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THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
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THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
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THE
PERSONALITY OF GOD
BY
JAMES H. SNOWDEN, D.D., LL.D.
Professor of Systematic Theology in the Western
Theological Seminary, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Author of "The World a Spiritual System: An Outline of Metaphysics,"
"The Basal Beliefs of Christianity," "The Psychology of
Religion," "Can We Believe in Immortality?" etc.
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THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1920
AU rights reserved
PREFACE
The great questions that may seem farthest away
from us are often also nearest to us and most deeply
and vitally permeate our life. At the heart of the uni-
verse lies the secret of all existence, and the core of this
secret is the question of the personality of God. All
the interests of our world, the soul and society, law
and order, science and art, philosophy and religion, all
human worth and hope, run their radii to this center to
find their final reality and evaluation. According to
our faith at this point will our universe '' mean in-
tensely and mean good," or be dust and ashes at the
core. And this is not a question that can be shut up
within the theologian's study or the philosopher's brain,
for it is escaping through every chaniael into our litera-
ture and life. It crops out in our fiction and poetry and
in our magazines and daily newspapers, and it lurks
behind all our thoughts or comes out into the open.
Sometimes it is answered in our popular literature eva-
sively or negatively with an assurance that is bom of
superficial thought and of meager acquaintance with
what the great thinkers from Plato down to our time
vii
Vlll PREFACE
have wrought out on this fundamental subject. Ques-
tions of trade and government and even of the great
war shrink in the presence of this question or derive
their ultimate significance and interest from the answer
given to it. This little book is an attempt to answer it
in terms that can be understood by readers that are not
trained in technical theology and philosophy, and it is
hoped that it will help to clarify and confirm the in-
stinctive faith and hope that lie latent in every heart.
Pittsburgh, Pa. J. H. S.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTBE
PAOB
I Introduction i
1. Importance of the subject i
2. Means and methods of solving the problem . . 2
3. The conclusion one of probability 3
4. Our belief in God is constitutional 4
II Personality in Man 7
1. The first reality we know is the soul .... 7
2. This reality is personal spirit 8
3. The complexity of the soul n
4. The soul is subject to degrees and growth ... 13
III The Passage from Man to God 16
1. Human personality is a part and product of the
world 16
2. The Cause of personality in man must be a per-
sonal Power ^7
IV The Witness of the World of Nature to the Per-
sonality OF God 20
1. The world discloses intelligence 20
2. It is a manifestation of sensibility 22
3. It manifests will 23
4. The universe thus manifests a vast if not an in-
finite Person ^3
V The Witness of Religion to the Personality of God 26
1. The witness of the moral nature of man ... 26
2. The witness of the religious nature of man , . 26
ix
X CONTENTS
CHAPTER p^^jg
VI The Witness of Christian Revelation 31
1. The personality of God as revealed in the Hebrew
people 31
2. The witness of Jesus to the personality of God . 33
3. The Christian doctrine of the Trinity .... 36
VII Tentative Construction of the Personality of God 40
1. The analogy of human to divine personality . . 40
2. The processes of the Divine Mind in thought, sen-
sibility, and will 42
3. Trinity in unity in the divine personality ... 47
4. Philosophical views of the divine personality . . 50
VIII Objections to the Personality of God 54
1. Agnosticism asserts that we cannot know ultimate
reality 55
(i) Yet agnosticism knows much about its Un-
knowable 56
(2) Agnosticism is equally fatal to all knowl-
edge 56
(3) The mind is a limited but true organ of
knowledge 57
(4) We can therefore know God in a finite de-
gree 58
2. The allegation that personality is a limitation . . 59
(i) The alleged limitations of self and not-self
and of subject and object 59
(2) Personality is not a limitation but an enor-
mous power 60
(3) The reasoning of Lotze and Bowne on
divine personality 61
IX Alternatives to the Personality of God .... 66
I. Deterministic monism 68
(i) The theory provides no origin for its
system 69
CONTENTS XI
CHAPTEE P^«=
(2) It cannot account for ascent ni evolution . 70
(3) It violates our sense of freedom and re-
sponsibility 70
2. Pantheism 7i
(i) One eternal Substance in evanescent mani-
festations 72
(2) Insuperable difficulties of the doctrine . . 73
(3) Its practical consequences 74
(4) The dread specter of the pantheistic Ab-
solute 74
X The Personality of God in the Light of Our Mod-
ern World 17
1. In the light of science 17
(i) The vastness of the universe 78
(2) The universality of law 80
(3) The theory of evolution 84
2. In the light of philosophy 87
(i) The Cr£?aftV^ £t'o/Mh"ow of Bergson . . . 87
(2) The Pluralistic Universe of William James go
(3) The God the Invisible King of H. G. Wells 92
(4) The profound religiousness of agnostic
thinkers 97
(5) The doctrine of a finite and growing God . loi
(6) The doctrine of a creative, struggling and
suffering God ^02
(7) The problem of the divine transcendence
and the divine immanence I07
3. In the light of the Great War no
(i) Nothing new in this crisis no
(2) It puts no new strain on the doctrines of
divine providence and divine immanence 112
(3) The effect the War is having on our faith
in God -^^3
Xll CONTENTS
CHAPTBB PAGE
(4) The larger meaning of the War sustains
faith in God 118
XI The Value of Personality 124
1. Personality the supreme worth in our human
world 124
2. Personality the only adequate explanation of the
universe 130
3. Personality is the only true and worthy view of
God 134
4. The divine personality is the only explanation and
guarantee of human personality . . . 136
5. The personality of God affords the only complete
satisfaction of all our needs .... 138
THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
IXTRODUCTION
I. The question of the personality of God is one of
fundamental importance. Our answer to it will frame
our conception of God, of his character and worth and
relation to the world ; shape our view of the universe ;
determine the reality and worth of our own person-
ality; measure all our values: decide character and
destiny; and underlie all our psycholog\-, ethics,
economics, sociology', politics, science, philosophy, and
religion. As this central, sovereign Personality of the
universe stands or falls will all finite personalities and
worths abide or wither.
It is therefore no remote, abstract question or
curious speculation we are considering, but one that
comes home to our business and bosoms and enters
into every drop of blood in our veins. Decide it
negativelv. and ever\-thing goes down in the market:
not an acre of ground or a steel beam, much less will
not a human soul, be worth as much as before. De-
I
2 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
cide it positively, and everything goes up in value ; all
our goods will be enhanced and human life will be
enormously raised in rank and crowned with per-
manent worth. The question is now a burning one in
our popular thought and life and has got out into the
street and market, and more and more it will shape and
color our character and conduct and our whole civili-
zation.
2. A word may be said as to the means and
methods of solving the problem, and as to the degree
of assurance we may have in the result reached. It
might seem that the question is so vast and runs so far
beyond all our faculties that it is impossible for us to
solve it or to get any probable or possible light upon
it, and that all our thinking about it is only fanciful
and futile speculation. One quick solution of the
problem is the agnostic answer, that our very faculties
are incapable of reaching or catching any glimpse of
the nature of God, and that we are hopelessly shut
up within our own finite limitations of impotence.
But our minds are made to think about big things,
and the very heavens cannot set bounds to our facul-
ties; and, as for the agnostic answer, it is equally
fatal, as we shall see, to all knowledge and precludes
us from knowing the least as well as the largest things.
The means and methods of solving this problem
INTRODUCTION 3
are the same as those by which we try to answer any
question however great or small. Perception, obser-
vation, comparison, combination of objects into larger
units, tracing of causal links and connections, the use
of analogy, the deduction of principles and their wider
application, constructive thought and imagination, all
the means and methods of experience apply to this
problem and lead us toward its solution. 'Great care
and caution should be exercised as we walk these
dizzy heights. Prejudice and dogmatism, superficial
reasoning and hasty conclusions, should be avoided.
The trustw^orthiness of the human mind, when critically
used, as an organ of knowledge is an assumption which
must underlie this undertaking as it does all our rea-
soning in any field. We must trust something before
we can know anything, and the mind must trust it-
self or it cannot prove or disprove anything. If it
cannot know that it is trustworthy, then it cannot
know that it is untrustworthy, and all knowledge is
at an end. | From a very small base on the earth the
astronomer determines the distance of the sun and
stars, and from a seemingly small area of thought
in the brain the mind dares to think its way up to
God and catch a vision of his nature.
3. The conclusion thus reached is one of probability.
Few of our results are of any other degree of assur-
V
4 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ance, and only in mathematical demonstrations do
we reach absolute certainty, and even this is doubted
by some thinkers. All our practical conclusions rest
on probability of greater or less degree. And such
knowledge answers our practical purposes, and we act
upon it with full confidence. We may not demon-
strate the personality of God so as to put it beyond
the doubt of skeptical or thoughtful minds, but we may
reach it along many converging lines of probability
which meet in a focus of faith that becomes a practical
assurance and guidance in action.
4. Our belief in God and in his personality is much
older and deeper than our reasoning and proofs in con-
nection with it. It is a constitutional instinct and im-
pulse which begins to act with the beginning of human
experience and grows with its growth as a practical
need and necessity. Our inherited and instinctive
sense of dependence and spiritual yearning pushes us
immediately into religious belief and life, just as our
physical hunger impels us to seek food and our mental
faculties feed on knowledge. God is thus a practical
necessity to give meaning and worth, purpose and
power, to our life; and if we found no God waiting to
match and satisfy our needs we would be forced to in-
vent one. \We do not prove the existence of God and
then believe in him, but we first believe in him and then
INTRODUCTION 5
construct arguments to confirm our belief.J Destroy
all our intellectual arguments for God, and we would
believe in him still. Kant, having disproved, as he be-
lieved, the possibility of knowing God through the in-
tellect, fell back on his practical need for God and be-
lieved in him as a necessary moral postulate. God
hath set eternity in our heart, and therefore eternity
comes out of our heart before we reason on the ground
and nature of this belief.
And so we start this argument for the personality of
God with belief in him already embedded in our whole
nature, and this instinctive belief is likely to have its
way whatever may be our logical conclusion. Great
agnostics, such as Spencer and Huxley, themselves
illustrate and prove this fact. However they may
deny God, they find some way of slipping back to him.
Though philosophy should sever the intellectual threads
that bind us to God, yet mysticism has bound us to him
with deeper threads that the knife of philosophy can-
not reach.
But if our belief in a personal God is deeper and
more secure than all our logic, why go through all this
unnecessary reasoning? If this ''intellectual business
is eminently a dust-raising process," why stir up the
needless argument and raise the dust? Because the
human mind also has an instinct for rational inquiry
6 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
and confirmation. It cannot rest content even with
the deepest instincts of the heart, but as these emerge
into the field of conscious, logical analysis they must
submit to this process and justify themselves at the
bar of the brain as well as in the mystic chamber of the
heart. Our fundamental needs are thus rationalized
and confirmed, and they are also clarified and purified,
controlled and guided. Our constitutional belief in a
personal God passes through this process and comes
out confirmed and intensified. Our theistic faith may
at first be the mystic feeling of the heart, but it is also
at last the reasoned conviction of the mind and then our
total faith is deeper and stronger.
Let knowledge grow from more to more,
But more of reverence in us dwell;
That mind and soul according well.
May make one music as before.
But vaster.
II
PERSONALITY IN MAN
We begin our investigation as close to ourselves as
possible, down on the ground of personal experience,
as the astronomer, when he is about to cast his measur-
ing line out among the stars, takes his stand on the
ground under his feet.
I. The first bit of reality we indubitably know is our
own soul, self or consciousness. We know this by im-
mediate awareness, or intuition. External objects are
known to us through the mediation of the senses, which
are of the nature of colored lenses that impose the sec-
ondary qualities of matter upon these objects and
thereby give them their sensational appearances. A
change in the senses, as in the retina of the eye or the
tympanum of the ear, would thereby effect a change in
the sensational nature of the object and might even
transform it profoundly. Sense perception thus gives
us knowledge of reality at second-hand, or knowledge
that has passed through a process of transmission and
transformation. Not so with our knowledge of the
7
8 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
self. We look into our consciousness, not through
senses, but directly without any transmitting and trans-
forming medium. We are immediately aware of the
self, of its states and activities, and there is thus no
room for error or perversion in a process of transmis-
sion. The self is at once subject and object with noth-
ing thrust between them, like the senses, to dim or blur
the vision. Consciousness becomes self -consciousness,
the knowing subject and the known object are identical
in one and the same self.
Such knowledge is the clearest and surest we can
have. Its stream is not mixed and muddied with the
sediment of the senses or perverted with their trans-
forming processes, but it is direct vision and pure light.
We thus know ourselves better than we know anything
else. Here is our first knowledge of reality. It is not
knowledge of a phenomenon, as is our knowledge of
the external world which consists of appearances or
symbolic representations of things, but our self-knowl-
edge is knowledge of the noumenon, of immediate real-
ity, or of the thing in itself. We have in our own
self a bit of ultimate reality, and this leads us strongly
toward the conclusion that we have in the soul a sample
of all reality, one of the tiny bricks of which the uni-
verse is built.
2, We now note that this first piece of reality is
PERSONALITY IN MAN 9
personal spirit or is constituted as personality. Few
words have been the center and subject of so much con-
troversy and confusion of thought as personality; and
as it is fundamental in our discussion we offer the fol-
lowing definition: Personality is the distinctive state
of a person; and a person is an individual being en-
dowed with consciousness consisting of perceptive and
reflective thought, sensibility, and responsible will.
We are immediately aware of these three fundamental
faculties or modes of activity fused into the unity of
our consciousness. We think, we feel, we will ; we do
these three things, and we never can do more or less.
In our consciousness we are always thinking and feel-
ing and willing simultaneously. Any one of these
modes may at any one moment be predominant and
seem to submerge the others, but the three are always
acting together, though in varying degrees and com-
binations.
The intellect is the knowing power of the mind, by
which we are aware of our mental faculties and pro-
cesses by immediate intuition and of external objects
by the medium of the senses. The streams of sensa-
tion pour in upon us through the senses, and then the
mind works up these raw materials into objects, or
casts the fluid material in its own mental molds, and
thus makes the products of its thought. In this pro-
10 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
cess the faculties of perception, apperception, associa-
tion, memory, imagination, and reasoning are active
and contribute each its own pecuHar element to the
product, and thus the intellect, or person, knows.
Feeling is a general state of excitement that is ex-
perienced by the soul on occasion of its cause. Sensa-
tions are the result of the direct action of objects on the
senses, or nerves, and emotions are feelings excited by
ideas or the presence of objects. It is tl?e feelings that
create our interest in objects and give us our sense of
their value. Without the play of our feelings objects
of knowledge would present to us the aspect of color-
less reality, and one thing would not mean more to us
than another; but our feelings invest them with vari-
ous degrees of value so that they appeal to us with
varying degrees of interest. Feelings are also the
motives that pour as a stream upon the will and move
it to action. We never act until we feel, and the vol-
ume and intensity of the feeling determine the degree
of decision and energy with which we act.
