but a feeble support, and is hardly ever
honoured with the name of proof."[8] Other authorities
on the other hand, such as Sir William Hamilton, admit analogy to a
primary place in logic and regard it as the very basis of induction.
But, fortunately, we are spared all discussion on this worn subject,
for two cogent reasons. For one thing, we do not demand of Nature directly
to prove Religion. That was never its function. Its function is to
interpret. And this, after all, is possibly the most fruitful proof. The
best proof of a thing is that we see it; if we do not see it, perhaps
proof will not convince us of it. It is the want of the discerning
faculty, the clairvoyant power of seeing the eternal in the temporal,
rather than the failure of the reason, that begets the sceptic. But
secondly, and more particularly, a significant circumstance has to be
taken into account, which, though it will appear more clearly afterwards,
may be stated here at once. The position we have been led to take up is
not that the Spiritual Laws are analogous to the Natural Laws, but that,
they are the same Laws. It is not a question of analogy but of Identity.
The Natural Laws are not the shadows or images of the Spiritual in the
same sense as autumn is emblematical of Decay, or the falling leaf of
Death. The Natural Laws, as the Law of Continuity might well warn us, do
not stop with the visible and then give place to a new set of Laws bearing
a strong similitude to them. The Laws of the invisible are the same Laws,
projections of the natural not supernatural. Analogous Phenomena are not
the fruit of parallel Laws, but of the same Laws—Laws which at one end, as
it were, may be dealing with Matter, at the other end with Spirit. As
there will be some inconvenience, however, in dispensing with the word
analogy, we shall continue occasionally to employ it. Those who apprehend
the real relation will mentally substitute the larger term.
Let us now look for a moment at the present state of the question. Can
it be said that the Laws of the Spiritual World are in any sense
considered even to have analogies with the Natural World? Here and there
certainly one finds an attempt, and a successful attempt, to exhibit on a
rational basis one or two of the great Moral Principles of the Spiritual
World. But the Physical World has not been appealed to. Its magnificent
system of Laws remains outside, and its contribution meanwhile is either
silently ignored or purposely set aside. The Physical, it is said, is too
remote from the Spiritual. The Moral World may afford a basis for
religious truth, but even this is often the baldest concession; while the
appeal to the Physical universe is everywhere dismissed as, on the face of
it, irrelevant and unfruitful. From the scientific side, again, nothing
has been done to court a closer fellowship. Science has taken theology at
its own estimate. It is a thing apart. The Spiritual World is not only a
different world, but a different kind of world, a world arranged on a
totally different principle, under a different governmental scheme.
The Reign of Law has gradually crept into every department of Nature,
transforming knowledge everywhere into Science. The process goes on, and
Nature slowly appears to us as one great unity, until the borders of the
Spiritual World are reached. There the Law of Continuity ceases, and the
harmony breaks down. And men who have learned their elementary lessons
truly from the alphabet of the lower Laws, going on to seek a higher
knowledge, are suddenly confronted with the Great Exception.
Even those who have examined most carefully the relations of the
Natural and the Spiritual, seem to have committed themselves deliberately
to a final separation in matters of Law. It is a surprise to find such a
writer as Horace Bushnell, for instance, describing the Spiritual World as
"another system of nature incommunicably separate from ours," and further
defining it thus: "God has, in fact, erected another and higher system,
that of spiritual being and government for which nature exists; a system
not under the law of cause and effect, but ruled and marshalled under
other kinds of laws."[9] Few men have shown more
insight than Bushnell in illustrating Spiritual truth from the Natural
World; but he has not only failed to perceive the analogy with regard to
Law, but emphatically denies it.
In the recent literature of this whole region there nowhere seems any
advance upon the position of "Nature and the Supernatural." All are agreed
in speaking of Nature and the Supernatural. Nature in the Supernatural, so
far as Laws are concerned, is still an unknown truth.
"The Scientific Basis of Faith" is a suggestive title. The accomplished
author announces that the object of his investigation is to show that "the
world of nature and mind, as made known by science, constitute a basis and
a preparation for that highest moral and spiritual life of man, which is
evoked by the self-revelation of God."[10] On the
whole, Mr. Murphy seems to be more philosophical and more profound in his
view of the relation of science and religion than any writer of modern
times. His conception of religion is broad and lofty, his acquaintance
with science adequate. He makes constant, admirable, and often original
use of analogy; and yet, in spite of the promise of this
quotation, he has failed to find any analogy in that department of Law
where surely, of all others, it might most reasonably be looked for. In
the broad subject even of the analogies of what he defines as "evangelical
religion" with Nature, Mr. Murphy discovers nothing. Nor can this be
traced either to short-sight or over-sight. The subject occurs to him more
than once, and he deliberately dismisses it—dismisses it not merely as
unfruitful, but with a distinct denial of its relevancy. The memorable
paragraph from Origen which forms the text of Butler's "Analogy," he calls
"this shallow and false saying"[11] He says: "The
designation of Butler's scheme of religious philosophy ought then to be
the analogy of religion, legal and evangelical, to the constitution of
nature. But does this give altogether a true meaning? Does this double
analogy really exist? If justice is natural law among beings having a
moral nature, there is the closest analogy between the constitution of
nature and merely legal religion. Legal religion is only the extension of
natural justice into a future life. . . . But is this true of evangelical
religion? Have the doctrines of Divine grace any similar support in the
analogies of nature? I trow not."[12] And with
reference to a specific question, speaking of immortality, he asserts that
"the analogies of mere nature are opposed to the doctrine of immortality."[13]
With regard to Butler's great work in this department, it is needless
at this time of day to point out that his aims did not lie exactly in this
direction. He did not seek to indicate analogies between
religion and the constitution and course of Nature. His theme was, "The
Analogy of Religion to the constitution and course of Nature." And
although he pointed out direct analogies of Phenomena, such as those
between the metamorphoses of insects and the doctrine of a future state;
and although he showed that "the natural and moral constitution and
government of the world are so connected as to make up together but one
scheme,"[14] his real intention was not so much to
construct arguments as to repel objections. His emphasis accordingly was
laid upon the difficulties of the two schemes rather than on their
positive lines; and so thoroughly has he made out his point, that as is
well known, the effect upon many has been, not to lead them to accept the
Spiritual World on the ground of the Natural, but to make them despair of
both. Butler lived at a time when defence was more necessary than
construction, when the materials for construction were scarce and
insecure, and when, besides. some of the things to be defended were quite
incapable of defence. Notwithstanding this, his influence over the whole
field since has been unparalleled.
