GROWTH
" Is not the evidence of Ease on the very front of all the greatest
works in existence? Do they not say plainly to us, not `there has been a
great effort here,' but `there has been a great power here'? It is not the
weariness of mortality but the strength of divinity, which we have to
recognise in all mighty things; and that is just what we now never
recognise, but think that we are to do great things by help of iron bars
and perspiration; alas! we shall do nothing that way, but lose some pounds
of our own weight."
RUSKIN.
"Consider the lilies of the field how they grow."—The Sermon on the
Mount.
" Nunquam aliud natura, aliud sapientia dicit."—Juvenal.
WHAT gives the peculiar point to this object-lesson from the lips of
Jesus is, that He not only made the illustration, but made the lilies. It
is like an inventor describing his own machine. He made the lilies and He
made me—both on the same broad principle. Both together, man and flower,
He planted deep in the Providence of God; but as men are dull at studying
themselves He points to this companion-phenomenon to teach us how to live
a free and natural life, a life which God will unfold for us, without our
anxiety, as He unfolds the flower. For Christ's words are not a general
appeal to consider nature. Men are not to consider the lilies simply to
admire their beauty, to dream over the delicate strength and grace of stem
and leaf. The point they were to consider was how they grew—how without
anxiety or care the flower woke into loveliness, how without weaving these
leaves were woven, how without toiling these complex tissues spun
themselves, and how without any effort or friction the whole slowly came
ready-made from the loom of God in its more than Solomon-like glory. `So,'
He says, making the application beyond dispute,' you care-worn, anxious
men must grow. You, too, need take no thought for your life, what ye shall
eat or what ye shall drink or what ye shall put on. For if God so clothe
the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the
oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith? `
This nature-lesson was a great novelty in its day; but all men now who
have even a "little faith" have learned this Christian secret of a
composed life. Apart even from the parable of the lily, the failures of
the past have taught most of us the folly of disquieting ourselves in
vain, and we have given up the idea that by taking thought we can add a
cubit to our stature.
But no sooner has our life settled down to this calm trust in God than
a new and graver anxiety begins. This time it is not for the body we are
in travail, but for the soul. For the temporal life we have considered the
lilies, but how is the spiritual life to grow? How are we to become better
men? How are we to grow in grace? By what thought shall we add the cubits
to the spiritual stature and reach the fulness of the Perfect Man? And
because we know ill how to do this, the old anxiety comes back again and
our inner life is once more an agony of conflict and remorse. After all,
we have but transferred our anxious thoughts from the body to the soul.
Our efforts after Christian growth seem only a succession of failures, and
instead of rising into the beauty of holiness our life is a daily
heartbreak and humiliation.
Now the reason of this is very plain. We have forgotten the parable of
the lily. Violent efforts to grow are right in earnestness, but wholly
wrong in principle. There is but one principle of growth both for the
natural and spiritual, for animal and plant, for body and soul. For all
growth is an organic thing. And the principle of growing in grace is once
more this, "Consider the lilies how they grow."
In seeking to extend the analogy from the body to the soul there are
two things about the lilies' growth, two characteristics of all growth, on
which one must fix attention. These are,—
First, Spontaneousness.
Second, Mysteriousness.
I. Spontaneousness. There are three lines along which one may seek for
evidence of the spontaneousness of growth. The first is Science. And the
argument here could not be summed up better than in the words of Jesus.
The lilies grow, He says, of themselves; they toil not, neither do they
spin. They grow, that is, automatically, spontaneously, without trying,
without fretting, without thinking. Applied in any direction, to plant, to
animal, to the body or to the soul this law holds. A boy grows, for
example, without trying. One or two simple conditions are fulfilled, and
the growth goes on. He thinks probably as little about the condition as
about the result; he fulfils the conditions by habit, the result follows
by nature. Both processes go steadily on from year to year apart from
himself and all but in spite of himself. One would never think of telling
a boy to grow. A doctor has no prescription for growth. He can tell me how
growth may be stunted or impaired, but the process itself is recognised as
beyond control—one of the few, and therefore very significant, things
which Nature keeps in her own hands. No physician of souls, in like
manner, has any prescription for spiritual growth. It is the question he
is most often asked and most often answers wrongly. He may prescribe more
earnestness, more prayer, more self-denial, or more Christian work. These
are prescriptions for something, but not for growth. Not that they may not
encourage growth; but the soul grows as the lily grows, without trying,
without fretting, without ever thinking. Manuals of devotion, with
complicated rules for getting on in the Christian life, would do well
sometimes to return to the simplicity of nature; and earnest souls who are
attempting sanctification by struggle instead of sanctification by faith
might be spared much humiliation by learning the botany of the Sermon on
the Mount. There can indeed be no other principle of growth than this. It
is a vital act. And to try to make a thing grow is as absurd as to help
the tide to come in or the sun rise.
Another argument for the spontaneousness of growth is universal
experience. A boy not only grows without trying, but he cannot grow if he
tries. No man by taking thought has ever added a cubit to his stature; nor
has any man by mere working at his soul ever approached nearer to the
stature of the Lord Jesus. The stature of the Lord Jesus was not itself
reached by work, and he who thinks to approach its mystical height by
anxious effort is really receding from it. Christ's life unfolded itself
from a divine germ, planted centrally in His nature, which grew as
naturally as a flower from a bud. This flower may be imitated; but one can
always tell an artificial flower. The human form may be copied in wax, yet
somehow one never fails to detect the difference. And this precisely is
the difference between a native growth of Christian principle and the
moral copy of it. The one is natural, the other mechanical. The one is a
growth, the other an accretion. Now this, according to modern biology, is
the fundamental distinction between the living and the not living, between
an organism and a crystal. The living organism grows, the dead crystal
increases. The first grows vitally from within, the last adds new
particles from the outside. The whole difference between the Christian and
the moralist lies here. The Christian works from the centre, the moralist
from the circumference. The one is an organism, in the centre of which is
planted by the living God a living germ. The other is a crystal, very
beautiful it may be; but only a crystal—it wants the vital principle of
growth.
And one sees here also, what is sometimes very difficult to see, why
salvation in the first instance is never connected directly with morality.
The reason is not that salvation does not demand morality, but that it
demands so much of it that :he moralist can never reach up to it. The end
of Salvation is perfection, the Christlike mind, character and life.