The will is the soul in action or the soul controlling
itself. The stream of ideas and feelings that pour into
consciousness is not an ungovernable flood on which
the self drifts helplessly, like a log or a boat without
rudder or engine on a swift current, but the soul has
a rudder and an engine by which it can steer and drive
PERSONALITY IN MAN II
its boat to its own destination. It chooses and acts,
not arbitrarily or under the compulsion of necessary
forces, but by its own free choice under the play of mo-
tives. These motives, however, are not dead and fixed
weights dropped upon the soul from without, which
necessarily determine it, but are subject to the soul's
own judgment and evaluation. We make and choose
the motives that move us, and this fact is the very cen-
ter and pivot of our free agency and responsibility.
The will is thus the spinal column and unifying power
of personality, the throne of this kingdom, the crown
and captain of the self. The soul with all its faculties
and activities is a unitary organism in which the whole
enters into each operation, and it is characterized in its
totality by growth, habit, law, liberty, purpose, and re-
sponsibility. It is this unitary self that constitutes per-
sonality.
3. Yet the soul is a very complex and wealthy world,
its unity diverging into variety and deep distinctions.
It has a varied and rich capacity of perceiving and
feeling and acting on different kinds or aspects of the
complex manifold of reality. When acting on objects
in their intellectual nature it has knowledge ; when act-
ing on them in their esthetic nature it has a sense of
beauty; when acting on them in their ethical nature it
has a sense of duty ; and when acting on them in their
12 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
relations to God it is exercising its sense of worship
and experiencing religion.
The complexity of the soul further consists of a
trinity in unity. One cleavage of its unity into trinity
is found in its threefold division of thought, sensibility,
and will, which we have already noted. The soul acts
in these three constitutional ways which are distinct
and yet cohere in a deeper unity. Another and per-
haps more significant trinitarian cleavage of the unity
of the soul is into subject and object and their relation.
In self -consciousness each one knows himself, first, as
the conscious subject which is thinking ; second, as the
conscious object which is thought about ; and third, as
the conscious relation and unity of the two. This trin-
ity makes the soul sufficient in itself for maintaining a
conscious life, constituting it as a kind of society ca-
pable of self-examination, meditation, communion, and
a whole inner life of its own. Without this constitu-
tion the soul would be incapable of self -consciousness
and reflection and would be reduced to the level of ani-
mal objective awareness. This constitution is the
foundation and beginning of the social nature and life
of the soul, unfolds in the social life of human society,
and reaches its full completion and satisfaction in fel-
lowship with God. This trinity in unity of the human
soul will be found to be of fundamental significance
PERSONALITY IN MAN I3
when we come to consider the constitution of the per-
sonality of God.
4. Personality is also subject to degree and growth.
It begins in the human being as a germ in the child,
unfolds into its full-blown powers in the man, and ex-
ists in a wide range of degrees from the peasant to the
philosopher. It rises into full tide and glow of thought
and feeling in consciousness in a state of excitement,
then subsides into dullness and drowsiness, and finally
sinks into the subconscious in sleep. This subcon-
sciousness is a great deep, the undergroimd world and
night life of the soul, where all our memories and ex-
periences are stored, to emerge at call into conscious-
ness; and it may be much deeper and larger than our
conscious self, just as seven-eighths of an iceberg is
submerged in the sea. Though we know our own self
better than anything else, yet it is full of vast unex-
plored deeps and unfathomable mysteries. " We at-
tribute far too small dimensions to the rich empire of
the self, if we omit from it the unconscious region
which resembles a dark continent. The world which
our memory peoples, only reveals in its revolution a
few luminous points at a time ; while its immense and
teeming mass remains in shade. . . . We daily see the
conscious passing into unconsciousness; and take no
notice of the bass accompaniment which our fingers
14 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
continue to play, while our attention is directed to fresh
musical effects."
Below personality in man we find subpersonality in
animals, and this descending and ascending scale log-
ically runs up, as we shall later see, into superpersonal-
ity in God.
Our knowledge of this constitution of the soul, it
may again be said, is not a product of our sense percep-
tion or of any kind of inference, but is an intuition or
an act and fact of immediate awareness, the identity of
the conscious subject and the conscious object, which
is the primary and most certain knowledge we have.
The soul, or self, may be subjected to fierce criticism
designed to prove its instability and unreality, a mere
bubble floating on the stormy sea of the world, as F. H.
Bradley attempts to do in his Appearance and Reality;
but the saniiC dialectic that thus dissolves the soul dis-
solves its own argument along with the soul and leaves
no result; and the fact remains that the soul not only
survives this criticism but perdures through all vicissi-
tudes, and however violently it may be strained under
the stress of inner experience or shocked by the impact
of the outer world, it abides as a unitary consciousness
and identical self.
This self is the starting point and foundation of all
our knowledge from the lowest and least up to the
PERSONALITY IN MAN I5
greatest truth. The inner world of the soul is a min-
iature copy of the great world of the universe and of
God himself. We see things, not only as they are,
but also as we are, and what we see without depends
on what we are within.
Watch narrowly
The demonstration of a truth, its birth,
And you trace back the effluence to its spring
And source within us; where broods radiance vast.
To be elicited ray by ray.
— Browning.
Ill
THE PASSAGE FROM MAN TO GOD
We are now prepared to make the passage from man
to God as the astronomer leaps from his tiny arc on the
earth to the sun and stars. In all our science we are
constantly stepping up on small things to things incon-
ceivably great, even from the finite to the infinite, and
we are only following this principle in passing from the
personality of man to the personality of God. When
once we find a center we do not hesitate to sweep the
circle, however long its radius and vast its circumfer-
ence.
I. The first fact to note as the initial step in the
argument at this point is that human personality is a
part and product of the world. It is self -evidently not
a self -existing and eternal being, but a finite entity that
had a beginning and a cause. It arose in a germinal
form out of the womb of the world and by a process of
growth attained its full development. It is therefore
an effect, and this origin is written all over and through
its constitution. That human personality is a product
i6
THE PASSAGE FROM MAN TO GOD 1 7
calling" for a sufficient cause is one of the most solid and
certain facts of our knowledge.
2. It is an intuition and axiom of all our thinking
that every event must have a cause, every product has
sprung from a power. This is a self-evident truth
which cannot be proved by any logical process because
it is an ultimate unanalyzable principle that cannot be
resolved into simpler elements. It is more certain than
any proof that could be brought either for it or against
it. All our reasoning does not strengthen it, and all
our speculative doubts do not weaken it. Try as we
will we cannot conceive of anything springing into
existence without a cause back of it. We may not
know w^hat the cause behind an event is, but we know it
is there. And the cause must be sufficient to account
for the whole of the effect, otherwise there is a part of
the effect that is not accounted for, and something has
then come into existence without a cause.
The application of this principle to personality in
man is now direct and conclusive. Man being a per-
sonal product, the cause of man must also be a per-
sonal Power. The simple statement of this step shows
its logical soundness and necessity, and there is no es-
caping it. The Power that produced man must at the
least and lowest be personal, whatever the process,
whether by evolution or otherwise, by which the effect
1 8 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
was caused. If this Power is not personal, then it has
produced in man something higher than itself, and
thereby the cause falls short of the effect and something
has come out of nothing. The effect always shows
what was potentially in the cause and n«ver can go be-
yond it; the stream, to use the classical illustration,
never can rise higher than its source. The personality
we find in the world is therefore a proof that there
must at least be an equal kind and degree of being in
the cause of the world, and thus we mount with sure
footing at one step from the personality of man to the
personality of God.
This argument is short and old, but its simplicity and
the fact that it has stood the test of time are its
strength, and it has lost nothing of its certainty amidst
all our modern knowledge. [^ It is true that we may be
staggered by this momentous conclusion and think that
a basis apparently so narrow and frail cannot bear a
weight so tremendous. But the astronomer does not
fear that the minute arc of earth under his feet will
crumble when he rests on it the whole mass and magni-
tude of the heavens, and the mathematician does not
lose faith in his curves and equations when they sweep
out into infinity. The validity of a conclusion is not
affected by its vastness when its logical basis is sound.
The principle of causation is the surest logical basis in
THE PASSAGE FROM MAN TO GOD 1 9
our mental constitution, and we should not doubt its
validity and verdict when it carries us straight from
our own personality to the personality of God. Our
human personality reflects the divine personality as the
tiny dewdrop mirrors the mighty sun.
Take all in a word : the truth in God's breast
Lies trace for trace upon ours impressed:
Though he is so bright and we so dim.
We are made in his image to witness him.
— Browning.
IV
THE WITNESS OF THE WORLD OF NATURE TO THE
PERSONALITY OF GOD
The world of nature, on any philosophical view, is
an outgrowth and manifestation of the First Cause
that underlies it. It is a product on a vast scale. Does
this product reveal in any degree the nature of the
Power producing it ? Can we read backward from the
effect to its cause? This principle underlies all our
science and reasoning and is trustworthy on the largest
as on the smallest scale.
The world bears witness to the personality of God
because it discloses intelligence, sensibility, and will in-
wrought into its whole fabric and constitution. This
fact has been written out in great and ever-growing
libraries of books and -can here only be hinted at.
I. That the world is orderly, intelligible, and pur-
poseful is the principle that underlies and guides the
whole search of science, and all science confirms it as its
final result. The astronomer finds that he can under-
stand the heavens and read them like a book. xThe vast
expanse of the sky is the real astronomy which he reads
THE WITNESS OF THE WORLD OF NATURE 21
and then copies upon the tiny pages of his book. The
geologist, physicist, chemist, and all other scientists are
doing the same thing, each in his own field. They find
that the whole web of the world of nature, down to its
finest filaments, is woven of intellectual threads and is a
tissue of mental ideas and relations. They have abso-
lute confidence in its intellectuality down into its deep-
est depth and darkest corner and to its last atom and
electron. They believe that they could understand it
through and through if they could get at it or bring it
under the power of their faculties. There is not a
particle of unreason or mental absurdity in the whole
universe. The world is thus found to be a mental con-
struction that reveals the presence and working of a
Mind as certainly as a book reveals to us the mind of
its author. Intellect is one of the essential constituents
of personality, and it shines out through the whole face
of nature. In the eloquent words of Dr. James Mar-
tineau : " What have we found by moving out along all
the radii into the infinite? That the whole is woven
together in one sublime tissue of intellectual relations,
geometrical and physical — the realized original, of
which all our science is but a partial copy. That sci-
ence is the crowning product and supreme expression
of human reason. . . . Unless therefore it takes more
mental faculty to construe the universe than to cause it,
22 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
to read the book of nature than to write it, we must
more than ever look upon its subHme face as the living
appeal of thought to thought."
2. In a similar way the world is found to be a mani-
festation of sensibility. It stirs every emotion of our
souls, or it is a million-stringed harp which evokes and
responds to all the feelings of our complex emotional
nature. It is stamped with majesty and sublimity,
richly carved and painted, embroidered and jeweled
with beauty, and saturated and drenched with music.
Joy suffuses the world of life. Nature even strikes
deeper ethical notes. At least the germs of honesty
and righteousness are exhibited in the law and order
and reward and retribution that are imbedded in the
constitution of the world. Ethical sensibility comes to
its fullest expression in nature in its altruism. Mother
love is a strong and beautiful affection in the higher an-
imals, and the altruistic principle runs down into the
primal cells of life. As Henry Drummond has so
strikingly shown, the struggle for life is more than
matched by the struggle for the life of others, begin-
ning with the first division of a cell, and evolution is
thus not simply a tale of battle, with nature " red in
tooth and claw with ravin," but it is also a love story as
beautiful as any romance. /And thus nature leads us
to see in it a great Artist, and to feel beating in it the
y
THE WITNESS OF THE WORLD OF NATURE 27,
heart of a great Lover. And, as feeling is another
constituent element of personality, we again mount our
nature up to the personality of God.
3. The world also manifests itself to us as will.
When we press on it at any point, it presses back
against us, just as one hand may oppose the other
hand, will acting in both; and the harder we press
against it the harder it presses against us, acting like
another will opposing our own. Will is essentially ac-
tivity, and nature is universally and ceaselessly active
in all its masses, molecules, atoms, and electrons. Will
is energy, and all the energies of the world act as man-
ifestations of will. We never catch nature except
when it is doing something and acting like a will.
Gravitation operates like a mighty muscle or system of
muscles, and all the energies of nature admit of the
same interpretation. Will acts toward ends, it is pur-
poseful, and all the energies of the world are teleologi-
cal, working according to plan and purpose. The
whole system of the world appears to be a living will,
and the world is thus pervaded by this third constituent
of personality.
4. As intelligence, sensibility, and will are fused into
the unity of consciousness, so are the intelligence, sensi-
bility, and will manifested in the world fused into the
grand unity of the universe. The soul, as we have
24 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
seen, is marked by growth, law, habit, and purpose,
and these are inwrought into the whole constitution of
nature. And thus the universe manifests itself to us
in terms of personality, or as a vast if not infinite Per-
son. As the soul is a little world, so the world is a
great Soul.
It may be said, however, that the world does not pre-
sent the appearance of a person, as does our body or-
ganized as the manifestation and instrument of the
soul. Where is there any slightest semblance of or-
gans, body, brain, and nerves, in the world? But life
does not always organize for itself the same form or
type of body. Vegetable life assumes various shapes,
animal life breaks into myriad bodily forms, and man
has developed his own type of body. God does not
manifest his spirit in a body after any of these types
because he does not need such a body and transcends
it. But none the less he does manifest in the world
his intelligence and sensibility and will in their unitary
nature and operation, and thereby reveals himself as
clearly, and accomplishes his purposes as fully, as he
could do through a body organized after the type of
our own ; rather such a body would be an encumbrance
to him and infinitely inferior to the universe in which
he is immanent.
The world thus confronts us with a threefold aspect
THE WITNESS OF THE WORLD OF NATURE 25
of thought, sensibility, and will, and these point with di-
rect and inescapable logic to the manifold nature of the
First Cause and the complex personality of God.
So, the All-Great were the All-Loving too —
So, through the thunder comes a human voice
Saying, " O heart I made, a heart beats here !
Face, my hands fashioned, see it in myself !
Thou hast no power nor mayst conceive of mine.
But love I gave thee, with myself to love."
— Browning.
V
THE WITNESS OF RELIGION TO THE PERSONALITY
OF GOD
We have already seen that our human personality
reflects the personality of God, but we now pass to the
reflection of the divine personality in our human world
in its moral and spiritual nature.
1. The moral nature of man imposes on him a sense
of obligation of right, which implies a Law-giver and
falls to the ground without this support and final vali-
dation. Conscience becomes an empty voice and mock-
ery in the infinite void of the universe without a Su-
preme Court and Judge. Through all the ages rolls
the solemn voice of human conscience witnessing to a
moral Person on the throne of the world. "If death
gives final discharge," says Dr. Martineau, " alike to
the sinner and the saint, we are warranted in saying
that conscience has told more lies than it has ever called
to their account."