After all, then, the Spiritual World, as it appears at this moment, is
outside Natural Law. Theology continues to be considered, as it has always
been, a thing apart. It remains still a stupendous and splendid
construction, but on lines altogether its own. Nor is Theology to be
blamed for this. Nature has been long in speaking; even yet its voice is
low, sometimes inaudible. Science is the true defaulter, for Theology had
to wait patiently for its development. As the highest of the sciences,
Theology in the order of evolution should be the last to fall into rank.
It is reserved for it to perfect the final harmony. Still, if it continues
longer to remain a thing apart, with increasing reason will be such
protests as this of the "Unseen Universe," when, in speaking of a view of
miracles held by an older Theology, it declares:—"If he submits to be
guided by such interpreters, each intelligent being will for ever continue
to be baffled in any attempt to explain these phenomena, because they are
said to have no physical relation to anything that went before or that
followed after; in fine, they are made to form a universe within a
universe, a portion cut off by an insurmountable barrier from the domain
of scientific inquiry."[15]
This is the secret of the present decadence of Religion in the world of
Science. For Science can hear nothing of a Great Exception. Constructions
on unique lines, "portions cut off by an insurmountable barrier from the
domain of scientific inquiry," it dare not recognise. Nature has taught it
this lesson, and Nature is right. It is the province of Science to
vindicate Nature here at any hazard. But in blaming Theology for its
intolerance, it has been betrayed into an intolerance less excusable. It
has pronounced upon it too soon. What if Religion be yet brought within
the sphere of Law? Law is the revelation of time. One by one slowly
through the centuries the Sciences have crystallized into geometrical
form, each form not only perfect in itself, but perfect in its relation to
all other forms. Many forms had to be perfected before the form of the
Spiritual. The Inorganic has to be worked out before the Organic, the
Natural before the Spiritual. Theology at present has merely an ancient
and provisional philosophic form. By-and-by it will be seen whether it be
not susceptible of another. For Theology must pass through the necessary
stages of progress, like any other science. The method of science-making
is now fully established. In almost all cases the natural history and
development are the same. Take, for example, the case of Geology. A
century ago there was none. Science went out to look for it, and brought
back a Geology which, if Nature were a harmony, had falsehood written
almost on its face. It was the Geology of Catastrophism, a Geology so out
of line with Nature as revealed by the other sciences, that on a priori
grounds a thoughtful mind might have been justified in dismissing it as a
final form of any science. And its fallacy was soon and thoroughly
exposed. The advent of modified uniformitarian principles all but banished
the word catastrophe from science, and marked the birth of Geology as we
know it now. Geology, that is to say, had fallen at last into the great
scheme of Law. Religious doctrines, many of them at least, have been up to
this time all but as catastrophic as the old Geology. They are not on the
lines of Nature as we have learned to decipher her. If any one feel, as
Science complains that it feels, that the lie of things in the Spiritual
World as arranged by Theology is not in harmony with the world around, is
not, in short, scientific, he is entitled to raise the question whether
this be really the final form of those departments of Theology to which
his complaint refers, He is justified, moreover, in demanding a new
investigation with all modern methods and resources; and Science is bound
by its principles not less than by the lessons of its own past, to
suspend. judgment till the last attempt is made. The success of such an
attempt will be looked forward to with hopefulness or fearfulness just in
proportion to one's confidence in Nature —in proportion to one's belief in
the divinity of man and in the divinity of things. If there is any truth
in the unity of Nature, in that supreme principle of Continuity which is
growing in splendour with every discovery of science, the conclusion is
foregone. If there is any foundation for Theology, if the phenomena of the
Spiritual World are real, in the nature of things they ought to come into
the sphere of Law. Such is at once the demand of Science upon Religion and
the prophecy that it can and shall be fulfilled.
The Botany of Linnaeus, a purely artificial system, was a splendid
contribution to human knowledge, and did more in its day to enlarge the
view of the vegetable kingdom than all that had gone before. But all
artificial systems must pass away. None knew better than the great Swedish
naturalist himself that his system, being artificial, was but provisional.
Nature must be read in its own light. And as the botanical field became
more luminous, the system of Jussieu and De Candolle slowly emerged as a
native growth, unfolded itself as naturally as the petals of one of its
own flowers, and forcing itself upon men's intelligence as the very voice
of Nature, banished the Linnaean system for ever. It were unjust to say
that the present Theology is as artificial as the system of Linnaeus; in
many particulars it wants but a fresh expression to make it in the most
modern sense scientific. But if it has a basis in the constitution and
course of Nature, that basis has never been adequately shown. It has
depended on Authority rather than on Law; and a new basis must be sought
and found if it is to be presented to those with whom Law alone is
Authority.
It is not of course to be inferred that the scientific method will ever
abolish the radical distinctions of the Spiritual World. True science
proposes to itself no such general levelling in any department. Within the
unity of the whole there must always be room for the characteristic
differences of the parts, and those tendencies of thought at the present
time which ignore such distinctions, in their zeal for simplicity really
create confusion. As has been well said by Mr. Hutton: "Any attempt to
merge the distinctive characteristic of a higher science in a lower—of
chemical changes in mechanical—of physiological in chemical—above all, of
mental changes in physiological—is a neglect of the radical assumption of
all science, because it is an attempt to deduce representations—or rather
misrepresentations—of one kind of phenomenon from a conception of another
kind which does not contain it, and must have it implicitly and illicitly
smuggled in before it can be extracted out of it. Hence, instead of
increasing our means of representing the universe to ourselves without the
detailed examination of particulars, such a procedure leads to
misconstructions of fact on the basis of an imported theory, and generally
ends in forcibly perverting the least-known science to the type of the
better known."[16]
What is wanted is simply a unity of conception, but not such a unity of
conception as should be founded on an absolute identity of phenomena. This
latter might indeed be a unity, but it would be a very tame one The
perfection of unity is attained where there is infinite variety of
phenomena, infinite complexity of relation, but great simplicity of Law.