Morality is on the way to this perfection; it may go a considerable
distance towards it, but it can never reach it. Only Life can do that. It
requires something with enormous power of movement, of growth, of
overcoming obstacles, to attain the perfect. Therefore the man who has
within himself this great formative agent, Life, is nearer the end than
the man who has morality alone. The latter can never reach perfection; the
former must. For the Life must develop out according to its type; and
being a germ of the Christ-life, it must unfold into a Christ. Morality,
at the utmost, only develops the character in one or two directions. It
may perfect a single virtue here and there, but it cannot perfect all. And
especially it fails always to give that rounded harmony of parts, that
perfect tune to the whole orchestra, which is the marked characteristic of
life. Perfect life is not merely the possessing of perfect functions, but
of perfect functions perfectly adjusted to each other and all conspiring
to a single result, the perfect working of the whole organism. It is not
said that the character will develop in all its fulness in this life. That
were a time too short for an Evolution so magnificent. In this world only
the cornless ear is seen; sometimes only the small yet still prophetic
blade. The sneer at the godly man for his imperfections is ill-judged. A
blade is a small thing. At first it grows very near the earth. It is often
soiled and crushed and downtrodden. But it is a living thing. That great
dead stone beside it is more imposing; only it will never be anything else
than a stone. But this small blade—it doth not yet appear what it shall
be.
Seeing now that Growth can only be synonymous with a living automatic
process, it is all but superfluous to seek a third line of argument from
Scripture. Growth there is always described in the language of physiology.
The regenerate soul is a new creature. The Christian is a new man in
Christ Jesus. He adds the cubits to his stature just as the old man does.
He is rooted and built up in Christ; he abides in the vine, and so
abiding, not toiling or spinning, brings forth fruit. The Christian in
short, like the poet, is born not made; and the fruits of his character
are not manufactured things but living things, things which have grown
from the secret germ, the fruits of the living Spirit. They are not the
produce of this climate, but exotics from a sunnier land.
II. But, secondly, besides this Spontaneousness there is this other
great characteristic of Growth—Mysteriousness. Upon this quality depends
the fact, probably, that so few men ever fathom its real character We are
most unspiritual always in dealing with the simplest spiritual things. A
lily grows mysteriously, pushing up its solid weight of stem and leaf in
the teeth of gravity. Shaped into beauty by secret and invisible fingers,
the flower develops we know not how. But we do not wonder at it. Every day
the thing is done; it is Nature, it is God. We are spiritual enough at
least to understand that. But when the soul rises slowly above the world,
pushing up its delicate virtues in the teeth of sin, shaping itself
mysteriously into the image of Christ, we deny that the power is not of
man. A strong will, we say, a high ideal, the reward of virtue, Christian
influence,—these will account for it. Spiritual character is merely the
product of anxious work, self-command, and self-denial. We allow, that is
to say, a miracle to the lily, but none to the man. The lily may grow; the
man must fret and toil and spin.
Now grant for a moment that by hard work and self-restraint a man may
attain to a very high character. It is not denied that this can be done.
But what is denied is that this is growth, and that this process is
Christianity. The fact that you can account for it proves that it is not
growth. For growth is mysterious; the peculiarity of it is that you cannot
account for it. Mysteriousness, as Mozley has well observed, is "the test
of spiritual birth." And this was Christ's test. "The wind bloweth where
it listeth. Thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it
cometh or whither it goeth, so is every one that is born of the Spirit".
The test of spirituality is that you cannot tell whence it cometh or
whither it goeth. If you can tell, if you can account for it on
philosophical principles, on the doctrine of influence, on strength of
will, on a favourable environment, it is not growth. It may be so far a
success, it may be a perfectly honest, even remarkable, and praiseworthy
imitation, but it is not the real thing. The fruits are wax, the flowers
artificial—you can tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth.
The conclusion is, then, that the Christian is a unique phenomenon. You
cannot account for him. And if you could he would not be a Christian.
Mozley has drawn the two characters for us in graphic words: "Take an
ordinary man of the world—what he thinks and what he does, his whole
standard of duty is taken from the society in which he lives. It is a
borrowed standard: he is as good as other people are; he does, in the way
of duty, what is generally considered proper and becoming among those with
whom his lot is thrown. He reflects established opinion on such points. He
follows its lead. His aims and objects in life again are taken from the
world around him, and from its dictation. What it considers honourable,
worth having, advantageous and good, he thinks so too and pursues it. His
motives all come from a visible quarter. It would be absurd to say that
there is any mystery in such a character as this, because it is formed
from a known external influence—the influence of social opinion and the
voice of the world. `Whence such a character cometh' we see; we venture to
say that the source and origin of it is open and palpable, and we know it
just as we know the physical causes of many common facts."
Then there is the other. "There is a certain character and disposition
of mind of which it is true to say that `thou canst not tell whence it
cometh or whither it goeth.' . . . There are those who stand out from
among the crowd, which reflects merely the atmosphere of feeling and
standard of society around it, with an impress upon them which bespeaks a
heavenly birth. . . . Now, when we see one of those characters, it is a
question which we ask ourselves, How has the person become possessed of
it? Has he caught it from society around him? That cannot be, because it
is wholly different from that of the world around him. Has he caught it
from the inoculation of crowds and masses, as the mere religious zealot
catches his character? That cannot be either, for the type is altogether
different from that which masses of men, under enthusiastic impulses,
exhibit. There is nothing gregarious in this character; it is the
individual's own; it is not borrowed, it is not a reflection of any
fashion or tone of the world outside; it rises up from some fount within,
and it is a creation of which the text says, We
know not whence it cometh."[53]
Now we have all met these two characters—the one eminently respectable,
upright, virtuous, a trifle cold perhaps, and generally, when critically
examined, revealing somehow the mark of the tool; the other with God's
breath still upon it, an inspiration; not more virtuous, but differently
virtuous; not more humble, but different, wearing the meek and quiet
spirit artlessly as to the manner born. The other-worldliness of such a
character is the thing that strikes you; you are not prepared for what it
will do or say or become next, for it moves from a far-off centre, and in
spite of its transparency and sweetness, that presence fills you always
with awe. A man never feels the discord of his own life, never hears the
jar of the machinery by which he tries to manufacture his own good points,
till he has stood in the stillness of such a presence. Then he discerns
the difference between growth and work. He has considered the lilies, how
they grow.