2. The religious nature of man is a still clearer and
more convincing witness. Through all ages and in all
lands the whole earth has been one great altar from
26
THE WITNESS OF RELIGION 2/
which has risen worship by humanity. The deepest
feehng of humanity is its sense of dependence on God,
and its greatest need and most urgent cry was voiced
by Augustine : '' O God, thou hast made us for thyself,
and we cannot rest until we rest in thee." While in
some forms, notably in the pantheistic religions of
India, religion has lapsed into impersonal views of God,
yet in its most general, and especially in its highest
and purest forms, it has borne witness in the clearest
and intensest convictions and voices to his personality ;
and even pantheistic religions are found, more or less
indirectly and unconsciously, to be slipping into faith in
and worship of some personal form of God. All the
elements and activities of religion demand a personal
God as their object and fulfillment. Dependence, pen-
itence, faith, obedience, fellowship, love, loyalty in
service and sacrifice, trust in life and in death — these
are meaningless except as they find their appropriate
object and satisfaction in a personal God and Father.
AVorship cannot be resolved into mere wonder at the
majesty and mystery of the universe according to Her-
bert Spencer's theory, or into John Morley's " feel-
ings for the incommensurable things," or J. R. Seeley's
" permanent and habitual admiration," or Edward
Caird's ''a man's attitude to the universe," or Mat-
thew Arnold's " morality touched with emotion."
28 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
Men simply cannot in any legitimate sense pray to and
worship an '' Unknown Power " or Infinite Conundrum
or Eternal Interrogation Point. Such an exercise of
the soul would be bitter mockery. '
In his experience man finds a personal God in prayer
and worship, fellowship and obedience. He seeks him
by a deep primal instinct and impulse which drives him
to God as hunger and thirst drive him to food and
water. He speaks to him with the confidence of a child
to a father and pours out his soul to him. He con-
fesses to him his open faults and secret sins, and be-
seeches him for pardon, purity, and peace. He looks
foi indications of God's guidance and follows the
gleam. " Thou wilt light my candle." He catches
from God visions of right and goodness, ideals of per-
fection, of duty, of service and sacrifice, of battles to
be fought against hosts of darkness, and of a kingdom
of truth and light, of brotherhood and love, to be built;
and he girds himself up for the battle and throws him-
self into the service and pours out of his heart the last
drop of devotion and sacrifice. His very sorrows only
drive him closer to the throne of grace as he falls on
the great world's altar stairs which slope through dark-
ness up to God.
Religion is one of the deepest, widest, and most pow-
THE WITNESS OF RELIGION 29
erful and permanent facts of the world. Professor Al-
fred Marshall opens his great work, The Principles of
Economics, with the statement that "the two great
forming agencies of the world's history have been the
religious and the economic. Here and there the ardor
of the military or the artistic spirit has been for a while
predominant: but religious and economic influences
have nowhere been displaced from the front rank even
for a time ; and they have nearly always been more im-
portant than all others put together." This religious
nature of man finds instinctive and necessary expres-
sion, and the great religions of the world are its out-
growth and fruit.
Religion, then, is not a superstition that is waning
and withering in the light of our modern knowledge,
but it is a constitutional principle in humanity which
grows with all human growth and comes to its highest
and purest forms and greatest worth in our highest
civilization and culture. Science and philosophy can-
not kill it, but only plant it more deeply than ever in
the world. Reason did not create it, and reason cannot
destroy it. It has given birth to all that is noblest and
best in our life. It is the vital breath of this world and
the hope of the next. All other instincts of our nature
find their appropriate satisfaction. Shall the instinct
30 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
of the bird and the bee be true, and this instinct of
the human heart be false ? Unless religion is all a lie
it is a true witness to the personality of God.
I go to prove my soul !
I see my way as birds their trackless way.
I shall arrive; what time, what circuit first,
I ask not : but unless God send his hail
Or blinding fireballs, sleet or stifling snow,
In some time, his good time, I shall arrive:
He guides me and the bird. In his good time !
— Browning.
VI
THE WITNESS OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION
That Christianity is the highest and purest form of
rehgion will be denied by few, and that it is the uni-
versal and final religion is affirmed by its adherents.
While it has universal elements in the universal sov-
ereignty and Fatherhood of God and in his immanence
in the world as " the inspiration of the Almighty that
giveth understanding to man," " the true light that
lighteth every man coming into the world," yet it was
specially introduced into the world through a particular
people.
I. The Hebrews were endowed with religious gen-
ius, as the Greeks were with intellectual and artistic
gifts, and the Romans with political organization and
power. They were the most sensitive race in the world
to the presence of God, the mountain peak that caught
the light of his face earlier than other people and re-
flected it down upon the world. Their great prophets
in the Old Testament times, Moses and Isaiah, stood
on the tip of this peak and saw the light so that their
own faces shone and men saw in them the reflection of
31
32 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
Jehovah. They looked at God face to face and told
the world what they saw. In the New Testament the
comparatively dim and reflected light of the Old burst
clear and full from the direct presence of God in Christ
and was further reflected in the teaching and work of
the apostles. John and Paul stood close to the Light
of the World and caught its beams and threw them far
and wide out over succeeding centuries.
All this light has been gathered into the Bible as into
a focus, where it shines to this day. The whole essen-
tial spiritual experience of the Hebrew people, from
their earliest prophets down to their latest apostles, has
been rcorded in this Book which transmits it to us and
recreates it in us in words which " are spirit and are
life."
The outstanding fact in this inspired people and in
their inspired Book is the personality of God. Abra-
ham, the father of the faithful and the founder of this
remarkable race, born and bred in the midst of heathen
idolatry and polytheism, saw and seized the great truth
of the one true and living God and followed the gleam
of this light out of his native country into the promised
land, where this truth was to take root and grow into
the religion that is now beginning to dominate the
world. The name by which God revealed himself to
Moses, " I am that I am," intensified to the sharpest
THE WITNESS OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION 33
point the divine personality and drove it deep into the
consciousness and worship of the whole Hebrew race.
The prophets of the chosen people, through all their
racial and national vicissitudes, development in relig-
ious experience and political power, temptations and
tears, trials and triumphs, captivity and deliverance,
never lost sight of Jehovah as their personal God and
Redeemer; and the whole history of the Hebrews pre-
pared the way for the fullness of time when the Mes-
siah, the fulfillment of their prophecies and prayers and
passionate hopes, came into the world.
2. In Jesus Christ we have the Messiah whose divine
nature and Saviourhood are established by many
proofs. His matchless character, combining into bal-
anced poise and power and perfection all virtues and
graces, even those that seem somewhat irreconcilable
and contradictory; his wonderful life, compressed into
one shining line, " who went about doing good " ; his
mighty works in mastering nature, the sparks of his
divinity; his compassion and tenderness and forgive-
ness that drew people of all classes and conditions to
himself; his spirit of service and sacrifice, culminating
in his sacrificial death on the cross ; the great seal that
was put upon his divinity in his resurrection and ascen-
sion; the Christian church, which is his mighty monu-
ment; and all the Christian centuries that date their cal-
34 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
endar from his birth and revolve around him as their
pivotal center — all this light converges on him and
declares him with power to be the Son of God.
And now Jesus bears witness to the personality of
God in his experience and teaching and in his own per-
son. In his experience he held constant fellowship
with the Father, ever called him '' my Father," and
declared : '' The Father hath not left me alone." In
his teaching he taught men to say : " Our Father,"
and ever presented God in the light of his Fatherhood.
In his own person he was filled with the fullness of
God. and was the express image of his person and the
brightness of his glory. Jesus is the revelation of God,
the incarnation of his nature, the unveiling of his
glory, the sunrise and sunburst of God. Jesus is God
come down so that we can see him. " And w^e beheld
his glory, glory as of the only begotten from the
Father, full of grace and truth." All the glory of God
that could be crowded into human flesh and soul was in
him and shone out of him. And so he stands trans-
figured before us, steeped and soaked in the splendor of
God. In seeing him we see the Father. Jesus is
thus a visible image of God, and therefore the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is a personal God.
Jesus was not only a human person, but he also es-
caped human limitations, transcended human con-
THE WITNESS OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION 35
sciousness, and slipped away into the infinite and eter-
nal. His personality had divine capacities and con-
tents. He lived in space and time and yet transcended
them. '' Before Abraham was, I am." " I and my
Father are one." '' He that hath seen me hath seen
the Father." These words, that would be absurd and
indicate insanity or imposture on other lips, calmly fell
from his as transparent sincerity and truth and were
perfectly natural to him. He stepped up upon the
throne of the universe and sat in judgment upon the
world, and yet such an act was not infinite presumption
and folly in him, but was only his proper right and
dignity.
The problem of the person of Christ is one of the
profoundest in Christian theology, and is so mysterious
that it is for us insoluble. No theory of it we can con-
struct can be carried through without encountering
grave embarrassments. That he is both human and
divine is the teaching of Scripture and the verdict of
the ages. We see him as a person of like passions with
ourselves, and we see him escaping these limitations
into the divine. His personality, then, cannot be con-
structed on and confined to our human pattern. His
consciousness cannot be crowded into our human mold.
He transcends us and shoots above us into the infinite.
His personality, therefore, is of a higher type than
36 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ours, and again we are approaching the conception of
superpersonality which we have already encountered.
3. The complex personality of God is set forth in
the Scriptures in the threefold constitution of the
Godhead as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The doc-
trine of the Trinity is not specifically mentioned in
the Scriptures, but the fact is imbedded in every part
of them. It begins in a germinal form in the Old
Testament and unfolds into clearer forms down to the
end of the New Testament. Each of these Persons is
represented as distinct from the others, and yet together
they constitute one Godhead. The personal names and
pronouns, I and thou, he and him, are constantly ap-
plied to them, and never are they represented as im-
personal forces or influences. They speak and act as
persons in all their relations to one another and to the
world. Of course, the doctrine must be kept clear of
tritheism, for polytheism in any form was foreign and
abhorrent to Hebrew thought, as it is to our modern
philosophy. It is also true that the word person is un-
fortunate and misleading in some of its implications as
implying human limitations and a separate substance.
The three Persons in the Trinity are truly Persons in
the sense that each one has a degree of independent
thought and feeling and will, and yet these three cohere
in the higher synthesis of one unitary spirit and life,
THE WITNESS OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION 37
which is the complex personality of the triune God.
The personality of God is thus of an infinitely higher
type than our human personality and leads us to the
conception of superpersonality, which will come up
later for fuller discussion. We shall then see that the
doctrine of the Trinity is not an outworn and absurd
dogma of mediaeval or ancient ecclesiastical speculation,
but adumbrates a distinction imbedded in the consti-
tution of God and is the necessary condition of his in-
finite Hfe. As Dr. Samuel Harris states it in his work
on God Creator and Lord of All: " The Trinity proves
itself to be, in its essential contents, the only worthy
and satisfactory philosophical conception of God and
of his revelation of himself in the finite. As revealed
in the God in Christ reconciling the world unto himself,
it is essential to supplement the half truths of philos-
ophy, to clear away its seeming contradictions, to har-
monize the philosophical conception of God with that
of religious faith and the revelation in the Bible, and
to give a reasonable, comprehensive, and self-consistent
idea of him."
In the same line of thought Dr. J. R. IlHngworth
writes in his Fersonality Human and Divine: " The
Unitarian imagines his conception of God, as an undif-
ferentiated unity, to be simpler than the Christian.
But it cannot really be translated into thought. It can-
38 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
not be thought out. Whereas the Christian doctrine,
however mysterious, moves in the direction, at least, of
conceivabihty, for the simple reason that it is the very
thing towards w^hich our own personality points. Our
own personality is triune; but it is potential, unreal-
ized triunity, which is incomplete in itself, and must
go beyond itself for completion, as, for example, in the
family. If, therefore, we are to think of God as per-
sonal, it must be by what is called the method of emi-
nence (zna eminentice) — the method, that is, which
considers God as possessing, in transcendent perfec-
tion, the same attributes which are imperfectly pos-
sessed by man. He must, therefore, be pictured as
One whose triunity has nothing potential or unrealized
about it ; whose triune elements are eternally actualized,
by no outw^ard influence, but from within ; a Trinity in
Unity; a social God, with all the conditions of personal
existence internal to himself."
It is true that this doctrine launches us out upon
deeps our longest plummet line cannot fathom. God
is infinitely greater than we can know or conceive;
but the infinitude of God does not impair the validity
and value of our finite knowledge of him. " Lo,
these are but the outskirts of his ways : and how small
a whisper do we hear of him ! But the thunder of his
power who can understand? "
THE WITNESS OF CHRISTIAN REVELATION 39
i
^ Christian revelation, then, in all its elements, history
and development, prophet and apostle, sacrifice and
symbol, psalm and proverb, gospel and epistle, in all
the books of the Bible in Old Testament and New,
bears witness to the personality of God ; and all its light
is converged on Jesus, the Christ, who stands forth en-
veloped in its splendor and crowned as the Son who is
the express image and bright glory of the personal God.
I say the acknowledgement of God in Christ
Accepted by thy reason, solves for thee
All questions in the earth and out of it,
And has so far advanced thee to be wise.
— Browning.
VII
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION OF THE PERSONALITY
OF GOD
We have now reached a point where we may attempt
a tentative construction of the personality of God.
The goal lies infinitely beyond us, and yet we cannot
escape the desire and endeavor to catch a glimpse of it
or at least to throw our thoughts out toward it. The
effort is legitimate and necessary, but in this attempt
we need to restrain any dogmatic presumption and ex-
ercise the utmost caution and modesty.
I. The analogy of the human to the divine person-
ality gives us a clue to follow. We have already seen
the basic identity of personality in man and in God, and
this stands as the foundation of our reasoning at this
point. The personality of God is the cause of person-
ality in man, and cause and effect are necessarily of like
nature. Cause and effect, how^ever, may differ widely
in degree. No effect shows the whole capacity and
contents of the cause. A single beam of light is not
the whole sun. Personality in man is only a gleam of
personality in God. God is infinite in nature and
40
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 4l
power, and therefore human personaUty only reflects a
finite image of the divine personaHty. It is true that
we must hold that human personality is similar in na-
ture to the divine personality as far as it goes; but it
goes only a little way, and the human is only a tiny copy
and pale reflection of the divine.
Personality, as we have seen, is subject to growth
and is found in widely different stages of development
and degrees of mental power. There is an enormous
difference between the soul of an infant and that of a
mature man, and between that of a savage and that of
a philosopher.^ Vastly greater differences separate
the mind of man from such soul-life and subpersonality
as we see manifested in animals. The mind of even
the highest animal falls immeasurably below the mind
of man. While it exhibits degrees of intelligence, sen-
sibility, and will, yet these are in such a rudimentary
stage that they do not rise into self-conscious thought
and free will, and so do not reach personality. Ani-
mals are at best only partial selves, and so belong to
a lower order of beings than man. But now, as there
are orders of being below man, are there not also or-
^ At this and at one or two other places in these pages a few
paragraphs have been taken with modifications from the author's
The World a Spiritual System and Can We Believe in Immortal-
ity? (both published by The Macmillan Company, New York),
where some of these points are more fully considered.