Science will be complete when all known phenomena can be arranged in one
vast circle in which a few well known Laws shall form the radii— these
radii at once separating and uniting, separating into particular groups,
yet uniting all to a common centre. To show that the radii for some of the
most characteristic phenomena of the Spiritual World are already drawn
within that circle by science is the main object of the papers which
follow. There will be found an attempt to re-state a few of the more
elementary facts of the Spiritual Life in terms of Biology. Any argument
for Natural Law in the Spiritual World may be best tested in the a
posteriori form. And although the succeeding pages are not designed in the
first instance to prove a principle, they may yet be entered here as
evidence. The practical test is a severe one, but on that account all the
more satisfactory.
And what will be gained if the point be made out? Not a few things. For
one, as partly indicated already, the scientific demand of the age will be
satisfied. That demand is that all that concerns life and conduct shall be
placed on a scientific basis. The only great attempt to meet that at
present is Positivism.
But what again is a scientific basis? What exactly is this demand of
the age? " By Science I understand," says Huxley, "all knowledge which
rests upon evidence and reasoning of a like character to that which claims
our assent to ordinary scientific propositions; and if any one is able to
make good the assertion that his theology rests upon valid evidence and
sound reasoning, then it appears to me that such theology must take its
place as a part of science." That the assertion has been already made good
is claimed by many who deserve to be heard on questions of scientific
evidence. But if more is wanted by some minds, more not perhaps of a
higher kind but of a different kind, at least the attempt can be made to
gratify them. Mr. Frederic Harrison,[17] in name of
the Positive method of thought, "turns aside from
ideal standards which avow themselves to be lawless [the italics are Mr.
Harrison's], which profess to transcend the field of law. We say, life and
conduct shall stand for us wholly on a basis of law, and must rest
entirely in that region of science (not physical, but moral and social
science) where we are free to use our intelligence, in the methods known
to us as intelligible logic, methods which the intellect can analyse. When
you confront us with hypotheses, however sublime and however affecting, if
they cannot be stated in terms of the rest of our knowledge, if they are
disparate to that world of sequence and sensation which to us is the
ultimate base of all our real knowledge, then we shake our heads and turn
aside." This is a most reasonable demand, and we humbly accept the
challenge. We think religious truth, or at all events certain of the
largest facts of the Spiritual Life, can be stated "in terms of the rest
of our knowledge."
We do not say, as already hinted, that the proposal includes an attempt
to prove the existence of the Spiritual World. Does that need proof? And
if so, what sort of evidence would be considered in court? The facts of
the Spiritual World are as real to thousands as the facts of the Natural
World— and more real to hundreds. But were one asked to prove that the
Spiritual World can be discerned by the appropriate faculties, one would
do it precisely as one would attempt to prove the Natural World to be an
object of recognition to the senses—and with as much or as little success.
In either instance probably the fact would be found incapable of
demonstration, but not more in the one case than in the other. Were one
asked to prove the existence of Spiritual Life, one would also do it
exactly as one would seek to prove Natural Life. And this perhaps might be
attempted with more hope. But this is not on the immediate programme.
Science deals with known facts; and accepting certain known facts in the
Spiritual World we proceed to arrange them, to discover their Laws, to
inquire if they can be stated "in terms of the rest of our knowledge."
At the same time, although attempting no philosophical proof of the
existence of a Spiritual Life and a Spiritual World, we are not without
hope that the general line of thought here may be useful to some who are
honestly inquiring in these directions. The stumbling-block to most minds
is perhaps less the mere existence of the unseen than the want of
definition, the apparently hopeless vagueness, and not least, the delight
in this vagueness as mere vagueness by some who look upon this as the mark
of quality in Spiritual things. It will be at least something to tell
earnest seekers that the Spiritual World is not a castle in the air, of an
architecture unknown to earth or heaven, but a fair ordered realm
furnished with many familiar things and ruled by well-remembered Laws.
It is scarcely necessary to emphasise under a second head the gain in
clearness. The Spiritual World as it stands is full of perplexity. One can
escape doubt only by escaping thought. With regard to many important
articles of religion perhaps the best and the worst course at present open
to a doubter is simple credulity. Who is to answer for this state of
things? It comes as a necessary tax for improvement on the age in which we
live. The old ground of faith, Authority, is given up; the new, Science,
has not yet taken its place. Men did not require to see truth before; they
only needed to believe it. Truth, therefore, had not been put by Theology
in a seeing form—which, however, was its original form. But now they ask
to see it. And when it is shown them they start back in despair. We shall
not say what they see. But we shall say what they might see. If the
Natural Laws were run through the Spiritual World, they might see the
great lines of religious truth as clearly and simply as the broad lines of
science. As they gazed into that Natural-Spiritual World they would say to
themselves, "We have seen something like this before. This order is known
to us. It is not arbitrary. This Law here is that old Law there, and this
Phenomenon here, what can it be but that which stood in precisely the same
relation to that Law yonder?" And so gradually from the new form
everything assumes new meaning. So the Spiritual World becomes slowly
Natural; and, what is of all but equal moment, the Natural World becomes
slowly Spiritual. Nature is not a mere image or emblem of the Spiritual.
It is a working model of the Spiritual. In the Spiritual World the same
wheels revolve—but without the iron. The same figures flit across the
stage, the same processes of growth go on, the same functions are
discharged, the same biological laws prevail—only with a different quality
of Bios. Plato's prisoner, if not out of the Cave, has at least his face
to the light.
"The earth is cram'd with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God."
How much of the Spiritual World is covered by Natural law we do not
propose at present to inquire. It is certain, at least, that the whole is
not covered. And nothing more lends confidence to the method than this.
For one thing, room is still left for mystery. Had no place remained for
mystery it had proved itself both unscientific and irreligious. A Science
without mystery is unknown; a Religion without mystery is absurd. This is
no attempt to reduce Religion to a question of mathematics, or demonstrate
God in biological formulae. The elimination of mystery from the universe
is the elimination of Religion. However far the scientific method may
penetrate the Spiritual World, there will always remain a region to be
explored by a scientific faith. "I shall never rise to the point of view
which wishes to `raise ` faith to knowledge. To me, the way of truth is to
come through the knowledge of my ignorance to the submissiveness of faith,
and then, making that my starting place, to raise my knowledge into
faith."[18]
Lest this proclamation of mystery should seem alarming, let us add that
this mystery also is scientific. The one subject on which all scientific
men are agreed the one theme on which all alike become eloquent, the one
strain of pathos in all their writing and speaking and thinking, concerns
that final uncertainty, that utter blackness of darkness bounding their
work on every side. If the light of Nature is to illuminate for us the
Spiritual Sphere, there may well be a black Unknown, corresponding, at
least at some points, to this zone of darkness round the Natural World.