We have now seen that spiritual growth is a process maintained and
secured by a spontaneous and mysterious inward principle. It is a
spontaneous principle even in its origin, for it bloweth where it listeth;
mysterious in its operation, for we can never tell whence it cometh;
obscure in its destination, for we cannot tell whence it goeth. The whole
process therefore transcends us; we do not work, we are taken in hand—"it
is God which worketh in us, both to will and to do of His good pleasure."
We do not plan—we are "created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God
hath before ordained that we should walk in them."
There may be an obvious objection to all this. It takes away all
conflict from the Christian life? It makes man, does it not, mere clay in
the hands of the potter? It crushes the old character to make a new one,
and destroys man's responsibility for his own soul?
Now we are not concerned here in once more striking the time-honoured
"balance between faith and works." We are considering how lilies grow, and
in a specific connection, namely, to discover the attitude of mind which
the Christian should preserve regarding his spiritual growth. That
attitude, primarily, is to be free from care. We are not lodging a plea
for inactivity of the spiritual energies, but for the tranquillity of the
spiritual mind. Christ's protest is not against work, but against anxious
thought; and rather, therefore, than complement the lesson by showing the
other side, we take the risk of still further extending the plea in the
original direction.
What is the relation, to recur again to analogy, between growth and
work in a boy? Consciously, there is no relation at all. The boy never
thinks of connecting his work with his growth. Work in fact is one thing
and growth another, and it is so in the spiritual life. If it be asked
therefore, Is the Christian wrong in these ceaseless and agonizing efforts
after growth? the answer is, Yes, he is quite wrong, or at least, he is
quite mistaken. When a boy takes a meal or denies himself indigestible
things, he does not say, "All this will minister to my growth"; or when he
runs a race he does not say, "This will help the next cubit of my
stature." It may or it nay not be true that these things will help his
stature, but, if he thinks of this, his idea of growth is morbid. And this
is the point we are dealing with. His anxiety here is altogether
irrelevant and superfluous. Nature is far more bountiful than we think.
When she gives us energy she asks none of it back to expend on our own
growth. She will attend to that. " Give your work," she says, "and your
anxiety to others; trust me to add the cubits to your stature." If God is
adding to our spiritual stature, unfolding the new nature within us, it is
a mistake to keep twitching at the petals with our coarse fingers. We must
seek to let the Creative Hand alone. "It is God which giveth the
increase." Yet we never know how little we have learned of the fundamental
principle of Christianity till we discover how much we are all bent on
supplementing God's free grace. If God is spending work upon a Christian,
let him be still and know that it is God. And if he wants work, he will
find it there—in the being still.
Not that there is no work for him who would grow, to do. There is work,
and severe work,— work so great that the worker deserves to have himself
relieved of all that is superfluous during his task. If the amount of
energy lost in trying to grow were spent in fulfilling rather the
conditions of growth, we should have many more cubits to show for our
stature. It is with these conditions that the personal work of the
Christian is chiefly concerned. Observe for a moment what they are, and
their exact relation. For its growth the plant needs heat, light, air, and
moisture. A man, therefore, must go in search of these, or their spiritual
equivalents, and this is his work? By no means. The Christian's work is
not yet. Does the plant go in search of its conditions? Nay, the
conditions come to the plant. It no more manufactures the heat, light,
air, and moisture, than it manufactures its own stem. It finds them all
around it in Nature. It simply stands still with its leaves spread out in
unconscious prayer, and Nature lavishes upon it these and all other
bounties, bathing it in sunshine, pouring the nourishing air over and over
it, reviving it graciously with its nightly dew. Grace, too, is as free as
the air. The Lord God is a Sun. He is as the Dew to Israel. A man has no
more to manufacture these than he has to manufacture his own soul. He
stands surrounded by them, bathed in them, beset behind and before by
them. He lives and moves and has his being in them. How then shall he go
in search of them? Do not they rather go in search of him? Does he not
feel how they press themselves upon him? Does he not know how unweariedly
they appeal to him? Has he not heard how they are sorrowful when he will
not have them? His work, therefore, is not yet. The voice still says, "Be
still."
The conditions of growth, then, and the inward principle of growth
being both supplied by Nature, the thing man has to do, the little
junction left for him to complete, is to apply the one to the other. He
manufactures nothing; he earns nothing; he need be anxious for nothing;
his one duty is to be in these conditions, to abide in them, to allow
grace to play over him, to be still therein and know that this is God.
The conflict begins and prevails in all its life-long agony the moment
a man forgets this. He struggles to grow himself instead of struggling to
get back again into position. He makes the church into a workshop when God
meant it to be a beautiful garden. And even in his closet, where only
should reign silence—a silence as of the mountains whereon the lilies
grow—is heard the roar and tumult of machinery. True, a man will often
have to wrestle with his God—but not for growth. The Christian life is a
composed life. The Gospel is Peace. Yet the most anxious people in the
world are Christians—Christians who misunderstand the nature of growth.
Life is a perpetual self-condemning because they are not growing. And the
effect is not only the loss of tranquillity to the individual. The
energies which are meant to be spent on the work of Christ are consumed in
the soul's own fever. So long as the Church's activities are spent on
growing there is nothing to spare for the world. A soldier's time is not
spent in earning the money to buy his armour, in finding food and raiment,
in seeking shelter. His king provides these things that he may be the more
at liberty to fight his battles. So, for the soldier of the Cross all is
provided. His Government has planned to leave him free for the Kingdom's
work.
The problem of the Christian life finally is simplified to this—man has
but to preserve the right attitude. To abide in
Christ, to be in position, that is all. Much work is done on board a ship
crossing the Atlantic. Yet none of it is spent on making the ship go. The
sailor but harnesses his vessel to the wind. He puts his sail and rudder
in position, and lo, the miracle is wrought. So everywhere God creates,
man utilizes. All the work of the world is merely a taking advantage of
energies already there.[54] God gives the wind, and
the water, and the heat; man but puts himself in the way of the wind,
fixes his water-wheel in the way of the river, puts his piston in the way
of the steam; and so holding himself in position before God's Spirit, all
the energies of Omnipotence course within his soul. He is like a tree
planted by a river whose leaf is green and whose fruits fail not. Such is
the deeper lesson to be learned from considering the lily. It is the voice
of Nature echoing the whole evangel of Jesus, "Come unto Me, and I will
give you rest."
" What could be easier than to form a catena of the most philosophical
defenders of Christianity, who have exhausted language in declaring the
impotence of the unassisted intellect? Comte has not more explicitly
enounced the incapacity of man to deal with the Absolute and the Infinite
than the whole series of orthodox writers. Trust your reason, we have been
told till we are tired of the phrase, and you will become Atheists or
Agnostics. We take you at your word; we become Agnostics."