42 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ders far above him? May there not be faculties of
mind and heart higher and more powerful than any we
know, and may not these be organized into personality
that lies infinitely above the level of human personal-
ity? It is not at all likely that the human soul is the
topmost and ultimate blossom on the mystic Tree of
Life; rather we may think of it as only a bud or germ
which points to a perfect Mind or Spirit in which all
human limitations and imperfections are transcended,
so that intelligence is omniscience and will is omnipo-
tence. The vastness and complexity and mystery of
the universe indicate a causative Mind which is incon-
ceivably if not infinitely greater than our own. The
divine Mind, or God, then, rises above the human mind
into personality which is infinitely higher in its facul-
ties and organization. Such a Mind transcends our
mind as ours transcends that of an animal or vege-
table.
2. We cannot conceive such a Mind, because it lies
above the level of our experience, but we are not with-
out some chart and compass in launching out upon this
deep. The divine Mind cannot be anything lower than
our consciousness, but must lie above it, and we natu-
rally attempt to gain some hint of it by removing the
imperfections and limitations from the human mind
and projecting it toward the infinite and absolute. Of
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 43
course we must at once set aside all imperfections and
faults due to our human sin. Sin has deeply infected
and perverted our human personality, blunting its intel-
lectual faculties and corrupting its passions and weak-
ening its will, but no such stain or shadow rests upon
the personality of God.
Does God think and feel and will as we think and
feel and will? We must believe that he thinks and
feels and wills, but not after our finite fashion or de-
gree. His thinking is to be conceived as being free
from all human limitations. Our intellect is limited
in all its operations, so that we never can reach the
utmost bound of truth. Every problem it solves only
brings into view a hundred others that are not solved,
so that its conscious ignorance grows faster than its
knowledge. However vast the circle of light of its ex-
panding knowledge, vaster still is the outlying sphere
of darkness that shuts it in. Doubt also constitution-
ally inheres in human knowledge, and no human
thinker can escape from doubt any more than he can
escape from his own shadow or slip out of his own
skin. Again, the human mind uses the instrumental
processes of sense perception and discursive reasoning
by which it gathers facts and builds up knowledge, and
thus its knowledge of objective reality is only mediate
and not intuitive. We can imagine all these limita-
44 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
tions Upon our human mind widened out indefinitely,
and in perfect personality all such limits would be com-
pletely removed or transcended and this would give us
omniscience in the mind of God. God knows all things
by immediate awareness or intuition. '' His under-
standing is infinite."
Does the divine mind think in the intuitions or men-
tal forms of space and time as we do? God projects
his thoughts upon the field of our consciousness in these
forms, but are the forms purely subjective in our
minds, or are they also forms of his mind? It would
be rash to give a dogmatic answer to this question, and
here even speculation grows thin to the vanishing point.
We cannot affirm that God thinks in terms of space or
projects his thoughts in spatial forms, and it may be
that this form lies wholly within the field of our human
consciousness. But, on the other hand, as our minds
are copies of his, it may be that the spatial form we
experience is the shadow or symbolic representative of
some corresponding though transcendent form in his
experience. The temporal form inheres more closely
than the spatial in the reality of the mind itself, its ex-
periences being successive but not spatial. Our tem-
poral experience depends on the length of our time-
span, or the period of consciousness during which suc-
cessive objects or moments of consciousness are simul-
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 45
taneously present to the mind, a period that is usually
estimated at two or three seconds. Removing this
limit from our time-span would result in a conscious-
ness in which all things are logically successive and yet
eternally present. Such a temporal consciousness, we
may suppose, is a hint of the divine mind. God is con-
scious of time, but not in time, and all time is to him an
eternal now. He does not exist in temporal succession,
but all temporal succession exists in him. The poet
Henry Vaughn had some such dream of eternity in his
strangely beautiful lines:
I saw Eternity the other night,
Like a great ring of pure and endless light,
All calm, as it was bright;
And round beneath it, Time in hours, days, years.
Driv'n by the spheres
Like a vast shadow mov'd ; in which the world
And all her train were hurl'd.
As to feeling, we must remove from our thought of
God's emotional life all the imperfections of our emo-
tional experience. Anything in the nature of evil dis-
position or passion in him is abhorrent to our thought ;
and we must also remove all fitfulness and fickle-
ness, uncontrolled gusts and outbreaks of feeling; ir-
ritability and fret fulness, ill-balanced and extreme or
deficient emotions, personal bias and selfishness.
There must be vast masses and profound depths of
46 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
emotion in the life of God, pure and calm, deep and
strong, rich and joyous and jubilant, compared with
which the deepest and most glorious emotional experi-
ences of humanity are only as single gleams of light
compared with the total splendor of the sun. Not only
so, the emotional life of God not only rises to higher
levels and fathoms deeper depths, but it also may differ
in faculty and organization from that of the human
soul.
The will of God must differ deeply from the human
will. The human will is obstructed by barriers with-
out and within and must use means to effect its ends.
But as the divine mind has immediate knowledge of all
things, and is freed from the use of sense perception
and discursive processes, so the divine will must achieve
its ends without the use of intermediate means. God
is not hampered as we are by limited power, but all
power is his, and with him thought and action, the
will to do and the deed itself, are one. " God said,
Let there be light : and there was light." With him,
to speak is to do, to will is to create. Thought and ac-
tion are fused into one free and frictionless stream of
life.
It may be thought that a consciousness possessed of
such powers of omniscient intelligence and omnipotent
will cannot be called consciousness at all, and that, in
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 47
particular, it cannot be supposed to have personality.
Does it not differ so radically both in degree and in na-
ture as to be something other than consciousness and
personality as we know these modes of reality? This
difficulty, especially as regards personality, will come
up later, but for the present we may say that we are not
without some gleams of light. We know that con-
sciousness exists in different degrees and that these dif-
ferences may be enormous. We are able to widen out
the barriers of ignorance that bound our knowledge,
and we can imagine this process carried out indefinitely.
Genius grasps by intuition many things that ordinary
minds must reach through slow discursive processes.
The gap between will and deed is often shortened up in
our human experience. A musical genius thinks and
wills a musical theme and composition by one stroke of
mind, and poetic thought and poetic expression may co-
incide in the poet's imagination. We can conceive all
these processes carried indefinitely toward the point
where human limitations would disappear, and these
forms of genius are hints and germs of unlimited con-
sciousness. While, then, the divine consciousness rises
above all our imperfections and limitations, yet it does
not lose its fundamental character as mind and per-
sonality.
3. We proceed further with unfolding the analogy
48 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
of our human personality into its implications in the
divine personality. We have seen that our human
personality, while a unitary, is yet a complex, world.
Does this complexity reflect the mind of God in its ele-
ments and organization? Does the trinity of thought,
feeling, and will and the deeper trinity of the con-
scious subject, the conscious object, and the conscious
union of the two, that enter into the very constitution
of human personality, also inhere in the divine person-
ality, or is the consciousness of God absolutely unitary?
Reflection drives us strongly towards the former rather
than the latter view. An absolutely unitary conscious-
ness involves us in grave difficulties. It would oblit-
erate distinctions in the divine consciousness and
thereby make conscious reflection and feeling and will
impossible. There could be no subject and object in
such a consciousness, and this would nullify the funda-
mental condition of thought. It would obliterate all
variety and activity in the field of consciousness and re-
duce it to a static condition, like an eternal frozen
ocean. Such a view of the divine consciousness can-
cels consciousness and issues in pantheism.
May w^e go further and infer that the trinity in our
human personality points to an infinitely higher trinity
in God? The analogy of degrees of consciousness is
not exhausted until we have followed it up to its ut-
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 49
most summit and climax. Subpersonality in animals
and incomplete personality in man are an ascending
series leading up to superpersonality in God. The dis-
tinctions of thought, feeling, and will and of subject,
object, and their union in man may be germinal hints
and buds of a complex personality in which there are
distinctions that may be viewed as personal and capable
of holding mutual relations of fellowship. God must
be sufficient in himself apart from and independent of
any created beings. What was he doing, how was he
employing and enjoying himself, before that " begin-
ning " in which he created the world and finite persons ?
The question startles us, and on its answer depend por-
tentous consequences. If God is a complex personal-
ity, having in himself distinctions that form a kind of
society in which mutual thought and love and activity
are exercised, then God is sufficient in himself and has
an eternal life of thought and love and joy, " God
blessed forever." But if God has not this self-suffi-
cient personality, then we are driven again into a pan-
theistic Absolute, which is the most terrible specter, as
we shall later see, that agnostic philosophy has ever cre-
ated. From this horror we are delivered as we find
reasons, broad as the universe and deep as the human
heart, for believing in a God who lives and loves in
himself and can impart the same joyous life to his ere-
50 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ated children. We thus climb and are driven up the
stairway of philosophical thought to a conception of
God that approaches, if it does not coincide with, the
Christian doctrine of the Trinity. The Godhead is
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, a higher personality that
fulfills all the conditions of our logical demands.
4. Somewhat similar results have been reached by
many of our profoundest thinkers. Friedrich Paul-
sen, in his Introduction to Philosophy, in describing his
" idealistic pantheism," writes : '' Pantheism, as we un-
derstand it, has no intention of depriving God of any-
thing or of denying him anything but human limita-
tions. It will not permit us to define God by the con-
cept of personality simply because the notion is too nar-
row for the infinite fullness and depth of his being.
Still, in order to remove the apprehension, we might
call God a suprapersonal being, not intending thereby to
define his essence, but to indicate that God's nature is
above the human mind, not below it. And pantheism
might add that it finds no fault with any one for calling
God a personal being in this sense. In so much as the
human mind is the highest and most important thing
we know, we can form an idea of God only by intensi-
fying human attributes.''
In his Appearance and Reality, Mr. F. H. Bradley
says : " The Absolute, though known, is higher, in a
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 5I
sense, than our experience and knowledge ; and in this
connection I will ask if it has personality. At the point
we have reached such a question can be dealt with rap-
idly. We answer it at once in the affirmative or nega-
tive according to its meaning. Since the Absolute has
everything, it of course must possess personality. And
if by personality we are to understand the highest form
of finite spiritual development, then certainly in an emi-
nent degree the Absolute is personal. For the higher
(we may repeat) is always the more real. ... If the
term ' personal ' is to bear anything like its ordinary
sense, assuredly the Absolute is not personal. It is
not personal, because it is personal and more. It is,
in a word, superpersonal. ... It is better to affirm
personality than to call the Absolute impersonal. But
neither mistake is necessary. The Absolute stands
above, and not below, its internal distinctions. It does
not eject them, but includes them as elements in its full-
ness. To speak in other language, it is not the indif-
ference but the concrete identity of all extremes. But
it is better in this connection to call it superpersonal."
And even Herbert Spencer, while persistently de-
claring that his " Unknowable Power " is absolutely
unknowable, yet cannot keep from expressing an opin-
ion as to its ultimate nature and makes bold to say that
it is " probably psychical " and " hyperpersonal."
/
52 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
While these thinkers deny that God is personal ac-
cording to the level and limitations of human person-
ality, yet they affirm that the personality of God lies
above the human level and is of a higher type, and this
is an affirmation of immense significance. ^If they
deny us a personal God after our human type, they be-
lieve that their *' God has provided some better thing
for us." Their philosophy is really moving in the di-
rection of the triune God, though they may know it not,
and their eyes may dimly catch a glimpse of the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, the Absolute " who is over all,
God blessed forever."
Our tentative construction of the personality of God
thus starts with our human self as a finite image of
the Infinite, a drop of dew that mirrors the mighty sun,
and unfolds this analogy in its psychological and phil-
osophical implications into the superpersonal Absolute
of philosophy and the triune God of Christian faith.
But here we know only in part and must ever be
hemmed in by the limitations of our knowledge.
" Canst thou by searching find out God ? canst thou find
out the Almighty to perfection?" Yet we know
enough to worship and serve God in faith and fellow-
ship, and in the presence of these unspeakable mysteries
to '' be still and know that I am God."
TENTATIVE CONSTRUCTION 53
There is a universe within,
The world we call the soul, the mind:
And in this world what best we find
We stammer forth, and think no sin
To call it God, and our God, and
Give heaven and earth into His hand,
And fear His power, and search His plan
Darkly, and love Him, when we can.
— Goethe.
VIII
OBJECTIONS TO THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
The fact that there are objections raised to the per-
sonaHty of God on psychological and philosophical
grounds is not surprising, for we encounter difficulties
in all fields of knowledge; and any theory of any fact
or event can be subjected to criticism that will seem to
entangle it in embarrassment if not in impossibility.
The simplest fact contains deeps that baffle us, and any-
thing so vast and profound as the constitution of God
must present problems that are infinitely beyond our
power of solution. The personality of God is indeed
rji infinite mystery, but it is one that includes and
solves all other mysteries, and we must come to a stop
with mystery somewhere. We cannot explain our ulti-
mate explanation, and at last must rest on some final
fact and faith.
The objections to the personality of God can be
stated and sustained with logical force and plausibility.
The fact that they are held and urged by some of our
greatest thinkers shows that they are not simply shal-
low and flimsy speculations and doubts, but have depth
54
OBJECTIONS 55
and solidity of reasoning behind them. And they are
not urged out of any irreligious or unworthy motive,
but only in sincerity as the compulsion of truth. Nev-
ertheless, grave as are the philosophical embarrass-
ments which are offered to the doctrine of the person-
ality of God, we believe that the denial of it encounters
still greater difficulties and that the main weight of
logical thought as well as of practical experience lies on
the side of the truth of this doctrine. And the very
denials of the doctrine, as we have already seen, admit
a higher and not a lower constitution in God.
I. The first fundamental objection to the personality
of God is the contention of agnosticism, that we cannot
know the nature of ultimate reality, or of reality in it-
self, but can know only its phenomenal appearances.
These appearances are said to be unlike the ultimate
reality and act as a screen or bar to shut us off from it.
The constitution of the human mind is such that its
senses and categories, or intuitional principles, are in-
terposed as a medium that perverts reality, just as a
lens of stained glass not only colors all the objects seen
through it but may also magnify or minimize their true
size and utterly distort their true shape. This theory
of the constitution of the mind w^as variously stated by
Hume and Kant and Hamilton and Spencer, but in all
its forms it conceives the mind to be an organ that
56 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
cannot give us true but only relative knowledge of ob-
jective reality. Mr. Spencer in his Principles of Psy-
chology gives us a diagram of a curved lens that dis-
torts a cube seen through it into a radically different
shape, and this illustrates his view of the working of
the mind in the perception of reality. The outcome
of this doctrine of the relativity of knowledge is that
our mind out of its own constitution forms a concep-
tion of reality that bears no resemblance to its true
nature ; and thus we are shut up within our mind and
can never reach reality. As applied to God this theory
gives us the Unknowable Power of Mr. Spencer and
the Absolute of Mr. Bradley.
As to this doctrine of agnosticism we remark:
( 1 ) In spite of his own agnostic principle Mr. Spen-
cer proceeds to write ten volumes of Synthetic Philos-
ophy, every page of which tells us something about
this Unknowable Power, for he is all the way through
unfolding the laws of its operations. It thus turns out
that he is rich as Croesus in practical knowledge of his
Unknowable Power. And Mr. Bradley, in spite of his
destructive criticism of the human mind, writes his
large volume on Appearance and Reality and is equally
inconsistent.