But the final gain would appear in the department of Theology. The
establishment of the Spiritual Laws on "the solid ground of Nature," to
which the mind trusts "which builds for aye," would offer a new basis for
certainty in Religion. It has been indicated that the authority of
Authority is waning This is a plain fact. And it was inevitable.
Authority—man's Authority, that is—is for children. And there necessarily
comes a time when they add to the question, What shall I do? or, What
shall I believe? the adult's interrogation—Why? Now this question is
sacred, and must be answered.
"How truly its central position is impregnable," Herbert Spencer has
well discerned, "religion has never adequately realized. In the devoutest
faith, as we habitually see it, there lies hidden an innermost core of
scepticism; and it is this scepticism which causes that dread of inquiry
displayed by religion when face to face with science."[19]
True indeed; Religion has never realized how impregnable
are many of its positions. It has not yet been placed on that basis which
would make them impregnable. And in a transition period like the present,
holding Authority with one hand, the other feeling all around in the
darkness for some strong new support, Theology is surely to be pitied.
Whence this dread when brought face to face with Science? It cannot be
dread of scientific fact. No single fact in Science has ever discredited a
fact in Religion. The theologian knows that, and admits that he has no
fear of facts. What then has Science done to make Theology tremble? It is
its method. It is its system. It is its Reign of Law. It is its harmony
and continuity. The attack is not specific. No one point is assailed. It
is the whole system which when compared with the other and weighed in its
balance is found wanting. An eye which has looked at the first cannot look
upon this. To do that, and rest in the contemplation, it has just to
uncentury itself.
Herbert Spencer points out further, with how much truth need not now be
discussed, that the purificatlon of Religion has always come from Science.
It is very apparent at all events that an immense debt must soon be
contracted The shifting of the furnishings will be a work of time. But it
must be accomplished. And not the least result of the process will be the
effect upon Science itself. No department of knowledge ever contributes to
another without receiving its own again with usury —witness the reciprocal
favours of Biology and Sociology. From the time that Comte defined the
analogy between the phenomena exhibited by aggregations of associated men
and those of animal colonies, the Science of Life and the Science of
Society have been so contributing to one another that their progress since
has been all but hand-in-hand. A conception borrowed by the one has been
observed in time finding its way back, and always in an enlarged form, to
further illuminate and enrich the field it left. So must it be with
Science and Religion. If the purification of Religion comes from Science,
the purification of Science, in a deeper sense, shall come from Religion.
The true ministry of Nature must at last be honoured, and Science take its
place as the great expositor. To Men of Science, not less than to
Theologians,
"Science then
Shall be a precious visitant; and then,
And only then, be worthy of her name:
For then her heart shall kindle, her dull eye,
Dull and inanimate, no more shall hang
Chained to its object in brute slavery;
But taught with patient interest to watch
The process of things, and serve the cause
Of order and distinctness, not for this
Shall it forget that its most noble use,
Its most illustrious province, must be found
In furnishing clear guidance, a support,
Not treacherous, to the mind's excursive power."[20]
But the gift of Science to Theology shall be not less rich. With the
inspiration of Nature to illuminate what the inspiration of Revelation has
left obscure, heresy in certain whole departments shall become impossible.
With the demonstration of the naturalness of the supernatural, scepticism
even may come to be regarded as unscientific. And those who have wrestled
long for a few bare truths to ennoble life and rest their souls in
thinking of the future will not be left in doubt.
It is impossible to believe that the amazing succession of revelations
in the domain of Nature during the last few centuries, at which the world
has all but grown tired wondering, are to yield nothing for the higher
life. If the development of doctrine is to have any meaning for the
future, Theology must draw upon the further revelation of the seen for the
further revelation of the unseen. It need, and can, add nothing to fact;
but as the vision of Newton rested on a clearer and richer world than that
of Plato, so, though seeing the same things in the Spiritual World as our
fathers, we may see them clearer and richer. With the work of the
centuries upon it, the mental eye is a finer instrument, and demands a
more ordered world. Had the revelation of Law been given sooner, it had
been unintelligible. Revelation never volunteers anything that man could
discover for himself—on the principle, probably, that it is only when he
is capable of discovering it that he is capable of appreciating it.
Besides, children do not need Laws, except Laws in the sense of
commandments. They repose with simplicity on authority, and ask no
questions. But there comes a time, as the world reaches its manhood, when
they will ask questions, and stake, moreover, everything on the answers.
That time is now. Hence we must exhibit our doctrines, not lying athwart
the lines of the world's thinking, in a place reserved, and therefore
shunned, for the Great Exception; but in their kinship to all truth and in
their Law-relation to the whole of Nature. This is, indeed, simply
following out the system of teaching begun by Christ Himself. And what is
the search for spiritual truth in the Laws of Nature but an attempt to
utter the parables which have been hid so long in the world around without
a preacher, and to tell men once more that the Kingdom of Heaven is like
unto this and to that?
PART II.
THE Law of Continuity having been referred to already as a prominent
factor in this inquiry, it may not be out of place to sustain the plea for
Natural Law in the Spiritual Sphere by a brief statement and application
of this great principle. The Law of Continuity furnishes an a priori
argument for the position we are attempting to establish of the most
convincing kind—of such a kind, indeed, as to seem to our mind final.
Briefly indicated, the ground taken up is this, that if Nature be a
harmony, Man in all his relations—physical, mental, moral, and
spiritual—falls to be included within its circle. It is altogether
unlikely that man spiritual should be violently separated in all the
conditions of growth, development, and life, from man physical. It is
indeed difficult to conceive that one set of principles should guide the
natural life, and these at a certain period— the very point where they are
needed—suddenly give place to another set of principles altogether new and
unrelated. Nature has never taught us to expect such a catastrophe. She
has nowhere prepared us for it. And Man cannot in the nature of things, in
the nature of thought, in the nature of language, be separated into two
such incoherent halves.