LESLIE STEPHEN.
"To be carnally minded is Death."—Paul.
"I do not wonder at what men suffer, but I wonder often at what they
lose."—Ruskin.
"DEATH," wrote Paber, "is an unsurveyed land, an unarranged Science."
Poetry draws near Death only to hover over it for a moment and withdraw in
terror. History knows it simply as a universal fact. Philosophy finds it
among the mysteries of being, the one great mystery of being not. All
contributions to this dread theme are marked by an essential vagueness,
and every avenue of approach seems darkened by impenetrable shadow.
But modern Biology has found it part of its work to push its way into
this silent land, and at last the world is confronted with a scientific
treatment of Death. Not that much is added to the old conception, or much
taken from it. What it is, this certain Death with its uncertain issues,
we know as little as before. But we can define more clearly and attach a
narrower meaning to the momentous symbol.
The interest of the investigation here lies in the fact that Death is
one of the outstanding things in Nature which has an acknowledged
spiritual equivalent. The prominence of the word in the vocabulary of
Revelation cannot be exaggerated. Next to Life the most pregnant symbol in
religion is its antithesis, Death. And from the time that "If thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die" was heard in Paradise, this solemn word has
been linked with human interests of eternal moment.
Notwithstanding the unparalleled emphasis upon this term in the
Christian system, there is none more feebly expressive to the ordinary
mind. That mystery which surrounds the word in the natural world shrouds
only too completely its spiritual import. The reluctance which prevents
men from investigating the secrets of the King of Terrors is for a certain
length entitled to respect. But it has left theology with only the vaguest
materials to construct a doctrine which, intelligently enforced, ought to
appeal to all men with convincing power and lend the most effective
argument to Christianity. Whatever may have been its influence in the
past, its threat is gone for the modern world. The word has grown weak.
Ignorance has robbed the Grave of all its terror, and platitude despoilt
Death of its sting. Death itself is ethically dead. Which of us, for
example, enters fully into the meaning of words like these: "She that
liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth"? Who allows adequate weight
to the metaphor in the Pauline phrase, "To be carnally minded is Death;"
or in this, "The wages of sin is Death"? Or what theology has translated
into the language of human life the terrific practical import of "Dead in
trespasses and sins"? To seek to make these phrases once more real and
burning; to clothe time-worn formulae with living truth; to put the
deepest ethical meaning into the gravest symbol of Nature, and fill up
with its full consequence the darkest threat of Revelation—these are the
objects before us now.
What, then, is Death? Is it possible to define it and embody its
essential meaning in an intelligible proposition?
The most recent and the most scientific attempt to investigate Death we
owe to the biological studies of Mr. Herbert Spencer. In his search for
the meaning of Life the word Death crosses his path, and he turns aside
for a moment to define it. Of course what Death is depends upon what Life
is. Mr. Herbert Spencer's definition of Life, it is well known, has been
subjected to serious criticism. While it has shed much light on many of
the phenomena of Life, it cannot be affirmed that it has taken its place
in science as the final solution of the fundamental problem of biology. No
definition of Life, indeed, that has yet appeared can be said to be even
approximately correct. Its mysterious quality evades us; and we have to be
content with outward characteristics and accompaniments, leaving the thing
itself an unsolved riddle. At the same time Mr. Herbert Spencer's masterly
elucidation of the chief phenomena of Life has placed philosophy and
science under many obligations, and in the paragraphs which follow we
shall have to incur a further debt on behalf of religion.
The meaning of Death depending, as has been said, on the meaning of
life, we must first set ourselves to grasp the leading characteristics
which distinguish living things. To a physiologist the living organism is
distinguished from the not-living by the performance of certain functions.
These functions are four in number—Assimilation, Waste, Reproduction, and
Growth. Nothing could be a more interesting task than to point out the
co-relatives of these in the spiritual sphere, to show in
what ways the discharge of these functions represent the true
manifestations of spiritual life, and how the failure to perform them
constitutes spiritual Death. But it will bring us more directly to the
specific subject before us if we follow rather the newer biological lines
of Mr. Herbert Spencer. According to his definition, Life is "The definite
combination of heterogeneous changes, both simultaneous and successive, in
correspondence with external co-existences and sequences,"[55]
or more shortly "The continuous adjustment of internal relations to
external relations."[56] An example or two will render
these important statements at once intelligible.
The essential characteristic of a living organism, according to these
definitions, is that it is in vital connection with its general
surroundings. A human being, for instance, is in direct contact with the
earth and air, with all surrounding things, with the warmth of the sun,
with the music of birds, with the countless influences and activities of
nature and of his fellow-men. In biological language he is said thus to be
"in correspondence with his environment." He is, that is to say, in active
and vital connection with them, influencing them possibly, but especially
being influenced by them. Now it is in virtue of this correspondence that
he is entitled to be called alive. So long as he is in correspondence with
any given point of his environment, he lives. To keep up this
correspondence is to keep up life. If his environment changes he must
instantly adjust himself to the change. And he continues living only as
long as he succeeds in adjusting himself to the " simultaneous and
successive changes in his environment" as these occur. What is meant by a
change in his environment may be understood from an example, which will at
the same time define more clearly the intimacy of the relation between
environment and organism. Let us take the case of a civil-servant whose
environment is a district in India. It is a region subject to occasional
and prolonged droughts resulting in periodical famines. When such a period
of scarcity arises, he proceeds immediately to adjust himself to this
external change. Having the power of locomotion, he may remove himself to
a more fertile district, or, possessing the means of purchase, he may add
to his old environment by importation the "external relations" necessary
to continued life. But if from any cause he fails to adjust himself to the
altered circumstances, his body is thrown out of correspondence with his
environment, his "internal relations" are no longer adjusted to his
"external relations," and his life must cease.
In ordinary circumstances, and in health, the human organism is in
thorough correspondence with its surroundings; but when any part of the
organism by disease or accident is thrown out of correspondence, it is in
that relation dead.
This Death, this want of correspondence, may be either partial or
complete. Part of the organism may be dead to a part of the environment,
or the whole to the whole. Thus the victim of famine may have a certain
number of his correspondences arrested by the change in his environment,
but not all. Luxuries which he once enjoyed no longer enter the country;
animals which once furnished his table are driven from it. These still
exist, but they are beyond the limit of his correspondence. In relation to
these things therefore he is dead. In one sense it might be said that it
was the environment which played him false; in another, that it was his
own organization—that he was unable to adjust himself, or did not. But,
however caused, he pays the penalty with partial Death.