(2) Agnosticism is equally fatal to all knowledge,
including knowledge of its own principle. If the hu-
OBJECTIONS 57
man mind is fundamentally an untrustworthy and per-
versive organ of knowledge, then it cannot truly know
anything, not even the fact that it cannot know. Such
denial of knowledge must deny its own denial and
thereby cancel itself. Agnosticism literally commits
suicide, and then strangely keeps on talking.
(3) There is an element of truth in agnosticism, as
there is in all theories and even in all error, and it is
this grain of truth in error that gives it its plausibility
and vitality. The truth in agnosticism is that the hu-
man mind cannot grasp reality in its whole nature but
can know only in part. Even to know^ a " flower in
the crannied wall " " root and branch and all in all "
would be to " know what God and man is." Never-
theless the mind is a true instrument of knowledge as
far as its powers go. It knows its own consciousness,
not through the media of senses, but by intuition or im-
mediate awareness, and this is knowledge not of phe-
nomena but of noumena, or reality in itself. And in
and through phenomena the mind knows noumena, or
ultimate reality, as far as its knowledge goes. For the
appearances of things are so far the things themselves
or disclose their activities and laws, and the mind goes
beyond appearances into the nature of things in so far
as it discerns the ideas and laws imbedded in them.
Idealism holds that the mind penetrates into the very
58 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
inner nature of an object as an activity of thought and
feeling and will and finds that it is a mental object or
is spirit of like nature with itself. The mind is thus
shown to be a trust worth}^ organ of knowledge and is
saved from the pit of universal agnosticism.
(4) The human mind can therefore know God so far
as its finite capacity can grasp or catch a glimpse of the
infinite. Mr. Spencer himself declares that the exist-
ence of the Unknowable Power is the most certain fact
of our knowledge — another self-contradiction in his
agnosticism — and he even hazards the venture that it
is '' probably psychical " and " hyperpersonal " in na-
ture. It is only going a logical step further to affirm
that the mind can gain some true knowledge of the in-
finite, and it finds the Ultimate Reality and First
Cause of all things to be Spirit and a personal God.
While our knowledge of God is limited by our finite
capacities and contains much symbolism, so that God is
still in a measure the " agnostic God," according to the
Greek inscription Paul saw on the statue of a god in
Athens, yet he is also truly known to us in his nature
and constitution as the Father of our spirits, in whom
we live and move and have our being. The knowledge
of God is indeed " too wonderful for us; it is high, we
cannot attain unto it." The Bible is full of such ag-
nosticism; our knowledge of God is only a child's or
OBJECTIONS 59
infant's knowledge of its father; yet it is real knowl-
edge that goes far enough to enable us to live with God
in ever-growing fellowship.
2. A second objection to the personality of God is
the allegation that personality is a limitation which is
inconsistent with the infinitude of God.
(i) Personality, it is said, implies limitation in its
necessary relation of the self to the not-self, and, more
definitely, of subject and object. There can be no per-
sonality without self-conscious thought, and there can
be no thought without a subject that thinks and an
object that is thought about. Thus personality is lim-
ited in its very constitution by the not-self that must
stand over against the self, and by the object that must
stand over against the subject. But the absolute, it is
said, by its very definition cannot permit a not-self,
w^hich would thus reduce it to subjection to relation,
and the infinite cannot admit an object, which would
limit it as subject. This difficulty is more verbal than
real; it grows out of our definitions rather than out of
reality. The absolute is not necessarily that which is
released from all relations, but that which is released
from all necessary relations or dep^dence imposed
upon it from without. It may itself initiate any rela-
tions it chooses and still be absolute, for such relations
are not imposed upon it so as to destroy its absolute-
6o THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ness, but it constitutes them and so remains absolute.
If the absolute were denied or lacked the power of con-
stituting relations, such inability would itself limit
and thereby destroy the absoluteness of the absolute.
In a similar w^ay, the infinite is not that which has no
limitations, but that which has no necessary limitations
imposed upon it from without. It still has the power
of assuming limitations of its own, but such limitations
are still within its own power and are not real limita-
tions to infinitude. The lack of such power would be
a real limitation to the infinite.
(2) Personality is not a limitation but an additional
power. The opposition of self and not-self is not a
necessary relation. This relation is generally present
in our human experience. Our consciousness of self,
though it begins with, does not depend on, our con-
sciousness of a not-self, but is an immediate experi-
ence. The opposition of subject and object is a neces-
sary relation of personality, at least in our experience
of personality, but this relation may be internal to the
constitutioi;! of personality itself. The self is at once
subject and object, and thus experiences this relation
in itself. The infinite personality of God may be based
on this relation and yet not pass into dependence on any
external object.
Personality is the power to know and feel and act,
OBJECTIONS 6l
and this ability is not a limitation but an enormous ex-
pansion of power. The absence of such power would
itself be a limitation beyond any other conceivable lack.
In the human soul personality is fettered by the limita-
tions and imperfections of finite conditions, and the
struggle of the soul in its development and education
and passionate ambitions is to break through and
widen out these limitations. We can conceive of free-
dom and power of personality indefinitely higher than
we have attained, and we long and strive to climb this
height and reach this freedom, and at times we beat
against the bars of our limitations as birds against the
wires of their cage. This is the meaning and purpose
of all our search for knowledge, bondage and battles,
visions and victories. Now these limitations do not
exist in the personality of God. He has personality in
full, infinite perfection and freedom and power. What
exists in us only as a tiny seed or feeble germ exists in
him in the glorious flower and perfect fruit. We are
but pale shadows of his substance, mere gleams of his
infinite glory.
(3) This is the reasoning and conclusion of Lotze
in his great chapter on The Personality of God, in his
Miscrocosmus.^ The whole chapter needs to be read to
feel the force of its reasoning, but a few quotations
will indicate its line of thought. He says:
62 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
There arise the questions — never to be quite silenced —
What are we ourselves? What is our soul? What is our-
self — that obscure being, incomprehensible to ourselves,
that stirs in our feelings and our passions, and never rises
into complete self-consciousness? The fact that these ques-
tions can arise shows how far our personality is from being
developed in us to the extent which its notion admits and
requires. It can be perfect only in the Infinite Being which,
in surveying all its conditions or actions, never finds any
content of that which it suffers or any law of its working,
the meaning and origin of which are not transparently plain
to it, and capable of being explained by reference to its own
nature. ... In point of fact we have little ground for speak-
ing of the personality of finite beings; it is an ideal, which,
like all that is ideal, belongs unconditionally only to the In-
finite, but like all that is good appertains to us only condi-
tionally and imperfectly.
The three concluding sections of Lotze's chapter give
its summary as follows :
Selfhood, the essence of personality, does not depend upon
any opposition that either has happened or is happening of
the Ego to a Non-Ego, but it consists in an immediate self-
existence which constitutes the basis of the possibility of that
contrast wherever it appears. Self-consciousness is the elu-
cidation of this self-existence which is brought about by
means of knowledge, and even this is by no means necessarily
bound up with the distinction of the Ego from the Non-Ego
which is substantially opposed to it.
In the nature of the finite mind as such is to be found the
reason why the development of its personal consciousness
can take place only through the influences of that cosmic
whole which the finite being itself is not, that is through
stimulation coming through the Non-Ego, not because it
OBJECTIONS 63
needs the contrast with something alien in order to have
self-existence, but because in this respect, as in every other,
it does not contain in itself the conditions of its existence.
We do not find this limitation in the being of the Infinite ;
hence for it alone is there possible a self-existence, which
needs neither to be initiated nor to be continuously developed
by something not itself, but which maintains itself within
itself with spontaneous action that is eternal and had no
beginning.
Perfect Personality is in God only, to all finite minds there
is allotted but a pale copy thereof; the finiteness of the finite
is not a producing condition of this Personality but a limit
and hindrance of its development.
By the same line of reasoning Professor Borden P.
Bowne comes to the same conclusion in his Theism:
On all these accounts we regard the objections to the per-
sonality of the world-ground as resting on a very superficial
psychology. So far as they are not verbal, they arise from
taking the limitations of human consciousness as essential
to consciousness in general. In fact, we must reverse the
common speculative dogma on this point, and declare that
proper personality is possible only to the Absolute. The
very objections urged against the personality of the Abso-
lute show the incompleteness of human personality. Thus
it is said, truly enough, that we are conditioned by some-
thing not ourselves. The outer world is an important factor
in our mental life. It controls us far more than we do it.
But this is a limitation of our personality rather than its
source. Our personality would be heightened rather than
diminished, if we were self-determinant in this respect.
Again, in our inner life we find similar limitations. We can-
not always control our ideas. They often seem to be occur-
rences in us rather than our own doing. The past vanishes
64 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
beyond recall; and often in the present we are more passive
than active. But these, also, are limitations of our person-
ality. We would be much more truly persons if we were
absolutely determinant of our states. But we have seen that
all finite things have the ground of their existence, not in
themselves, but in the Infinite, and they owe their peculiar
nature to their mutual relations and to the plan of the whole.
Hence, in the finite consciousness, there will always be a
foreign element, an external compulsion, a passivity as well
as activity, a dependence on something not ourselves, and a
corresponding subjection. Hence in us personality will al-
ways be incomplete. The absolute knowledge and self-pos-
session which are necessary to perfect personality can be
found only in the absolute and infinite being upon whom all
things depend. In his pure self-determination and perfect
self-possession only do we find the conditions of complete
personality; and of this our finite personality can never be
more than the feeblest and faintest image.
This reasoning turns the very objections that are
urged against the personality of the Absolute into ar-
guments for such personality, and uses them as means
for raising the personality of the Absolute to infinite
perfection. We may call such personality superper-
sonal, but this name or conception does not change its
fundamental character ; and it obviously points to the
Christian doctrine of the Trinity, which, as compared
with human personality, is a higher and more complex
and infinitely perfect constitution of the Godhead.
We may even find, as we have seen before, a faint copy
of such a complex constitution in the human soul, for
OBJECTIONS 65
its threefold power of functioning at once as conscious
subject, conscious object, and conscious union of the
two may be taken as corresponding in a measure with
the three persons of the Godhead — Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. The tripartite nature that is adumbrated
in us may exist in the Godhead in such a complex con-
stitution or society of persons as is symbolized in the
doctrine of the Trinity.
It thus turns out that the objections to the personality
of God, in spite of their initial force and philosophical
prestige, when fully considered leave this doctrine more
deeply rooted and solidly established than it was be-
fore. We may thank our opponents for their objec-
tions, which have rendered us a fuller confirmation of
our faith.
With me, faith means perpetual unbelief
Kept quiet like the snake 'neath Michael's foot
Who stands calm just because he feels it writhe.
Say I — let doubt occasion still more faith !
IX
ALTERNATIVES TO THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
••In forming our decision on any subject we should
consider its alternatives. It is not wise to tear down
the old house before we have a new house built. The
old habitation may be only a hut altogether inadequate
and uncomfortable, but it may be better than going out
unprotected into storm and night. The consequences
of a decision may react upon and modify, if not re-
verse, our sense, not only of its expediency, but of its
fundamental truth and right. In the field of moral
truth there is a subjective element that enters into and
helps to constitute the belief we form. We must make
our ideals come true, and " the will to believe " thus
turns our faith into fact. Even so vast and objective
a reality as the personality of God is not beyond the
reach of this principle. It will become true for us
only as we make it true. The alternatives to this view
should have a proper influence in determining our atti-
tude towards the view itself. Our moral and religious
nature has its ineradicable and insuppressible rights in
the matter, and it will declare its needs and cast its
66
ALTERNATIVES 6/
vote. We should then face the alternatives of the per-
sonality of God before deciding against it.
These alternatives are many, for error is always
manifold and truth is one. There is only one straight
shortest line between any two points, but there is an
infinite number of curved and crooked ones. There is
only one true explanation of a fact, but there may be
any number of erroneous ones. Of the many views
that deny the personality of God the principal ones are
atheism, deterministic monism, pantheism, agnosti-
cism, and pessimism. Each of these world-views has
in it some element of truth that gives it its partial jus-
tification and its vitality. It is a general fact that er-
ror is true in what it afifirms and false in what it denies,
and these theories illustrate this law. Atheism and
pantheism are complementary half-truths, each going
to one extreme and losing sight of the other. Atheism
affirms the reality of the world and denies the objective
reality of God, and pantheism affirms the reality of
God and denies the objective reality of the world.
Both are right in what they affirm, and wrong in what
they deny. Deterministic monism is right in affirming
the universality of law, and wrong in denying the pres-
ence of a causative personal Will in the world. Ag-
nosticism is right in affirming the existence of an Ulti-
m.ate Reality, but wrong in denying that we can know,
68 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
anything of its nature. Pessimism is right in seeing
the sad and tragic aspects of the world, but wrong in
being bhnd to its bright aspects and victorious pros-
pects. Thus each of these erroneous theories contains
an important element of truth, but this is overshadowed
and smothered under the overwhelming mass and
weight of its error.
A thorough examination and refutation of these
views will be found in special works devoted to the sub-
ject, such as Robert Flint's Anti-Theistic Theories and
his Agnosticism, but in this study there is room for
only a brief examination of two of them, the two that
are most prevalent and that include in one form or an-
other most of the others. These are deterministic mon-
ism and pantheism.
I. Deterministic monism holds that there is one sub-
stance which works and unfolds according to blind me-
chanical laws. This ultimate substance may be viewed
as material in nature and then we have materialism, or
as mental in nature and then we may have idealistic
pantheism, or as unknowable and then we have agnos-
ticism. The essential principle of the theory is that
the system of the world is a mechanism of law which
has caused all things to evolve out of a primary condi-
tion of simplicity or homogeneity into the present in-
finitude of differentiation. This primary condition
ALTERNATIVES 69
may be viewed as the star dust or glowing gas of a
nebula, which cools and condenses into sun and planets,
and the planet then in time spontaneously generates life
and proceeds along the line of geological and biological
evolution. The doctrine of evolution itself, when it
ceases to be a mere method of operation and becomes
a philosophy of cause, takes on this form of determin-
istic monism. Every moment, event or fact in one
stage of the world's evolution springs by mechanical
necessity out of the preceding stage, and thus the star
dust held in its fiery bosom the secret and seeds of all
civilization. Man himself is only a fine product of the
system, the topmost blossom on this mystic tree, and
does not differ in substance and law from the lowest
and coarsest root, so that all his sense of freedom of
will and responsibility of conscience is pure illusion and
delusion. The whole system is a fixed finality from
beginning to end, and nothing could ever have been
different from what it was and is, and nothing can ever
escape its foredoomed fate.
On this theory we remark :
(i) The theory provides no means of originating
the system. The universe does not wear the aspect of
eternity, but, on the contrary, it has in it all the marks
of a beginning in time. It is a dependent reality at
every point, each stage in its evolution growing out of
70 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
a preceding stage, and this process does take us back
to the nebula. But the nebula itself is a finite depend-
ent reality, and we are no nearer the origin of the
system than we were before. The universe appears
to be a clock running down, and somewhere, sometime,
it must have had an eternal Power as its Cause that
wound it up and set it agoing. Deterministic monism
has no starting point and First Cause, and leaves its
system suspended on nothing.