The spiritual man, it is true, is to be studied in a different
department of science from the natural man. But the harmony established by
science is not a harmony within specific departments. It is the universe
that is the harmony, the universe of which these are but parts. And the
harmonies of the parts depend for all their weight and interest on the
harmony of the whole. While, therefore, there are many harmonies, there is
but one harmony. The breaking up of the phenomena of the universe into
carefully guarded groups, and the allocation of certain prominent Laws to
each, it must never be forgotten, and however much Nature lends herself to
it, are artificial. We find an evolution in Botany, another in Geology,
and another in Astronomy, and the effect is to lead one insensibly to look
upon these as three distinct evolutions. But these sciences, of course,
are mere departments created by ourselves to facilitate
knowledge—reductions of Nature to the scale of our own intelligence. And
we must beware of breaking up Nature except for this purpose. Science has
so dissected everything, that it becomes a mental difficulty to put the
puzzle together again; and we must keep ourselves in practice by
constantly thinking of Nature as a whole, if science is not to be spoiled
by its own refinements. Evolution being found in so many different
sciences, the likelihood is that it is a universal principle. And there is
no presumption whatever against this Law and many others being excluded
from the domain of the spiritual life. On the other hand, there are very
convincing reasons why the Natural Laws should be continuous through the
Spiritual Sphere—not changed in any way to meet the new circumstances, but
continuous as they stand.
But to the exposition. One of the most striking generalisations of
recent science is that even Laws have their Law. Phenomena first, in the
progress of knowledge, were grouped together, and Nature shortly presented
the spectacle of a cosmos, the lines of beauty being the great Natural
Laws. So long, however, as these Laws were merely great lines running
through Nature, so long as they remained isolated from one another, the
system of Nature was still incomplete. The principle which sought Law
among phenomena had to go further and seek a Law among the Laws. Laws
themselves accordingly came to be treated as they treated phenomena, and
found themselves finally grouped in a still narrower circle. That inmost
circle is governed by one great Law, the Law of Continuity. It is the Law
for Laws.
It is perhaps significant that few exact definitions of Continuity are
to be found. Even in Sir W. R. Grove's famous paper,[21]
the fountain-head of the modern form of this far from modern truth,
there is no attempt at definition. In point of fact, its sweep is so
magnificent, it appeals so much more to the imagination than to the
reason, that men have preferred to exhibit rather than to define it. Its
true greatness consists in the final impression it leaves on the mind with
regard to the uniformity of Nature. For it was reserved for the Law of
Continuity to put the finishing touch to the harmony of the universe.
Probably the most satisfactory way to secure for oneself a just
appreciation of the Principle of Continuity is to try to conceive the
universe without it. The opposite of a continuous universe would be a
discontinuous universe, an incoherent and irrelevant universe—as
irrelevant in all its ways of doing things as an irrelevant person. In
effect, to withdraw Continuity from the universe would be the same as to
withdraw reason from an individual. The universe would run deranged; the
world would be a mad world.
There used to be a children's book which bore the fascinating title of
"The Chance World." It described a world in which everything happened by
chance. The sun might rise or it might not; or it might appear at any
hour, or the moon might come up instead. When children were born they
might have one head or a dozen heads, and those heads might not be on
their shoulders—there might be no shoulders—but arranged about the limbs.
If one jumped up in the air it was impossible to predict whether he would
ever come down again. That he came down yesterday was no guarantee that he
would do it next time. For every day antecedent and consequent varied, and
gravitation and everything else changed from hour to hour. To-day a
child's body might be so light that it was impossible for it to descend
from its chair to the floor; but tomorrow, in attempting the experiment
again, the impetus might drive it through a three-storey house and dash it
to pieces somewhere near the centre of the earth. In this chance world
cause and effect were abolished. Law was annihilated. And the result to
the inhabitants of such a world could only be that reason would be
impossible. It would be a lunatic world with a population of lunatics.
Now this is no more than a real picture of what the world would be
without Law, or the universe without Continuity. And hence we come in
sight of the necessity of some principle or Law according to which Laws
shall be, and be "continuous" throughout the system. Man as a rational and
moral being demands a pledge that if he depends on Nature for any given
result on the ground that Nature has previously led him to expect such a
result, his intellect shall not be insulted, nor his confidence in her
abused. If he is to trust Nature, in short, it must be guaranteed to him
that in doing so he will "never be put to confusion." The authors of the
Unseen Universe conclude their examination of this principle by saying
that "assuming the existence of a supreme Governor of the universe, the
Principle of Continuity may be said to be the definite expression in words
of our trust that He will not put us to permanent intellectual confusion,
and we can easily conceive similar expressions of trust with
reference to the other faculties of man."[22]
Or, as it has been well put elsewhere, Continuity is the expression of
"the Divine Veracity in Nature."[23] The most striking
examples of the continuousness of Law are perhaps those furnished by
Astronomy, especially in connection with the more recent applications of
spectrum analysis. But even in the case of the simpler Laws the
demonstration is complete. There is no reason apart from Continuity to
expect that gravitation for instance should prevail outside our world. But
wherever matter has been detected throughout the entire universe, whether
in the form of star or planet, comet or meteorite, it is found to obey
that Law. "If there were no other indication of unity than this, it would
be almost enough. For the unity which is implied in the mechanism of the
heavens is indeed a unity which is all-embracing and complete. The
structure of our own bodies, with all that depends upon it, is a structure
governed by, and therefore adapted to, the same force of gravitation which
has determined the form and the movements of myriads of worlds. Every part
of the human organism is fitted to conditions which would all be destroyed
in a moment if the forces of gravitation were to change or fail."[24]
But it is unnecessary to multiply illustrations. Having defined the
principle we may proceed at once to apply it. And the argument may be
summed up in a sentence. As the Natural Laws are continuous through the
universe of matter and of space, so will they be continuous through the
universe of spirit.
If this be denied, what then? Those who deny it must furnish the
disproof. The argument is founded on a principle which is now acknowledged
to be universal; and the onus of disproof must lie with those who may be
bold enough to take up the position that a region exists where at last the
Principle of Continuity fails. To do this one would first have to overturn
Nature, then science, and last, the human mind.