Suppose next the case of a man who is thrown out of correspondence with
a part of his environment by some physical infirmity. Let it be that by
disease or accident he has been deprived of the use of his ears. The deaf
man, in virtue of this imperfection, is thrown out of rapport with a large
and well-defined part of the environment, namely, its sounds. With regard
to that "external relation," therefore, he is no longer living. Part of
him may truly be held to be insensible or "Dead." A man who is also blind
is thrown out of correspondence with another large part of his
environment. The beauty of sea and sky, the forms of cloud and mountain,
the features and gestures of friends, are to him as if they were not. They
are there, solid and real, but not to him; he is still further "Dead."
Next, let it be conceived, the subtle finger of cerebral disease lays hold
of him. His whole brain is affected, and the sensory nerves, the medium of
communication with the environment, cease altogether to acquaint
him with what is doing in the outside world. The
outside world is still there, but not to him; he is still further "Dead."
And so the death of parts goes on. He becomes less and less alive. "Were
the animal frame not the complicated machine we have seen it to be, death
might come as a simple and gradual dissolution, the `sans everything'
being the last stage of the successive loss of fundamental powers."[57]
But finally some important part of the mere animal framework that remains
breaks down. The correlation with the other parts is very intimate, and
the stoppage of correspondence with one means an interference with the
work of the rest. Something central has snapped, and all are thrown out of
work. The lungs refuse to correspond with the air, the heart with the
blood. There is now no correspondence whatever with environment—the thing,
for it is now a thing, is Dead.
This then is Death; "part of the framework breaks down," "something has
snapped"—these phrases by which we describe the phases of death yield
their full meaning. They are different ways of saying that
"correspondence" has ceased. And the scientific meaning of Death now
becomes clearly intelligible. Dying is that breakdown in an organism which
throws it out of correspondence with some necessary part of the
environment. Death is the result produced, the want of correspondence. We
do not say that this is all that is involved. But this is the root idea of
Death—Failure to adjust internal relations to external relations, failure
to repair the broken inward connection sufficiently to enable it to
correspond again with the old surroundings. These preliminary statements
may be fitly closed with the words of Mr. Herbert Spencer: "Death by
natural decay occurs because in old age the relations between
assimilation, oxidation, and genesis of force going on in the organism
gradually fall out of correspondence with the relations between oxygen and
food and absorption of heat by the environment. Death from disease arises
either when the organism is congenitally defective in its power to balance
the ordinary external actions by the ordinary internal actions, or when
there has taken place some unusual external action to which there was no
answering internal action. Death by accident implies some neighbouring
mechanical changes of which the causes are either unnoticed
from inattention, or are so intricate that their results cannot
be foreseen, and consequently certain relations in the organism are not
adjusted to the relations in the environment."[58]
With the help of these plain biological terms we may now proceed to
examine the parallel phenomenon of Death in the spiritual world. The
factors with which we have to deal are two in number as before—Organism
and Environment. The relation between them may once more be denominated by
"correspondence." And the truth to be emphasised resolves itself into
this, that Spiritual Death is a want of correspondence between the
organism and the spiritual environment.
What is the spiritual environment? This term obviously demands some
further definition. For Death is a relative term. And before we can define
Death in the spiritual world we must first apprehend the particular
relation with reference to which the expression is to be employed. we
shall best reach the nature of this relation by considering for a moment
the subject of environment generally. By the natural environment we mean
the entire surroundings of the natural man, the entire external world in
which he lives and moves and has his being. It is not involved in the idea
that either with all or part of this environment he is in immediate
correspondence. Whether he correspond with it or not, it is there. There
is in fact a conscious environment and an environment of which he is not
conscious; and it must be borne in mind that the conscious environment is
not all the environment that is. All that surrounds him, all that environs
him, conscious or unconscious, is environment. The moon and stars are part
of it, though in the daytime he may not see them. The polar regions are
parts of it, though he is seldom aware of their influence. In its widest
sense environment simply means all else that is.
Now it will next be manifest that different organisms correspond with
this environment in varying degrees of completeness or incompleteness. At
the bottom of the biological scale we find organisms which have only the
most limited correspondence with their surroundings. A tree, for example,
corresponds with the soil about its stem, with the sunlight, and with the
air in contact with its leaves. But it is shut off by its comparatively
low development from a whole world to which higher forms of life have
additional access. The want of locomotion alone circumscribes most
seriously its area of correspondence, so that to a large part of
surrounding nature it may truly be said to be dead. So far as
consciousness is concerned, we should be justified indeed in saying that
it was not alive at all. The murmur of the stream which bathes its roots
affects it not. The marvellous insect-life beneath its shadow excites in
it no wonder. The tender maternity of the bird which has its nest among
its leaves stirs no responsive sympathy. It cannot correspond with those
things. To stream and insect and bird it is insensible, torpid, dead. For
this is Death, this irresponsiveness.
The bird, again, which is higher in the scale of life, corresponds with
a wider environment. The stream is real to it, and the insect. It knows
what lies behind the hill; it listens to the love-song of its mate. And to
much besides beyond the simple world of the tree this higher organism is
alive. The bird we should say is more living than the tree; it has a
correspondence with a larger area of environment. But this bird-life is
not yet the highest life. Even within the immediate bird-environment there
is much to which the bird must still be held to be dead. Introduce a
higher organism, place man himself within this same environment, and see
how much more living he is. A hundred things which the bird never saw in
insect, stream, and tree appeal to him. Each single sense has something to
correspond with. Each faculty finds an appropriate exercise. Man is a mass
of correspondences, and because of these, because he is alive to countless
objects and influences to which lower organisms are dead, he is the most
living of all creatures.
The relativity of Death will now have become sufficiently obvious. Man
being left out of account, all organisms are seen as it were to be partly
living and partly dead. The tree, in correspondence with a narrow area of
environment, is to that extent alive; to all beyond, to the all but
infinite area beyond, it is dead. A still wider portion of this vast area
is the possession of the insect and the bird. Their's also, nevertheless,
is but a little world, and to an immense further area insect and bird are
dead. All organisms likewise are living and dead—living to all within the
circumference of their correspondences, dead to all beyond. As we rise in
the scale of life, however, it will be observed that the sway of Death is
gradually weakened. More and more of the environment becomes accessible as
we ascend, and the domain of life in this way slowly extends in
ever-widening circles. But until man appears there is no organism to
correspond with the whole environment. Till then the outermost circles
have no correspondents. To the inhabitants of the innermost spheres they
are as if they were not.