(2) The theory cannot account for the ascent of
the process of evolution. The distance between the
nebula and the mind of man is as great in height as
it is in time; and yet the theory maintains that all
that comes out in mind was originally latent in matter.
But mechanical causation can produce nothing in the
effect that was not in the cause, and this theory con-
tradicts this fundamental axiom by bringing out of the
magic box of evolution wonders of mind and thought
that never could have been in it in the beginning.
(3) The theory yiolates our whole nature and sense
of freedom and responsibility. It resolves these high
powers of the soul into motion and force and thus de-
grades them to a level with the growth of grass and
the blowing of the wind. This contradicts our men-
tal and moral intuition of freedom, which is more cer-
tain than any argument science and philosophy can con-
ALTERNATIVES 7 1
struct against it. Of course the doctrine pulls up our
whole moral and spiritual life by the roots and dooms
all our highest hopes to the fate of a baseless delusion.
The purely dynamic theory of the world views it as a
fire, burning to an ash heap, in which spirit is only a
fine flame; as a machine, running down never to go
again, in which consciousness is only a cog. This view
makes short work, not only with theology, but also
with psychology, ethics, economics, politics, and his-
tory, by reducing them all to physics, and raises over
the entire universe the dread specter of fatalism and
final extinction. The only escape from this fire and
ash heap is the view that sees the world as a spiritual
system in which energy is will, substance is spirit, ul-
timate reality is personality, and the eternal God is
all in all.
2. The same description and the same refutation
of deterministic monism, just given, apply with little
change of terms to pantheism. This doctrine is much
older than deterministic monism, which is mostly the
product of our modern scientific and philosophic
thought. It is a very ancient doctrine and has widely
pervaded, and at points deeply saturated, the world,
especially the East, where in India it has run its log-
ical course and brought forth its appropriate fruit. It
is a fascinating theory as it seemingly exalts God into
J2 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
the totality of existence and makes all phenomenal
things but evanescent manifestations of him.
(i) Pantheism affirms the reality of one eternal
substance which is forever evolving into all the tem-
porary aspects of the world. Spinoza held that there
is one infinite substance with an unknown number of
attributes, of which we know two, thought and exten-
sion, the one being mind and the other matter. This
unitary substance comes to consciousness in mind and
extends itself spatially in matter, and thus we have
the two fundamental aspects of the world we experi-
ence. The one eternal substance, however, has con-
sciousness only in man and in any other finite minds
that may exist, but is itself unconscious and impersonal.
Impersonality is the deepest root of pantheism. The
impersonal substance also unfolds into its temporal
manifestations by necessity, and again we are caught
in the coils of a fatalistic system. " The disposition
which commonly governs the pantheistic imagination,"
says Lotze, is " the suppression of all that is finite in
favor of the Infinite, the inclination to regard all that
is of value to the living soul as transitory, empty, and
frail in comparison of the majesty of the One, upon
whose formal properties of immensity, unity, eternity,
and inexhaustible fullness it concentrates all its rev-
erence."
ALTERNATIVES 73
(2) The difficulties inherent in pantheism are
clearly set forth by Dr. Borden P. Bowne in his work
on Personalism, from which we quote as follows :
The pantheistic view has insuperable difficulties. The
problem of knowledge, we have before seen, is insoluble
except as we maintain the freedom of both the finite and the
infinite spirit. That all things depend on God is a necessary
affirmation of thought, but that all things and thoughts and
activities are divine is unintelligible in the first place, and
self-destructive in the next. That God should know our
thoughts and feelings and should perfectly understand and
appreciate them is quite intelligible, but that our thoughts
and feelings are his in any other sense is a psychological
contradiction. If, however, we insist on so saying, then
reason simply commits suicide. It is God who thinks and
feels in our thinking and feeling, and hence it is God who
blunders in our blundering and is stupid in our stupidity,
and it is God who contradicts himself in the multitudinous
inconsistencies of our thinking. Thus error, folly, and sin
are all made divine, and reason and conscience as having
authority vanish.
The outcome of this system of thought is that all
the myriad aspects of the world are mere illusions,
highly colored bubbles on the ocean of the infinite that
for an instant flash their iridescence and then burst,
or angry waves that for a moment rise and display
the gleam of their white fangs, and then bubble and
wave sink back into the depths of oblivion. Pantheism
is as fatal to the reality of our human personality as
it is to that of the infinite substance, for it reduces it
74 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
to one of the illusions of the world. It is equally fatal
to all free will and responsibility, worthy character
and conduct, for these, too, are determined as certainly
as the wind and waves. In such a system " everything
is God but God himself."
(3) The practical consequence of this doctrine is
to deaden and destroy the sense of freedom and re-
sponsibility, relax the spirit into the flesh, drown virtue
in a sea of immorality, and sink religion itself in sensu-
ality, as is seen in India. It also lowers and destroys
the sense of the worth and blessedness of life and
turns it into bondage and bitterness, a hereditary and
awful curse which is to be thrown off by any means,
however painful and self-sacrificing, in order that the
burdened soul may escape into oblivion and extinction.
(4) The God of pantheism once more confronts us
as a dread specter which paralyzes life with hope-
lessness and despair. For it is *' an immense solitary
specter — it hath no shape, it hath no sound, it hath
no time, it hath no place. It is, it will be, it is never
more nor less, nor sad nor glad. It is nothing — and
the sands fall down in the hour glass, and the hands
sweep around the dial, and men alone live and strive
and hate and love and know it." It was of such a
world that Jean Paul Richter dreamed in his Dream
of a World without God :
ALTERNATIVES 75
I dreamed I was in a churchyard at midnight. Overhead
I heard the thunder of distant avalanches and beneath my
feet the first footfalls of a boundless earthquake. Lightning
gleamed athwart the church windows and the lead and iron
frames melted and rolled down. Christ appeared and all
the dead cried out, "Is there no God?" And Christ an-
swered, " There is none. I have traversed the worlds, I
have risen to the suns, with the milky ways I have passed
athwart the great waste spaces of the sky : there is no God.
And I descended to where the very shadow cast by Being
dies out and ends, and I gazed out into the gulf beyond and
cried, 'Father, where art thou?' But answer came none,
save the eternal storm which rages on. We are orphans all,
both I and you. We have no Father." Then the universe
sank and became a mine dug in the face of the black eternal
night besprent with thousand suns. And Christ cried, " Oh,
mad unreasoning Chance; Knowest thou — thou knowest not
— where thou dost march, hurricane-winged, amid the whirl-
ing snow of stars, extinguishing sun after sun on thy on-
ward way, and when the sparkling dew of constellations
ceases to gleam, as thou dost pass by? How every soul in
this great corpse-trench of a universe is utterly alone?"
And I fell down and peered into the shining mass of worlds,
and beheld the coils of the great Serpent of eternity twined
about those worlds; these mighty coils began to writhe and
then again they tightened and contracted, folding around the
universe twice as closely as before; they wound about all
nature in thousand folds, and crashed the worlds together.
And all grew narrow and dark and terrible. And then a
great immeasurable bell began to swing and toll the last
hour of time and shatter the fabric of the universe, when my
sleep broke up and I awoke. And my soul wept for joy
that I could still worship God — my gladness and my weep-
ing and my faith, these were my prayer.
^6 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
In such a world there is no room for true life and
love, faith and hope, for all these are the strangled
children of our illusion and delusion. This fatalistic
impersonality of pantheism is its own deepest and
surest condemnation. Our hearts, in which eternity
hath been set, cry out against it as fatherless and
motherless children cry in the night. Our deepest
constitution and our most urgent needs must have
their appropriate satisfaction, and we refuse to join
in Matthew Arnold's cry of despair which was sug-
gested to him by the mournful music of the waves on
Dover Beach, and which expresses the practical conse-
quences and profound pessimism of all these alterna-
tives to the personality of God :
For the world, which seems
To lie before us like a land of dreams,
So various, so beautiful, so new.
Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
And we are here as on a darkling plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
.Where ignorant armies clash by night.
THE PERSONALITY OF GOD IN THE LIGHT OF
OUR MODERN WORLD
^ All the great problems of religion, however they
are rooted in the divine and eternal, are also affected
by the special conditions of each passing age. They
grow up out of its environment and experience and
reflect its light, and thus present aspects that vary with
the changing science and philosophy and social condi-
tions of the time. The doctrine of the personality of
God is peculiarly subject and sensitive to such changes
and is continually readjusting itself to their demands.
I. In the Light of Science. Science has wrought
Copernican revolutions and continental and climatic
changes in our modern world, shifting its center and
lifting or depressing its continents and mountain ranges
and thus producing changes of climate that have caused
some forms of thought to grow into bloom and fruit-
age and others to wither and become obsolete or ex-
tinct. It has given life and power to some religious
doctrines and left others embedded as fossils in the
mental strata of our modern world. How has the
n
yS THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
personality of God been affected by these changes?
There are three scientific doctrines that specially bear
upon this problem.
(i) The first of these is the vastness of the uni-
verse. The former conceptions of the expanse of the
heavens, great as they were, have been enormously ex-
tended by the revlations of our modern instruments.
The microscope, telescope, and spectroscope are three
magic machines which are in effect immense eyes that
enable us to peer into the world of matter in both di-
rections, the microscope opening up vistas into the in-
finitesimally small, the telescope into the unspeakably
distant and great, and the spectroscope, more marvel-
ous still, reports the chemical composition, motion, di-
rection and speed of distant stars and nebulae. These
enormous eyes have disclosed a universe which is an
inconceivably vast whirling snow of stars of such
sizes, distances and speeds as bewilder and appall us.
There are huge solar monsters, such as Sirius and
Rigel, which in size and splendor literally throw our
sun into the shade. Mighty Canopus, as far as known
the largest star in the heavens, next to Sirius in bright-
ness and twelve times as distant, is more than two and
a half millions of times larger than our sun, so that the
sun could be dropped into one of its spots or yawning
chasms as a pebble is dropped into a well. The light-
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 79
year, which is the distance traveled in a year by a ray
of light moving at the rate of 186,000 miles a second,
is the yardstick with which the astronomer measures
the distances of the heavenly bodies, and some stars
are thousands of such light-years away. There are
also star clusters and spiral nebulae which are thought
to be universes outside of our galaxy, and these are
conceived to be hundreds of thousands of light-years
distant.
The first effect of such conceptions of the heavens
is to dwarf our earth into a mere mote floating in this
vast sea of splendor and then still farther to dwarf
man into this " fretful midget," the human race itself
being a mere " trouble of ants in the gleam of a million
million suns." And the second effect is to seem to
overtop God and crowd him out and crush him under
the immeasurable weight of this blazing mass of suns.
Can the personality of God stand up under this in-
tolerable burden?
The case, however, is not so alarming as it seems,
for the first appearance of things is often deceptive,
and the difficulty rapidly dissolves under reflection.
On any theory of philosophy matter cannot overtop
and crush mind, whatever its mass and might. Man
himself thinks the universe, and thereby rises above
it and puts it under his feet. However vast he dis-
80 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
covers it to be, it is his own mind that perceives and
reconstructs its star-fretted dome, he sets it all up in his
own brain, and thereby subordinates it to himself.
The greatest star is still at the little end of the tele-
scope, the star that is looking, not the star that is being
looked at.
But, on the idealistic conception of the world, mind
is the only kind of reality and the universe is a spir-
itual system that has its origin and abiding seat in
an infinite consciousness. On this view the physical
universe is the thought and action, the eternal employ-
ment and enjoyment of God, and his personality, so
far from being lost in the vastness of the heavens, is
reflected from this shining mirror, and the universe
is the sublime appeal of Spirit to spirit. The vaster
is the creation the greater is the creative God. The
heaven of heavens cannot contain him and the con-
stellations are but the dew on the fringe of his garment.
" Lo, these are but the outskirts of his ways : and how
small a whisper do we hear of him ! "
(2) Another scientific doctrine bearing on the per-
sonality of God is the universality of law. Science is
the search for order and harmony and final unity, and
it finds these as it extends the reign of law. Nature
at first sight presents the appearance of confusion and
chaos, and men have slowly threaded their way through
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 8l
its jungle and cleared it up into law and order. The
physical world has been widely brought under this
principle, and now it is believed, though this belief is
an immense exercise of faith, that law reigns down to
the last atom and electrical vibration of the universe.
The same principle has been extended to the mental
and moral and spiritual world, and human souls are
found to be not capricious beings forming a chaotic
social order, but are law-saturated organisms cohering
in an orderly system. It is true that some spiritual
laws may be violated in ways in which physical and
metaphysical laws are not violable, but all spiritual laws
hold as obligations and are the necessary conditions of
moral and spiritual welfare.
This extension of the reign of law, until it has be-
come coterminous with the whole field of being, at
first seems to reduce personality to mechanism and
thereby to imprison and destroy its essential nature of
moral freedom and responsibility. As law was ex-
tended over each additional area it seemed that both
man and God, considered as free beings, were driven
out of that field and were shut up in a narrower
sphere in which to act and exist, and that finally they
were crowded out of the law-ruled universe altogether.
God, according to this view, has thus become im-
prisoned in his own world, and his personality has been
82 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
rendered impotent and has been destroyed. Undoubt-
edly the reign of law has made it more difficult for the
modern mind to believe in either the freedom of man
or the personality of God.
But again the difficulty is greatest at first view, and
abates and disappears under reflection. In the case of
man he clearly exercises his conscious freedom in a
world of physical laws. He does not and cannot vio-
late them, but he combines and turns them to his own
ends, and this is what he is doing in all his mastery of
nature. Physical energies have increasingly become
his nimble servants, so that he hitches his wagon to the
great golden driving wheel of the sun and rides in ease
and comfort. He is wholly environed in these physi-
cal energies, and yet they no more fetter and impede
him than does his own skin which constantly adapts
itself without friction to all his activities and aids him
in them.
Man is not imprisoned in nature, but is its master
and lord. The universe with all its laws is his servant,
and all its power bows to his personality at every step.
Man is a supernatural being and moves through nature
in the full possession and exercise of his personality
and freedom. Laws are the means of liberty, 'the
grooves and guides in which liberty moves with
smoothness in speed and safety. The steel track does
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 83
not limit the liberty of the locomotive but gives it all
the liberty it has. Law and liberty are not antagonis-
tic but are mutually complementary and harmonious.
It is because man lives in a world of law that he can
have liberty and life.
Lotze wrote his monumental work, Microcosmiis,
to show *' how absolutely universal is the extent and at
the same time how completely subordinate the signifi-
cance, of the mission which mechanism has to fulfill
in the structure of the world." And Mr. A. J. Bal-
four, in his Gifford Lectures on Theism and Human-
ism, speaking of the difficulties in connection with
natural law and prayer, says : " These difficulties are
difficulties of theory, not of practice. They never dis-
turb the ordinary man — nor the extraordinary man
in his ordinary moments. Human intercourse is not
embarrassed by the second, nor simple piety by the first.
And perhaps the enlightened lounger, requesting a club
waiter to shut the window, brushes aside, or ignores,
as many philosophical puzzles as a mother passionately
praying for the safety of her child."