It may seem an obvious objection that many of the Natural Laws have no
connection whatever with the Spiritual World, and as a matter of fact are
not continued through it. Gravitation for instance—what direct application
has that in the Spiritual World? The reply is threefold. First, there is
no proof that it does not hold there. If the spirit be in any sense
material it certainly must hold. In the second place, gravitation may hold
for the Spiritual Sphere although it cannot be directly proved. The spirit
may be armed with powers which enable it to rise superior to gravity.
During the action of these powers gravity need be no more suspended than
in the case of a plant which rises in the air during the process of
growth. It does this in virtue of a higher Law and in apparent defiance of
the lower. Thirdly, if the spiritual be not material it still cannot be
said that gravitation ceases at that point to be continuous. It is not
gravitation that ceases—it is matter.
This point, however, will require development for another reason. In
the case of the plant just referred to, there is a principle of growth or
vitality at work superseding the attraction of gravity. Why is there no
trace of that Law in the Inorganic world? Is not this another instance of
the discontinuousness of Law? If the Law of vitality has so little
connection with the Inorganic kingdom—less even than gravitation with the
Spiritual, what becomes of Continuity? Is it not evident that each kingdom
of Nature has its own set of Laws which continue possibly untouched for
the specific kingdom but never extend beyond it?
It is quite true that when we pass from the Inorganic to the Organic,
we come upon a new set of Laws. But the reason why the lower set do not
seem to act in the higher sphere is not that they are annihilated, but
that they are overruled. And the reason why the higher Laws are not found
operating in the lower is not because they are not continuous downwards,
but because there is nothing for them there to act upon. It is not Law
that fails, but opportunity. The biological Laws are continuous for life.
Wherever there is life, that is to say, they will be found acting, just as
gravitation acts wherever there is matter.
We have purposely, in the last paragraph, indulged in a fallacy. We
have said that the biological Laws would certainly be continuous in the
lower or mineral sphere were there anything there for them to act upon.
Now Laws do not act upon anything. It has been stated already, although
apparently it cannot be too abundantly emphasized, that Laws are only
codes of operation, not themselves operators. The accurate statement,
therefore, would be that the biological Laws would be continuous in the
lower sphere were there anything there for them, not to act upon, but to
keep in order. If there is no acting going on, if there is nothing being
kept in order, the responsibility does not lie with Continuity. The Law
will always be at its post, not only when its services are required, but
wherever they are possible.
Attention is drawn to this, for it is a correction one will find
oneself compelled often to make in his thinking. It is so difficult to
keep out of mind the idea of substance in connection with the Natural
Laws, the idea that they are the movers, the essences, the energies, that
one is constantly on the verge of falling into false conclusions. Thus a
hasty glance at the present argument on the part of any one ill-furnished
enough to confound Law with substance or with cause would probably lead to
its immediate rejection.
For, to continue the same line of illustration, it might next be urged
that such a Law as Biogenesis, which, as we hope to show afterwards, is
the fundamental Law of life for both the natural and spiritual worlds, can
have no application whatsoever in the latter sphere. The life with which
it deals in the Natural World does not enter at all into the Spiritual
World, and therefore, it might be argued, the Law of Biogenesis cannot be
capable of extension into it. The Law of Continuity seems to be snapped at
the point where the natural passes into the spiritual. The vital principle
of the body is a different thing from the vital principle of the spiritual
life. Biogenesis deals with Bios, with the natural life, with cells and
germs, and as there are no exactly similar cells and germs in the
Spiritual World, the Law cannot therefore apply. All which is as true as
if one were to say that the fifth proposition of the First Book of Euclid
applies when the figures are drawn with chalk upon a blackboard, but fails
with regard to structures of wood or stone.
The proposition is continuous for the whole world, and, doubtless,
likewise for the sun and moon and stars. The same universality may be
predicated likewise for the Law of life. Wherever there is life we may
expect to find it arranged, ordered, governed according to the same Law.
At the beginning of the natural life we find the Law that natural life can
only come from pre-existing natural life; and at the beginning of the
spiritual life we find that the spiritual life can only come from
pre-existing spiritual life. But there are not two Laws; there is
one—Biogenesis. At one end the Law is dealing with matter, at the other
with spirit. The qualitative terms natural and spiritual make no
difference. Biogenesis is the Law for all life and for all kinds of life,
and the particular substance with which it is associated is as indifferent
to Biogenesis as it is to Gravitation. Gravitation will act whether the
substance be suns and stars, or grains of sand, or raindrops. Biogenesis,
in like manner, will act wherever there is life.
The conclusion finally is, that from the nature of Law in general, and
from the scope of the Principle of Continuity in particular, the Laws of
the natural life must be those of the spiritual life. This does not
exclude, observe, the possibility of there being new Laws in addition
within the Spiritual Sphere; nor does it even include the supposition that
the old Laws will be the conspicuous Laws of the Spiritual World, both
which points will be dealt with presently. It simply asserts that whatever
else may be found, these must be found there; that they must be there
though they may not be seen there, and that they must project beyond there
if there be anything beyond there. If the Law of Continuity is true, the
only way to escape the conclusion that the Laws of the natural life are
the Laws, or at least are Laws, of the spiritual life, is to say that
there is no spiritual life. It is really easier to give up the phenomena
than to give up the Law.
Two questions now remain for further consideration—one bearing on the
possibility of new Law in the spiritual; the other, on the assumed
invisibility or inconspicuousness of the old Laws on account of their
subordination to the new.
Let us begin by conceding that there may be new Laws. The argument
might then be advanced that since, in Nature generally, we come upon new
Laws as we pass from lower to higher kingdoms, the old still remaining in
force, the newer Laws which one would expect to meet in the Spiritual
World would so transcend and overwhelm the older as to make the analogy or
identity, even if traced, of no practical use. The new Laws would
represent operations and energies so different, and so much more elevated,
that they would afford the true keys to the Spiritual World. As
Gravitation is practically lost sight of when we pass into the domain of
life, so Biogenesis would be lost sight of as we enter the Spiritual
Sphere.
We must first separate in this statement the old confusion of Law and
energy. Gravitation is not lost sight of in the organic world. Gravity may
be, to a certain extent, but not Gravitation; and gravity only where a
higher power counteracts its action. At the same time it is not to be
denied that the conspicuous thing in Organic Nature is not the great
Inorganic Law.