Now follows a momentous question. Is man in correspondence with the
whole environment? When we reach the highest living organism, is the final
blow dealt to the kingdom of Death? Has the last acre of the infinite area
been taken in by his finite faculties?. Is his conscious environment the
whole environment? Or is there, among these outermost circles, one which
with his multitudinous correspondences he fails to reach? If so, this is
Death. The question of Life or Death to him is the question of the amount
of remaining environment he is able to compass. If there be one circle or
one segment of a circle which he yet fails to reach, to correspond with,
to know, to be influenced by, he is, with regard to that circle or
segment, dead.
What then, practically, is the state of the case? Is man in
correspondence with the whole environment or is he not? There is but one
answer. He is not. Of men generally it cannot be said that they are in
living contact with that part of the environment which is called the
spiritual world. In introducing this new term spiritual world, observe, we
are not interpolating a new factor. This is an essential part of the old
idea. We have been following out an ever-widening environment from point
to point, and now we reach the outermost zones. The spiritual world is
simply the outermost segment, circle, or circles, of the natural world.
for purposes of convenience we separate the two just as we separate the
animal world from the plant. But the animal world and the plant world are
the same world. They are different parts of one environment. And the
natural and spiritual are likewise one. The inner circles are called the
natural, the outer the spiritual. And we call them spiritual simply
because they are beyond us or beyond a part of us. What we have
correspondence with, that we call natural; what we have little or no
correspondence with, that we call spiritual. But when the appropriate
corresponding organism appears, the organism, that is, which can freely
communicate with these outer circles, the distinction necessarily
disappears. The spiritual to it becomes the outer circle of the natural.
Now of the great mass of living organisms, of the great mass of men, is
it not to be affirmed that they are out of correspondence with this outer
circle? Suppose, to make the final issue more real, we give this outermost
circle of environment a name. Suppose we call it God. Suppose also we
substitute a word for "correspondence" to express more intimately the
personal relation. Let us call it Communion. We can now determine
accurately the spiritual relation of different sections of mankind. Those
who are in communion with God live, those who are not are dead.
The extent or depth of this communion, the varying degrees of
correspondence in different individuals, and the less or more abundant
life which these result in, need not concern us for the present. The task
we have set ourselves is to investigate the essential nature of Spiritual
Death. And we have found it to consist in a want of communion with God.
The unspiritual man is he who lives in the circumscribed environment of
this present world. "She that liveth in pleasure is Dead while she liveth."
"To be carnally minded is Death." To be carnally minded, translated into
the language of science, is to be limited in one's correspondences to the
environment of the natural man. It is no necessary part of the conception
that the mind should be either purposely irreligious, or directly vicious.
The mind of the flesh, , by its very nature, limited capacity, and
time-ward tendency, is Death. This earthly mind may be of noble calibre,
enriched by culture, high toned, virtuous and pure. But if it know not
God? What though its correspondences reach to the stars of heaven or grasp
the magnitudes of Time and Space? The stars of heaven are not heaven.
Space is not God. This mind, certainly, has life, life up to its level.
There is no trace of Death. Possibly too, it carries its deprivation
lightly, and, up to its level, lives content. We do not picture the
possessor of this carnal mind as in any sense a monster. We have said he
may be high-toned, virtuous, and pure. The plant is not a monster because
it is dead to the voice of the bird; nor is he a monster who is dead to
the voice of God. The contention at present simply is that he is Dead.
We do not need to go to Revelation for the proof of this. That has been
rendered unnecessary by the testimony of the Dead themselves. Thousands
have uttered themselves upon their relation to the Spiritual World, and
from their own lips we have the proclamation of their Death. The language
of theology in describing the state of the natural man is often regarded
as severe. The Pauline anthropology has been challenged as an insult to
human nature. Culture has opposed the doctrine that "The natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness
unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually
discerned." And even some modern theologies have refused to accept the
most plain of the aphorisms of Jesus, that "Except a man be born again he
cannot see the Kingdom of God." But this stern doctrine of the spiritual
deadness of humanity is no mere dogma of a past theology. The history of
thought during the present century proves that the world has come round
spontaneously to the position of the first. One of the ablest
philosophical schools of the day erects a whole antichristian system on
this very doctrine. Seeking by means of it to sap the foundation of
spiritual religion, it stands unconsciously as the most significant
witness for its truth. What is the creed of the Agnostic, but the
confession of the spiritual numbness of humanity? The negative doctrine
which it reiterates with such sad persistency, what is it but the echo of
the oldest of scientific and religious truths? And what are all these
gloomy and rebellious infidelities, these touching, and too sincere
confessions of universal nescience, but a protest against this ancient law
of Death?
The Christian apologist never further misses the mark than when he
refuses the testimony of the Agnostic to himself. When the Agnostic tells
me he is blind and deaf, dumb, torpid and dead to the spiritual world, I
must believe him. Jesus tells me that. Paul tells me that. Science tells
me that. He knows nothing of this outermost circle; and we are compelled
to trust his sincerity as readily when he deplores it as if, being a man
without an ear, he professed to know nothing of a musical world, or being
without taste, of a world of art. The nescience of the Agnostic philosophy
is the proof from experience that to be carnally minded is Death. Let the
theological value of the concession be duly recognised. It brings no
solace to the unspiritual man to be told he is mistaken. To say he is
self-deceived is neither to compliment him nor Christianity. He builds in
all sincerity who raises his altar to the Unknown God. He does not know
God. With all his marvellous and complex correspondences, he is still one
correspondence short.
It is a point worthy of special note that the proclamation of this
truth has always come from science rather than from religion. Its general
acceptance by thinkers is based upon the universal failure of a universal
experiment. The statement, therefore, that the natural man discerneth not
the things of the spirit, is never to be charged against the intolerance
of theology. There is no point at which theology has been more modest than
here. It has left the preaching of a great fundamental truth almost
entirely to philosophy and science. And so very moderate has been its
tone, so slight has been the emphasis placed upon the paralysis of the
natural with regard to the spiritual, that it may seem to some to have
been intolerantly tolerant. No harm certainly could come now, no offence
could be given to science, if religion asserted more clearly its right to
the spiritual world. Science has paved the way for the reception of one of
the most revolutionary doctrines of Christianity; and if Christianity
refuses to take advantage of the opening it will manifest a culpable want
of confidence in itself. There never was a time when its fundamental
doctrines could more boldly be proclaimed, or when they could better
secure the respect and arrest the interest of Science.