God, then, moves through his universe and its laws
are not weights but wings to his freedom and person-
ality; and equally the inviolable laws of his character
are an expression and means of his liberty and life.
Personality finds its proper expression, not in caprice,
84 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
but in plan and purpose ; and thus the reign of law in
the universe, instead of being an objection to the per-
sonality of God, is an argument in its favor.
(3) The third scientific doctrine that bears upon
our problem is the theory of evolution. This now dom-
inates the whole field of thought and is applied to
physical nature from the ether to atoms and molecules,
and from nebulae to suns and systems, and in the
world of life from single-celled organisms up to man.
Its central principle is that of genetic connection and
continuity as the simpler forms unfold into the more
complex, and it also includes a reversal of the process
in devolution. This central principle is universally
accepted in the scientific world, though the mechanism
or factors of the process are still an unsolved prob-
lem. Darwin's theory of natural selection is now
generally held to be an insufficient account of evolution
and efforts are being made to find the determining
cause of the process in the secret of heredity.
So revolutionary and dominant an idea was bound
to be attended with mistaken views in its interpreta-
tion and application, and at first sight it seemed to
many to be destructive of all ideas of creation and
providence and of human immortality and divine per-
sonality. But continued reflection has cleared up such
views and showed that the theory leaves all these prob-
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 85
lems unaffected in their essential nature, though throw-
ing new light upon them. The fundamental fact as to
evolution is that it is a method and not a cause. It
only shows how causes work, but does not account for
the causes themselves. It cannot bring out explicitly
in the result anything that was not either implicit in
the beginning or was put into the course of the process.
If any increment comes out in the product that was
not put into the process, such an increment would be an
event or effect without a cause and this would contra-
dict one of the most fundamental of our axiomatic in-
tuitions. That every event has a cause is a necessary
belief that lies at the basis of all our thought and action
and applies to the whole creation from the beginning
to the end.
Evolution, then, is only a method and is a description
of the way all causes work, back and up to the First
Cause, or God. It is the divine program of creation,
written broadly over the first chapter of Genesis and
expressed in all the processes of the world. Being the
plan and program of God, it does not in the least impair
his freedom and hamper his presence and purpose and
providence in the world. So far from destroying or
crippling his personality, it gives full and free expres-
sion to it. All that evolves out of the creation was by
him involved in it, either at the beginning or during the
86 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
course of the process, so that the creation grows out of
him as the mechanism out of the mechanician or as the
flower out of the seed or the body out of the spirit.
God in his personality still stands central and sover-
eign in his universe, and all this infinite snowstorm of
stars came out of him as snowflakes come out of the
invisible air, or as our evolving plans and purposes,
thoughts and deeds come out of us. The production
of new species of plants and animals by evolution no
more shuts God out of creation than does the produc-
tion of individual plants and animals by growth ex-
clude him from this process. Any new increment that
emerges in the course of evolution draws its heredity
from God, as when " Jehovah God formed man of
the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils
the breath of life; and man became a living soul."
The theist, holding to the personality of God as his cen-
tral principle, has no difficulty in holding in fullest
harmony with it the modern doctrine of evolution, and
such acceptance on the part of theistic thinkers is prac-
tically universal and unquestioned.
Not only does evolution not stand in the way of the
personality of God, but, as in the case of the vastness
of the universe and the reign of law, it turns out to be
an argument in its favor. For evolution ever leads up
to higher forms and finally culminates in personality
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 87
in man, and this fact points on up to personality in
the Cause of man. Personality in man is only a pale
copy of a perfect Pattern, a gleam of light that shoots
from the central Splendor of the universe, and its per-
fection and source is the personality of God.
2. In the Light of Philosophy. Philosophy, which
seeks to penetrate behind the proximate causes of sci-
ence to final causes and ultimate reality, cuts deeper
into the substance of the world and the tissues of the
soul than science, and therefore bears more intimately
and vitally upon the problem of the personality of
God. Recent renewed interest in philosophy has been
specially concerned with our subject, for the personality
of God is the central supreme question that determines
the solution of all vital human questions and cosmic
problems.
(i) The Creative Evolution of Bergson. The
French philosopher Bergson has arisen on our horizon
as a star of sparkling brilliance, though probably not
of the first magnitude. He has invested his specula-
tions in the vivacity and charm of French thought and
style, and they have attained a popular currency that
surpasses their popular intelligibility.
Bergson presents us with the picture of a growing
universe which consists of a stream of life flowing
through resistant matter and breaking into all its
S8 TKIL PERSONALITY OF GOD
myriad forms. This stream of life, or elan vital,
is described as consciousness, but not " the narrowed
consciousness that functions in us " ; it is '' rather
super-consciousness." Matter is the refractory ele-
ment or realm of mechanical necessity which this life-
force seeks '* to penetrate with contingency.'' For a
central principle in Bergson's system is the creative
freedom of his life-force which is always initiating new
forms of thought and action which are unforeseeable.
Past existence is constantly summed up and contained
within present existence, so that the present always con-
serves the whole of the past and carries it along with
it; and then it gives birth to its own free actions by
which life " seizes upon matter . . . and strives to
introduce into it the largest amount of indetermina-
tion and liberty." The freedom that is so strongly
emphasized contains " properly speaking neither pro-
ject nor plan," and is so released from reasoned mo-
tives and ends that it looks like blind impulse or irra-
tional caprice.
This invites and justifies the criticism by Mr. Bal-
four, found in The Hibbert Journal for October, 191 1,
in which he says : " Creation, freedom, will — these
doubtless are great things ; but we cannot lastingly ad-
mire them unless we know their drift. We cannot,
I submit, rest satisfied with what differs so little from
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 89
the haphazard; joy is no fitting consequence of efforts
which are so nearly aimless. If values are to be taken
into account, it is surely better to invoke God with a
purpose than a supra-consciousness with none."
At this point Bergson leaves us in the dark as to what
is behind his '' life " and '' matter " and whence they
come. He might be a theist or an agnostic as to ulti-
mate reality, and he has even been accused of " atheistic
monism." However, Professor Pringle-Pattison, in
his recent work on The Idea of God, is able to quote
a letter written in 19 12 by Bergson in which he says
that the arguments of his books should leave us with
*' a clear idea of a free and creating God, producing
matter and life at once, whose creative effort is con-
tinued, in a vital direction, by the evolution of species
and the construction of human personalities." He is
further quoted as having said, in his Gifford Lectures
at Edinburgh in 19 14, that he did '' not profess to
have a metaphysical system," and " he appeared pre-
pared to regard as the rationale of a phenomenal
process the idea of a Creator, the end of whose action
was the creation of creators." It would thus appear
that Bergson's views of ultimate reality are undergo-
ing evolution along with his growing universe, and
more light may be expected from this interesting but
inconclusive thinker.
90 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
(2) The Pluralistic Universe of \Mlliam James.
Mr. James, having done notable and enduring work
in psychology, in his later years set sail upon the sea
of metaphysics, but can hardly be said to have discov-
ered any new land or even to have found a solid shore
on which to set his foot. His speculations have the
penetrating insight and unconventional freshness of
thought and style that characterize all his work, but
they give the impression that he had not thought his
way through. This unfinishedness, however, is part
of his pragmatic, anti-intellectualist system, and he
would suspect and repudiate any thinking, even his
own, if it swept a full circle and found a complete
solution of a world problem.
James is enamored of Bergson and finds his book
" like the breath of the morning and the song of birds.
It tells us of reality itself, instead of merely reiterating
what dusty-minded professors have written about what
other previous professors have thought. Nothing in
Bergson is shop-worn or at second hand.'' James fol-
lows Bergson, but has his own point of view. Both of
these thinkers are greatly opposed to " a block-uni-
verse," or " closed system/' or monism, but find all
things in a state of free flux, an unfinished and grow-
ing world. " What really exists is not things but
things in the making.'' James's universe is an aggre-
IX THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 9 1
gate. He will not have an organic unity, but strings
out his world in a row, or pitches it together as a heap.
" Pluralism means only that the sundry parts of re-
ality may be externally related. Everything you can
think of, however vast or inclusive, has on the pluralis-
tic view a genuinely ' external ' environment of some
sort or amount. Things are ' with ' one another in
many ways, but nothing includes anything, or dom-
inates over everything. The word ' and ' trails along
after every sentence. . . . The pluralistic world is thus
more like a federal republic than like an empire or a
kingdom. However much may be collected, however
much may report itself as present at any effective cen-
ter of consciousness or action, something else is self-
governed and absent and unreduced to unity."
As to the ultimate nature of his pluralistic universe,
]\Ir. James reaches super-human intelligence and a fi-
nite God. "' The absolute," he says, " is not the impos-
sible being I once thought it. ^Mental facts do func-
tion both singly and together, at once, and we finite
minds may simultaneously be co-conscious with one
another in a super-human intelligence. . . . The out-
lines of the super-human intelligence thus made prob-
able must remain, however, very vague, and the num-
ber of functionally distinct ' selves ' it comports and
carries has to be left entirely problematic. It may
92 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
be polytheistically or it may be monotheistically con-
ceived of. . . . The line of least resistance, then, as
it seems to me, both in theology and in philosophy, is
to accept, along with the super-human consciousness,
the notion that it is all-embracing, the notion, in other
words, that there is a God, but that he is finite, either
in power or in knowledge, or in both at once. . . .
Yet because God is not the absolute, but is himself a
part when the system is conceived pluralistically, his
functions can be taken as not wholly dissimilar to those
of the other smaller parts, — as similar to our func-
tions consequently.'*
God is thus one in the midst of the many and is of
like powers and passions with them, differing only in
degree and not in kind. Mr. James has strong sympa-
thy with religion and thinks that philosophy must meet
its practical demands; and he is so hopeful as to be-
lieve that his empirical philosophy contains the vital
breath of a religious revival ; let it '* once become asso-
ciated with religion, . . . and I believe that a new era
of religion as well as of philosophy will be ready to
begin."
(3) The God the Invisible King of H. G. Wells.
Mr. H. G. Wells, scientific romancer, novelist, social-
ist, and agnostic, has also assumed the role of a philoso-
pher and theologian. Though his books in this field
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 93
show his lack of training in and acquaintance with
this region of thought, yet they display the interesting
workings of a remarkably inventive and fertile mind.
In his first war novel, entitled Mr. Britling Sees It
Through, he introduced God in quite orthodox fashion
and almost led his readers to believe that he had been
converted to belief in a theistic God, if not in Chris-
tianity. His later book, however, entitled God the In-
visible King, dispelled this impression and set forth
his views in unmistakable terms.
Mr. Wells is singularly frank. In the first two sen-
tences of his Preface he says : " This book sets out
as forcibly and exactly as possible the religious belief
of the writer. That belief is not orthodox Christian-
ity ; it is not, indeed, Christianity at all ; its core never-
theless is a profound belief in a personal and intimate
God." A book that begins with such expression of
" profound belief in a personal and intimate God,"
and ends with the declaration, '' It is the Kingdom of
God at hand," promises much to the religious soul,
but we fear that the contents of the book, despite its
eloquence and hopeful as it is from some points of view,
will yet prove a disappointment to many readers.
Notwithstanding this belief in a personal and inti-
mate God, the book at once plants agnosticism of the
densest and darkest kind behind the universe. " At
94 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
the back of all known things," we read, " there is an
impenetrable curtain ; the ultimate existence is a Veiled
Being, which seems to know nothing of life or death
or good or ill. Of that Being, whether it is simple or
complex or divine, we know nothing; to us it is no
more than the limit of understanding, the unknown
beyond." Like Herbert Spencer, to whom Frederic
Harrison said, " You know too much about your Un-
knowable," Mr. Wells has peeped behind the Veil and
reports to us much about his Veiled Being, which seems
to correspond closely with Spencer's Unknowable
Power.
Out of this abyss behind or at the bottom of the uni-
verse pours a flood of Life, which corresponds with
Bergson's elan vital. '' And coming out of this veiled
being, proceeding out of it in a manner altogether in-
conceivable, is another lesser being, an impulse thrust-
ing through matter and clothing itself in continually
changing material forms, the maker of our world.
Life, the Will to Be. It comes out of the inscrutable
being as a wave comes rolling to us from beyond the
horizon. It is as it were a great wave rushing through
matter and possessed by a spirit. It is a breeding,
fighting thing; it pants through the jungle track as a
tiger and lifts itself towards heaven as a tree; it is a
rabbit bolting for its life and the dove calling its mate;
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 95
it crawls, it flies, it dives, it lusts and devours, it pur-
sues and eats itself in order to live still more eagerly
and hastily ; it is every living thing, of it are our pas-
sions and desires and fears."
Out of Life comes God, and again we are introduced
to a finite growing God, but this time to one incarnated
in humanity. We are told much about this God, such
as that he is " courage," " youth," and *' love." But
the essential thing is the nature of God as contrasted
with orthodox views of the divine being. " Modern
religion," says Mr. Wells — and this is the very heart
of his creed — " declares that though he does not exist
in matter or space, he exists in time just as a current
of thought may do; that he changes and becomes more
even as a man's purpose gathers itself together; that
somewhere in the dawning of mankind he had a be-
ginning, an awakening, and that as mankind grows he
grows. With our eyes he looks out upon the universe
he invades; with our hands, he lays hands upon it.
All our truth, all our intentions and achievements, he
gathers to himself. He is the undying human mem-
ory, the increasing human will." Mr. Wells denies
that this God is only the sum of humanity, but he is
constantly using language that implies this and will
admit of no other clear meaning. " It comes as no
great shock," he says again, " to those w^ho have
gS THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
grasped iht full implications of the statement that God
is Finite, to hear it asserted that the first purpose of
God is the attainment of clear knowledge, of knowl-
edge as a means to more knowledge, and of knowledge
as a means to power. For that he must use human
eyes and hands and brains.''
'* The Kingdom of God " fills a large space in Mr.
Wells's book and much is said about it that is true and
good and beautiful. Mr. Wells is as orthodox and
insistent as Paul in turning all life into religion and
bidding us, '' Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or
whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." Pro-
vision or at least allowance is made for organized re-
ligion : '* There is no reason why one should not or-
ganize or join associations for the criticism of reli-
gious ideas," and " many people feel the need of
prayer/' though '' the waiter does not understand this
desire or need for collective prayer very well." As to
immortality, Mr. Wells thinks it is not " one of the
essentials of religion," but he says he has " no appe-
tite for a separate immortality. God is my immor-
tality; what, of me, is identified with God, is God; what
is not me is of no more permanent value than the snows
of yester-year." As Mr. James was enthusiastic about
the future of his religion, so is Mr. Wells. " I fore-
see," he says, " a wave of religious revival and religious
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 97
clarification," and declares: "In quite a little while
the whole world may be alive with this renascent
faith." 1
(4) The Profound Religiousness of Agnostic
Thinkers. Bergson, James, and Wells are three strik-
ing figures in the present field of philosophy. They are
free lances in philosophical discussion and have small
respect for the traditional rules of the game. No
views or methods are sacrosanct to them. The ortho-
dox philosopher receives as irreverent and rough treat-
ment at their hands as the orthodox theologian. It
was a keen thrust of his sharp blade that James gave
them when he spoke of philosophers as " merely re-
iterating what dusty-minded professors have written
about what other previous professors have thought."