But the objection turns upon the statement that reasoning from analogy
we should expect, in turn, to lose sight of Biogenesis as we enter the
Spiritual Sphere. One answer to which is that, as a matter of fact, we do
not lose sight of it. So far from being invisible, it lies across the very
threshold of the Spiritual World, and, as we shall see, pervades it
everywhere. What we lose sight of, to a certain extent, is the natural
Bios. In the Spiritual World that is not the conspicuous thing, and it is
obscure there just as gravity becomes obscure in the Organic, because
something higher, more potent, more characteristic of the higher plane,
comes in. That there are higher energies, so to speak, in the Spiritual
World is, of course, to be affirmed alike on the ground of analogy and of
experience; but it does not follow that these necessitate other Laws. A
Law has nothing to do with potency. We may lose sight of a substance, or
of an energy, but it is an abuse of language to talk of losing sight of
Laws.
Are there, then, no other Laws in the Spiritual World except those
which are the projections or extensions of Natural Laws? From the number
of Natural Laws which are found in the higher sphere, from the large
territory actually embraced by them, and from their special prominence
throughout the whole region, it may at least be answered that the margin
left for them is small. But if the objection is pressed that it is
contrary to the analogy, and unreasonable in itself, that there should not
be new Laws for this higher sphere, the reply is obvious. Let these Laws
be produced. If the spiritual nature, in inception, growth, and
development, does not follow natural principles, let the true principles
be stated and explained. We have not denied that there may be new Laws.
One would almost be surprised if there were not. The mass of material
handed over from the natural to the spiritual, continuous, apparently,
from the natural to the spiritual, is so great that till that is worked
out it will be impossible to say what space is still left unembraced by
Laws that are known, At present it is impossible even approximately to
estimate the size of that supposed terra incognita. From one point of view
it ought to be vast, from another extremely small. But however large the
region governed by the suspected new Laws may be that cannot diminish by a
hair's-breadth the size of the territory where the old Laws still prevail.
That territory itself, relatively to us though perhaps not absolutely,
must be of great extent. The size of the key which is to open it, that is,
the size of all the Natural Laws which can be found to apply, is a
guarantee that the region of the knowable in the Spiritual World is at
least as wide as these regions of the Natural World which by the help of
these Laws have been explored. No doubt also there yet remain some Natural
Laws to be discovered, and these in time may have a further light to shed
on the spiritual field. Then we may know all that is? By no means. We may
only know all that may be known. And that may be very little. The
Sovereign Will which sways the sceptre of that invisible empire must be
granted a right of freedom—that freedom which by putting it into our wills
He surely teaches us to honour in His. In much of His dealing with us
also, in what may be called the paternal relation, there may seem no
special Law—no Law except the highest of all, that Law of which all other
Laws are parts, that Law which neither Nature can wholly reflect nor the
mind begin to fathom—the Law of Love. He adds nothing to that, however,
who loses sight of all other Laws in that, nor does he take from it who
finds specific Laws everywhere radiating from it.
With regard to the supposed new Laws of the Spiritual World—those Laws,
that is, which are found for the first time in the Spiritual World, and
have no analogies lower down—there is this to be said, that there is one
strong reason against exaggerating either their number or importance—their
importance at least for our immediate needs. The connection between
language and the Law of Continuity has been referred to incidentally
already. It is clear that we can only express the Spiritual Laws in
language borrowed from the visible universe. Being dependent for our
vocabulary on images, if an altogether new and foreign set of Laws existed
in the Spiritual World, they could never take shape as definite ideas from
mere want of words. The hypothetical new Laws which may remain to be
discovered in the domain of Natural or Mental Science may afford some
index of these hypothetical higher Laws, but this would of course mean
that the latter were no longer foreign but in analogy, or, likelier still,
identical. If, on the other hand, the Natural Laws of the future have
nothing to say of these higher Laws, what can be said of them? Where is
the language to come from in which to frame them? If their disclosure
could be of any practical use to us, we may be sure the clue to them, the
revelation of them, in some way would have been put into Nature. If, on
the contrary, they are not to be of immediate use to man, it is better
they should not embarrass him. After all, then, our knowledge of higher
Law must be limited by our knowledge of the lower. The Natural Laws as at
present known, whatever additions may yet be made to them, give a fair
rendering of the facts of Nature. And their analogies or their projections
in the Spiritual sphere may also be said to offer a fair account of that
sphere, or of one or two conspicuous departments of it. The time has come
for that account to be given. The greatest among the theological Laws are
the Laws of Nature in disguise. It will be the splendid task of the
theology of the future to take off the mask and disclose to a waning
scepticism the naturalness of the supernatural.
It is almost singular that the identification of the Laws of the
Spiritual World with the Laws of Nature should so long have escaped
recognition. For apart from the probability on a priori grounds, it is
involved in the whole structure of Parable. When any two Phenomena in the
two spheres are seen to be analogous, the parallelism must depend upon the
fact that the Laws governing them are not analogous but identical. And yet
this basis for Parable seems to have been overlooked. Thus Principal
Shairp: "This seeing of Spiritual truths mirrored in the face of Nature
rests not on any fancied, but in a real analogy between the natural and
the spiritual worlds. They are in some sense which science has not
ascertained, but which the vital and religious imagination can perceive,
counterparts one of the other."[25]
But is not this the explanation, that parallel Phenomena depend upon
identical Laws? It is a question indeed whether one can speak of Laws at
all as being analogous. Phenomena are parallel, Laws which make them so
are themselves one.
In discussing the relations of the Natural and Spiritual kingdom, it
has been all but implied hitherto that the Spiritual Laws were framed
originally on the plan of the Natural; and the impression one might
receive in studying the two worlds for the first time from the side of
analogy would naturally be that the lower world was formed first, as a
kind of scaffolding on which the higher and Spiritual should be afterwards
raised. Now the exact opposite has been the case. The first in the field
was the Spiritual World.