To all this, and apparently with force, it may, however, be objected
that to every man who truly studies Nature there is a God. Call Him by
whatever name—a Creator, a Supreme Being, a Great First Cause, a Power
that makes for Righteousness—Science has a God; and he who believes in
this, in spite of all protest, possesses a theology. "If we will look at
things, and not merely at words, we shall soon see that the scientific man
has a theology and a God, a most impressive theology, a most awful and
glorious God. I say that man believes in a God, who feels himself in the
presence of a Power which is not himself, and is immeasurably above
himself, a Power in the contemplation of which he is absorbed, in the
knowledge of which he finds safety and happiness. And such now is
Nature to the scientific man."[59]
Such now, we humbly submit, is Nature to very few. Their own confession is
against it. That they are "absorbed" in the contemplation we can well
believe. That they might "find safety and happiness" in the knowledge of
Him is also possible—if they had it. But this is just what they tell us
they have not. What they deny is not a God. It is the correspondence. The
very confession of the Unknowable is itself the dull recognition of an
Environment beyond themselves, and for which they feel they lack the
correspondence. It is this want that makes their God the Unknown God. And
it is this that makes them dead.
We have not said, or implied, that there is not a God of Nature. We
have not affirmed that there is no Natural Religion. We are assured there
is. We are even assured that without a Religion of Nature Religion is only
half complete; that without a God of Nature the God of Revelation is only
half intelligible and only partially known. God is not confined to the
outermost circle of environment, He lives and moves and has His being in
the whole. Those who only seek Him in the further zone can only find a
part. The Christian who knows not God in Nature, who does not, that is to
say, correspond with the whole environment, most certainly is partially
dead. The author of "Ecce Homo" may be partially right when he says: "I
think a bystander would say that though Christianity had in it something
far higher and deeper and more ennobling, yet the average scientific man
worships just at present a more awful, and, as it were, a greater Deity
than the average Christian. In so many Christians the idea of God has been
degraded by childish and little-minded teaching; the Eternal and the
Infinite and the All-embracing has been represented as the head of the
clerical interest, as a sort of clergyman, as a sort of schoolmaster, as a
sort of philanthropist. But the scientific man knows Him to be eternal; in
astronomy, in geology, he becomes familiar with the countless millenniums
of His lifetime. The scientific man strains his mind actually to realize
God's infinity. As far off as the fixed stars he traces Him, `distance
inexpressible by numbers that have name.' Meanwhile, to the
theologian, infinity and eternity are very much of empty words
when applied to the Object of his worship. He does not realize them in
actual facts and definite computations."[60] Let us
accept this rebuke. The principle that want of correspondence is Death
applies all round. He who knows not God in Nature only partially lives.
The converse of this, however is not true; and that is the point we are
insisting on. He who knows God only in Nature lives not. There is no
"correspondence" with an Unknown God, no "continuous adjustment" to a
fixed First Cause. There is no "assimilation" of Natural Law; no growth in
the Image of "the All-embracing." To correspond with the God of Science
assuredly is not to live. "This is Life Eternal, to know Thee, the true
God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent."
From the service we have tried to make natural science render to our
religion, we might be expected possibly to take up the position that the
absolute contribution of Science to Revelation was very great. On the
contrary, it is very small. The absolute contribution, that is, is very
small. The contribution on the whole is immense, vaster than we have yet
any idea of. But without the aid of the higher Revelation this many-toned
and far-reaching voice had been for ever dumb. The light of Nature, say
the most for it, is dim—how dim we ourselves, with the glare of other
Light upon the modern world, can only realize when we seek among the pagan
records of the past for the gropings after truth of those whose only light
was this. Powerfully significant and touching as these efforts were in
their success, they are far more significant and touching in their
failure. For they did fail. It requires no philosophy now to speculate on
the adequacy or inadequacy of the Religion of Nature. For us who could
never weigh it rightly in the scales of Truth it has been tried in the
balance of experience and found wanting. Theism is the easiest of all
religions to get, but the most difficult to keep. Individuals have kept
it, but nations never. Socrates and Aristotle, Cicero and Epictetus had a
theistic religion; Greece and Rome had none. And even after getting what
seems like a firm place in the minds of men, its unstable equilibrium
sooner or later betrays itself. On the one hand theism has always fallen
into the wildest polytheism, or on the other into the blankest atheism.
"It is an indubitable historical fact that, outside of the sphere of
special revelation, man has never obtained such a knowledge of God as a
responsible and religious being plainly requires. The wisdom of the
heathen world, at its very best, was utterly inadequate to the
accomplishment of such a task as creating a due
abhorrence of sin, controlling the passions, purifying the heart, and
ennobling the conduct."[61]
What is the inference? That this poor rush-light itself was never meant
to lend the ray by which man should read the riddle of the universe. The
mystery is too impenetrable and remote for its uncertain flicker to more
than make the darkness deeper. What indeed if this were not a light at
all, but only part of a light—the carbon point, the fragment of calcium,
the reflector in the great Lantern which contains the Light of the World?
This is one inference. But the most important is that the absence of
the true Light means moral Death. The darkness of the natural world to the
intellect is not all. What history testifies to is, first the partial, and
then the total eclipse of virtue that always follows the abandonment of
belief in a personal God. It is not, as has been pointed out a hundred
times, that morality in the abstract disappears, but the motive and
sanction are gone. There is nothing to raise it from the dead. Man's
attitude to it is left to himself. Grant that morals have their own base
in human life; grant that Nature has a Religion whose creed is Science;
there is yet nothing apart from God to save the world from moral Death.