It is not necessary to reproduce here in detail the argument which has
been stated recently with so much force in the "Unseen Universe." The
conclusion of that wort remains still unassailed, that the visible
universe has been developed from the unseen. Apart from the general proof
from the Law of Continuity, the more special grounds of such a conclusion
are, first, the fact insisted upon by Herschel and Clerk-Maxwell that the
atoms of which the visible universe is built up bear distinct marks of
being manufactured articles; and, secondly, the origin in time of the
visible universe is implied from known facts with regard to the
dissipation of energy. With the gradual aggregation of mass the energy of
the universe has been slowly disappearing, and this loss of energy must go
on until none remains. There is, therefore, a point in time when the
energy of the universe must come to an end; and that which has its end in
time cannot be infinite, it must also have had a beginning in time. Hence
the unseen existed before the seen.
There is nothing so especially exalted therefore in the Natural Laws in
themselves as to make one anxious to find them blood relations of the
Spiritual It is not only because these Laws are on the ground, more
accessible therefore to us who are but groundlings; not only, as the
"Unseen Universe" points out in another connection, "because they are at
the bottom of the list—are in fact the simplest and lowest—that they are
capable of being most readily grasped by the finite intelligences of the
universe."[26] But their
true significance lies in the fact that they are on the list at all, and
especially in that the list is the same list. Their dignity is not as
Natural Laws, but as Spiritual Laws, Laws which, as already said, at one
end are dealing with Matter, and at the other with Spirit "The physical
properties of matter form the alphabet which is put into our hands by God,
the study of which, if properly conducted, will enable us more perfectly
to read that great book which we call the `Universe."'[27]
But, over and above this, the Natural Laws will enable us to read that
great duplicate which we call the "Unseen Universe," and to think and live
in fuller harmony with it. After all, the true greatness of Law lies in
its vision of the Unseen. Law in the visible is the Invisible in the
visible. And to speak of Laws as Natural is to define them in their
application to a part of the universe, the sense-part, whereas a wider
survey would lead us to regard all Law as essentially Spiritual. To
magnify the Laws of Nature, as Laws of this small world of ours, is to
take a provincial view of the universe. Law is great not because the
phenomenal world is great, but because these vanishing lines are the
avenues into the eternal Order.
"Is it less reverent to regard the universe as an illimitable avenue
which leads up to God, than to look upon it as a limited area bounded by
an impenetrable wall, which, if we could only pierce it would admit us at
once into the presence of the Eternal?"[28] Indeed the
authors of the " Unseen Universe" demur even to the expression material
universe, since, as they tell us "Matter is (though it may seem
paradoxical to say so) the less important half of the material of the
physical universe."[29] And even Mr. Huxley, though in
a different sense, assures us, with Descartes, "that we know more of mind
than we do of body; that the immaterial world is a firmer reality than the
material."[30]
How the priority of the Spiritual improves the strength and meaning of
the whole argument will be seen at once. The lines of the Spiritual
existed first, and it was natural to expect that when the "Intelligence
resident in the `Unseen"' proceeded to frame the material universe He
should go upon the lines already laid down. He would, in short, simply
project the higher Laws downward, so that the Natural World would become
an incarnation, a visible representation, a working model of the
spiritual. The whole function of the material world lies here. The world
is not a thing that is; it is not. It is a thing that teaches, yet not
even a thing—a show that shows, a teaching shadow, However useless the
demonstration otherwise, philosophy does well in proving that matter is a
non-entity. We work with it as the mathematician with an x. The reality is
alone the Spiritual. "It is very well for physicists
to speak of `matter,' but for men generally to call this `a material
world' is an absurdity. Should we call it an x-world it would mean as
much, viz., that we do not know what it is."[31]When
shall we learn the true mysticism of one who was yet far from being a
mystic—"We look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which
are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things
which are not seen are eternal?"[32] The visible is
the ladder up to the invisible; the temporal is but the scaffolding of the
eternal. And when the last immaterial souls have climbed through this
material to God, the scaffolding shall be taken down, and the earth
dissolved with fervent heat—not because it was base, but because its work
is done.
Footnotes
[3] "Reign of Law," chap. ii
[4] " Animal Kingdom "
[5] "Sartor Resartus," 1858 ed.,
p. 43.
[6] Even parable, however, has
always been considered to have attached to it a measure of evidential as
well as of illustrative value. Thus: "The parable or other analogy to
spiritual truth appropriated from the world of nature or man, is not
merely illustrative, but also in some sort proof. It is not merely that
these analogies assist to make the truth intelligible or, if intelligible
before, present it more vividly to the mind, which is all that some will
allow them. Their power lies deeper than this, in the harmony
unconsciously felt by all men, and which all deeper minds have delighted
to trace, between the natural and spiritual worlds, so that analogies from
the first are felt to be something more than illustrations happily but yet
arbitrarily chosen. They are arguments, and may be alleged as witnesses;
the world of nature being throughout a witness for the world of spirit,
proceeding from the same hand, growing out of the same root, and being
constituted for that very end."—(Archbishop Trench: "Parables," pp. 12,
13.)
[7] Mill's "Logic," vol. ii. p.
96.
[8] Campbell's "Rhetoric," vol.i.
p. 114.
[9] "Nature and the
Supernatural," p.19.
[10] "The Scientific Basis of
Faith." By J. J. Murphy, p. 466.
[11] Op. Cit., p. 333.
[12] Ibid., p.333.
[13] Ibid., p. 331.
[14] "Analogy," chap. vii.
[15] "Unseen Universe," 6th ed.,
pp. 89, 90.
[16] "Essays", vol. I. p. 40.
[17] "A Modern
Symposium."—Nineteenth Century, vol. i. p. 625.
[18] Beck: "Bib. Psychol.,"
Clark's Tr., Pref., 2nd Ed. p. xiii.
[19] "First Principles", p.161.
[20] Wordsworth's Excursion, Book
iv.
[21] "The Correlation of Physical
Forces," 6th ed., p. 181 et seq.
[22] "Unseen universe," 6th
ed., p. 88.
[23] "Old Faiths in New
Light," by Newman Smyth. Unwin's English edition, p. 252.
[24] The Duke of Argyll:
Contemporary Review, Sept., 1880, p. 358.
[25] "Poetic Interpretation of
Nature," p. 115.
[26] 6th edition, p. 235.
[27] Ibid., p. 286.
[28] "Unseen Universe", p.
96.
[29] Ibid., p.100.
[30] Science and Culture,"
p. 259.
[31] `Hinton's "Philosophy and
Religion," p. 40.
[32] 2 Cor. iv. 18. |