Morality has the power to dictate but none to move. Nature directs but
cannot control. As was wisely expressed in one of many pregnant utterances
during a recent Symposium, "Though the decay of religion may leave the
institutes of morality intact, it drains off their inward power. The
devout faith of men expresses and measures the intensity of their moral
nature, and it cannot be lost without a remission of enthusiasm, and under
this low pressure, the successful re-entrance of importunate desires and
clamorous passions which had been driven back. To believe in an
ever-living and perfect Mind, supreme over the universe, is to invest
moral distinctions with immensity and eternity, and lift them from the
provincial stage of human society to the imperishable theatre of all
being. When planted thus in the very substance of things, they justify and
support the ideal estimates of the conscience; they
deepen every guilty shame; they guarantee every righteous hope; and they
help the will with a Divine casting-vote in every balance of temptation."[62]
That morality has a basis in human society, that Nature has a Religion,
surely makes the Death of the soul when left to itself all the more
appalling. It means that, between them, Nature and morality provide all
for virtue—except the Life to live it
It is at this point accordingly that our subject comes into intimate
contact with Religion. The proposition that "to be carnally minded is
Death" even the moralist will assent to. But when it is further announced
that "the carnal mind is enmity against God" we find ourselves in a
different region. And when we find it also stated that "the wages of sin
is Death," we are in the heart of the profoundest questions of theology.
What before was merely "enmity against society" becomes "enmity against
God;" and what was "vice" is "sin." The conception of a God gives an
altogether new colour to worldliness and vice. Worldliness it changes into
heathenism, vice into blasphemy. The carnal mind, the mind which is turned
away from God, which will not correspond with God—this is not moral only
but spiritual Death. And Sin, that which separates from God, which
disobeys God, which can not in that state correspond with God—this is
hell.
To the estrangement of the soul from God the best of theology traces
the ultimate cause of sin. Sin is simply apostasy from God, unbelief in
God. "Sin is manifest in its true character when the demand of holiness in
the conscience, presenting itself to the man as one of loving submission
to God, is put from him with aversion. Here sin appears as it really is, a
turning away from God; and while the man's guilt is
enhanced, there ensues a benumbing of the heart resulting from the
crushing of those higher impulses. This is what is meant by the reprobate
state of those who reject Christ and will not believe the Gospel, so often
spoken of in the New Testament; this unbelief is just the closing of the
heart against the highest love."[63] The other view of
sin, probably the more popular at present, that sin consists in
selfishness, is merely this from another aspect. Obviously if the mind
turns away from one part of the environment it will only do so under some
temptation to correspond with another. This temptation, at bottom, can
only come from one source—the love of self. The irreligious man's
correspondences are concentrated upon himself. He worships himself.
Self-gratification rather than self-denial; independence rather than
submission—these are the rules of life. And this is at once the poorest
and the commonest form of idolatry.
But whichever of these views of sin we emphasize, we find both equally
connected with Death. If sin is estrangement from God, this very
estrangement is Death. It is a want of correspondence. If sin is
selfishness, it is conducted at the expense of life. Its wages are
Death—"he that loveth his life," said Christ, "shall lose it."
Yet the paralysis of the moral nature apart from God does not only
depend for its evidence upon theology or even upon history. From the
analogies of Nature one would expect this result as a necessary
consequence. The development of any organism in my direction is dependent
on its environment. A living cell cut off from air will die. A seed-germ
apart from moisture and an appropriate temperature will make the ground
its grave for centuries. Human nature, likewise, is subject to similar
conditions. It can only develop in presence of its environment. No matter
what its possibilities may be, no matter what seeds of thought or virtue,
what germs of genius or of art, lie latent in its breast, until the
appropriate environment present itself the correspondence is denied, the
development discouraged, the most splendid possibilities of life remain
unrealized, and thought and virtue, genius and art, are dead. The true
environment of the moral life is God. Here conscience wakes. Here kindles
love. Duty here becomes heroic; and that righteousness begins to Live
which alone is to live for ever. But if this Atmosphere is not, the
dwarfed soul must perish for mere want of its native air. And its Death is
a strictly natural Death. It is not an exceptional judgment upon Atheism.
In the same circumstances, in the same averted relation to their
environment, the poet, the musician, the artist, would alike perish to
poetry, to music, and to art. Every environment is a cause. Its effect
upon me is exactly proportionate to my correspondence with it. If I
correspond with part of it, part of myself is influenced. If I correspond
with more, more of myself is influenced; if with all, all is influenced.
If I correspond with the world, I become worldly; if with God, I become
Divine. As without correspondence of the scientific man with the natural
environment there could be no Science and no action founded on the
knowledge of Nature, so without communion with the spiritual
Environment there can be no Religion. To refuse to cultivate the
religious relation is to deny to the soul its highest right—the right to a
further evolution.[64]
We have already admitted that he who knows not God may not be a
monster; we cannot say he will not be a dwarf. This precisely, and on
perfectly natural principles, is what he must be. You can dwarf a soul
just as you can dwarf a plant, by depriving it of a full environment. Such
a soul for a time may have "a name to live." Its character may betray no
sign of atrophy. But its very virtue somehow has the pallor of a flower
that is grown in darkness, or as the herb which has never seen the sun, no
fragrance breathes from its spirit. To morality, possibly, this organism
offers the example of an irreproachable life; but to science it is an
instance of arrested development; and to religion it presents the
spectacle of a corpse—a living Death. With Ruskin, "I do not wonder at
what men suffer, but I wonder often at what they lose."
Footnotes
[53] University Sermons, pp.
234-241.
[54] See Bushnell's "New Life."
[55] "Princioles of Biology,"
vol. I. p. 74.
[56] Ibid.
[57] Foster's " Physiology," p.
642.
[58] Op. cit., pp. 88, 89.
[59] "Natural Religion" p. 19.
[60] "Natural Religion," p. 20.
[61] Prof. Flint, "Theism", p.
305.
[62] Martineau. Vide the whole
Symposium on "Influences upon Morality of a Decline in Religious
Belief."—Nineteenth Century, vol i. pp. 331, 531.
[63] Muller: "Christian Doctrine
of Sin." 2nd Ed. vol. i. p. 131.
[64] It would not be difficult to
show, were this the immediate subject, that it is not only a right but a
duty to exercise the spiritual faculties, a duty demanded not by religion
merely, but by science. Upon biological principles man owes his full
development to himself, to nature, and to his fellow-men. Thus Mr. Herbert
Spencer affirms, "The performance of every function is, in a sense, a
moral obligation. It is usually thought that morality requires us only to
restrain such vital activities as, in our present state, are often pushed
to excess, or such as conflict with average welfares special or general;
but it also requires us to carry on these vital activities up to their
normal limits. All the animal functions, in common with all the higher
functions, have, as thus understood, their imperativeness"— "The Data of
Ethics," 2nd Ed., p. 76 |