It might be retorted that he and some of his compeers
would come off better in this field if they did know
1 Inventors of new religions frequently are obsessed with the
idea that their little systems will sweep the whole world like wild-
fire and throw all other religions into the shade. Thus Auguste
Comte, whose Positive Religion " seems to me," says Professor
Flint, " a most monstrous combination of fetichism, skepticism,
and Catholicism, of sense and folly, of science and sentimental
drivel," " yet believed that his ludicrous religion of humanity
would be established throughout the West during the present
(nineteenth) century; in seven years afterwards over the mono-
theistic East ; and in thirteen years more, by the conversion and
regeneration of all the polytheistic and fetichist peoples, over
the whole earth." See his Philosophy of History in France, p.
607, and his Socialism, p. 267.
98 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
and respect the rules of the game, which, Hke all rules,
are the product of long experience; but they are in-
corrigible and impervious to any such lance thrust.
The contributions of these thinkers to philosophy are
fresh and pertinent and important. As regards our
subject they are all three witnesses to the personality
of God. They fall short of historic orthodoxy at this
point, but they see that the logic of reality runs in
this direction. They judge that the universe shows
its essential nature at the top, in the blossom and fruit
rather than in the root, and that the final expression
of reality is some form and degree of personality. As
against blind materialism and impersonal pantheism
their witness has weight. And they are profoundly
and practically religious and tremendously emphasize
and apply the truth that *' in him we live and move and
have our being." Mr. Wells at times writes as though,
like Spinoza, he were *' a God-intoxicated man." Mr.
James comes out of his philosophical discussion of re-
ligion with these two results: '' i. An uneasiness;
and 2. Its solution." The " uneasiness " being " a
sense that there is something wrong about us as we
naturally stand," and the '' solution " being '' a sense
that we are saved from the wrongness by making
proper connection with the higher powers." These are
broadly orthodox results, and yet Mr. James studiously
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 99
avoids the orthodox terms " sin " and " salvation,"
which are the equivalent of his " uneasiness " and " so-
lution," possibly because he did not want it to be
thought that he had been converted and joined the
church.
In reading these thinkers we often feel that the or-
thodoxy that has been politely bowed out or uncere-
moniously thrust out through the front door has been
quietly taken in again, under another name, through
the back door. Psychologists and philosophers are
" incorrigibly religious," and even some modern ag-
nostics would be classed by the Apostle Paul among
the Athenian agnostics whom he addressed as " very
religious."
John Stuart Mill was a striking illustration of this
fact. He was regarded as a leader among the agnos-
tics of his day, but he left his posthumous Essays on
Religion which fell and exploded as a bomb in the
camp of his followers. In these essays he leaned
strongly towards theism and human immortality, say-
ing: "It appears to me that the indulgence of hope
with regard to the government of the universe and the
destiny of man after death,- while we recognize as a
clear truth that we have no ground for more than a
hope, is legitimate and philosophically defensible " ;
and going so far as to say concerning Christ that " re-
604018A
lOO THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ligion cannot be said to have made a bad choice in
pitching on this man as the ideal representative and
guide of humanity; nor, even now, would it be easy,
even for an unbeliever, to find a better translation of
the rule of virtue from the abstract into the concrete
than the endeavor so to live that Christ would approve
our life." When these Essays came out there was no
small amount of consternation in certain quarters.
" Mr. Leslie Stephen," writes Wilfred Ward in his
essay on John Stuart Mill, in his Men and Matters,
" was reported to have paced the room in indignation
which could not be contained, while his wife yet fur-
ther angered him by the poor consolation of ' I told
you so. I always said John Mill was orthodox.' "
Huxley, also, archagnostic as he was and inventor of
the word, could not keep the name of God off his tomb-
stone, where together with a wistful hope of immor-
tality it appears in an inscription written by his wife
and approved of by himself. And Spencer himself, the
philosopher of agnosticism, declared of religion that
"the matter is one which concerns each and all of us
more than any other matter whatever." He even went
so far as to say that his " Unknowable Power " is
" probably psychical " and " probably hyperpersonal,"
thus approaching the idea of a spiritual Absolute and
a personal God. Truly these agnostic thinkers are
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 10 1
" very religious/' and may be '' not far from the king-
dom of God."
(5) The Doctrine of a Finite and Growing God.
These results of these thinkers are steps in the right
direction and are hopeful philosophical and religious
signs of the times. But their doctrine of a finite and
growing God gives us pause. This doctrine, of course,
is not new or peculiar to them but is as old as Oriental
dualism and Plato's theodicy. It is resurgent in much
of our modem philosophy. Hume took refuge in it,
and John Stuart Mill gave powerful expression to
it as the only explanation of this world torn asunder
by the struggle between good and evil. These think-
ers say that this disjointed world proves that God
cannot be omnipotent but must be limited in knowledge
and power, or else he is not good.
But, desperate as is the situation and intolerable as
it sometimes seems, the proposed solution is more in-
tolerable still. All our thinking and experience, sci-
ence and philosophy, theology and religious demands,
drive us in spite of these appearances back and up to
unity as the source of all the streams of the universe.
Two Gods are intolerable to us because they would not
tolerate each other. They would both necessarily be
finite and dependent and would thereby drive us back
to some deeper and final reality, which would be the
I02 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
one and only true God. Spencer and Wells recognize
this logic in their Unknowable Power and Veiled
Being.
One omnipotent eternal God is an infinite mystery,
but it is a mystery that swallows up and digests and
explains all other mysteries. A God that had his birth
in the dawn of humanity will never satisfy humanity.
A '' pluralistic universe " is a contradiction in its very
terms. Mr. James has a veritable obsession against
thin '' intellectualism '• as a world-builder, but his own
" pluralistic universe " is itself an intellectual con-
struction, the product of his pragmatic logic, and is
itself undermined and overthrown by a deeper logic
of mind an^ heart. We accept the testimony of these
thinkers to the personal and spiritual elements in the
universe, yet cannot stop at their half-way station
of a finite God, but must go on towards the logical
limit and fulfillment of their own principles in
the one infinite, eternal, personal God, Creator of the
world and Father of our spirits.
(6) The Doctrine of a Creative, Struggling, and
Suffering God. The doctrine of a finite and growing
God is aimed at an error that needs to be repudiated
and contains a truth that should be brought out. The
error is that of an absentee God who at some remote
period in the past created the world and set it agoing,
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD IO3
and then left it to itself, something after the manner
in which an engineer makes and starts an engine which
then goes of itself with only an occasional interference
on his part. It is needless to say that this deistic con-
ception has wholly passed out of our philosophic and
religious thought and has been superseded by the doc-
trine of the divine immanence.
God is immanent in the world in continuous crea-
tion. It is true that " In the beginning God created
the heavens and the earth," but this statement need
refer only to the heavens of which our solar system
and earth are a part. Other universes appear to be in
process of creation in the spiral nebulae whose enor-
mous arms, studded with stars, may be condensing into
other galaxies like our own. But, however this may
be, our own universe is still on the anvil of creation in
the mighty workshop of God in which we see suns fly-
ing off like sparks of fire. Our solar system is un-
dergoing constant changes, and our earth is still in
the factory and is being hammered and carved into
shape and use. God is carrying on the work of crea-
tion in every star and planet and root and leaf as cer-
tainly and intimately as he ever did and is immanent in
every atom and vibration. " My Father worketh
hitherto," said Jesus, meaning that God is ever at
work.
I04 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
But is God present and active and struggling and
suffering in our human world as it slowly and pain-
fully fights its way up from the slime of savagery and
the ethics of the jungle to the heights of our moral and
spiritual civilization? Or is he only a spectator of
the scene, sitting upon his throne in ease and splendor,
while his human children are involved in this awful
strife and carnage? This is the point that pinches
and pains modern thought. At this point, also, there
has been a climatic change in our modern views. An-
cient thought and mediaeval art represented God as
resting, the Greek and Roman gods reveled in eternal
dissipation, and the Italian painters picture God as
reclining on a luxurious throne or floating in gorgeous
clouds. The impression has not yet been wholly elim-
inated from our minds that God has nothing to do. It
is pleasant to think of him as an eternal idler always
having a good time. Labor is a disagreeable thought
to us and seems a degradation to God. But the Bible
boldly represents God as a laborer, and this is an in-
finitely higher and nobler view of him than that of
pagan thought and mediaeval art.
The Scriptural doctrine of providence puts God right
down in the midst of our human world, appointing
unto us the bounds of our habitation and numbering
the very hairs of our heads. And the doctrine of re-
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD IO5
demption puts the Son of God under the burden of
all the world's wounds and woes where he is struggling
and suffering with us to overcome it as one who " hath
borne our griefs and carried our sorrows," and is
" wounded for our transgressions, bruised for our ini-
quities." In all our affliction he is afflicted, and while
we '* work out our salvation," he works in us " both to
will and to do of his good pleasure." Christ is the
Captain of our salvation, no dress-parade officer but
a soldier down in the ranks and in the trench, bearing
the brunt of the fight.
The notion of an inactive and impassive God is gone.
He toils with the toiler, weeps with them that weep,
and rejoices with them that rejoice. He is energizing
in all the forces of the world that are struggling up
through visions of better things to victory. He is in.
the spirit of widening good will that is drawing all
men into a new sense of unity and brotherhood and
preparing the way for the Republic of God on earth.
God is indeed struggling and suffering with us that he
may help bear our infirmities, overcome our enemies,
and bring many sons to glory.
If it be asked, Why does not God in his omnipotence
cut the struggle short and bring instant victory? the
answer must be that moral results cannot be effected by
mere power, however great, but can be achieved only
I06 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
by moral means and processes. Truth and persuasion,
sympathy and love, are the only proper means to this
end. God having endowed us w^ith personality must
respect our moral free agency and deal with us as per-
sons ; and he can win us only as he struggles and suffers
with us.
And if it be said, again, that omnipotence cannot
struggle as it must attain its ends at an instant effort-
less stroke and that any language implying divine en-
deavor must be illusory, the answer is that omnipotence
can do only possible things and that the fact that divine
Personality cannot invade and annul human personal-
ity is no limitation upon the divine omnipotence. God
is limited in his omnipotence, not by any lack of power
on his part, but by the lack of capacity on our part;
and this is the solution of the problem that embarrassed
so sincere a seeker after religious truth as John Stuart
Mill and forced him into the belief in a finite God.
God is helping us and we are helping God, and this en-
ables us, in the language of Mill, to cherish " the feel-
ing of helping God," *' inasmuch as a battle is con-
stantly going on, in which the humblest human creature
is not incapable of taking some part, between the pow-
ers of good and those of evil, and in which every even
the smallest help to the right side has its value in pro-
moting the very slow and often almost insensible prog-
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD I07
ress by which good is gradually gaining ground on
evil, yet gaining it so visibly at considerable intervals
as to promise the very distant but not uncertain final
victory of Good."
The idea of a God, then, who stands aloof from the
world, his work of creation done and his part in human
affairs involving him in none of our conflict and suf-
ferings, has been outgrown in both religion and philos-
ophy. '' God is a very present help in trouble " is
an assurance that is the very heart of the Bible, and the
same principle emerges in our philosophic thought.
" In him we live and move and have our being," and
" he is not far from each one of us," for his ** word is
nigh thee and in thine heart."
(7) This leads us into the deep problem in religion
and philosophy of the relation of the divine transcend-
ence and the divine immanence, and it may be briefly
referred to in this connection. The relation of the
One to the many, of the Infinite to the finite, is a funda-
mental problem of philosophy that has exercised the
greatest thinkers in all ages. The tendency of human
thought is to relapse into the one or the other of these
extremes. When all things merge into the divine
transcendence we have the Absolute of pantheism; then
all tracks lead into the lion's den and none comes out;
and when the One breaks up into and disappears in the
I08 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
many, we have a pluralistic universe with no center
and throne of unity, a mere collocation of things, which
is practical atheism. Either of these views is intoler-
able to our thought, and we must find some mode of
combining them into unity.
In the idealistic conception of the world, the total
universe, excluding finite spirits, is a spiritual system
which is the life of God, his eternal employment and
enjoyment. It is therefore immanent in him, some-
what as our thoughts and feelings and volitions are
immanent in our consciousness and constitute our life;
and yet he is also transcendent over it, as our con-
sciousness controls our inner life. Finite spirits are
personalities that are the offspring of God and have
their own internal life of responsible thought and ac-
tion. They are in God and God is in them, so that
both they and he have their own life. Each soul is
intuitively and ineradicably conscious and certain of
its own freedom and personality, which cannot be
erased or overriden by any doctrine of pantheistic de-
terminism, and to deny which is to degrade the soul
into a mere thing and cancel all its worth. And yet
God also includes all human souls and wills in his own
plan and life.
" There is a spirit in man : and the inspiration of the
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD IO9
Almighty giveth them understanding." The prophet
and poet and man of genius whose lofty and sensitive
souls are quick to catch heaven's light are specially
open to divine influences, but the same light " lighteth
every man that cometh into the world." The infinite
Spirit of God is ever endeavoring to penetrate and fill
the human spirit, to free it from error and evil, to
purify and deepen and ennoble it, and thus to develop
it into larger and richer life. And yet through all these
processes the Infinite respects the limitations and free-
dom and responsibility of the finite. The whole or-
ganism of humanity is environed and saturated with
the Spirit of God, and under this divine immanence
humanity develops and advances into fuller and nobler
life. God is in all creatures, and all creatures are in
God. God and his world are reciprocally immanent
throughout and constitute the total sum of being. This
mutual indwelling and inter working of the human and
divine eludes our power to trace its boundaries and
operations, but it is a fundamental fact in our reli-
gious and philosophical conceptions of the personality
of God and in our religious experience.
Draw if thou canst the mystic line
Severing rightly His from thine,
'Which is human, which Divine.
— Emerson.
TIO THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
3. In the Light of the Great War. The great war
has convulsed the world to its core, crumpling up the
whole crust of its civilization, apparently engulfing all
things, even the most solid realities and precious gains
and faiths and hopes of humanity, in its fiery crater,
and bringing up from the great deeps of its subcon-
scious life elemental instincts and passions, as sub-
marine upheavals bring to the surface strange mon-
sters from the bottom of the sea. Though it has col-
lapsed, yet for a long time we shall live amidst its
wreckage and grapple with its problems. It is a test-
ing time, when all things human and divine are being
tried as by fire, and all hay, wood and stubble will be
burned to ashes and only pure gold will survive. How
does the doctrine of the personality of God stand thi>
trial?
( I ) There is really nothing new in this crisis. War
is as old as the race, and a thousand times has it ripped
up the earth and saturated it with blood. Time and
again has civilization been thrown into its molten
melting pot and fused into its primal elements. It is
true that this war has been the most gigantic and
appalling in all the history of the world, but its mag-
nitude involves no new principle. Other wars in their
day seemed as destructive of the most precious pos-
sessions of the world. When the Babylonians fell
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD III
with their furious brute power upon the Jews and de-
stroyed Jerusalem and wiped out for the time being all
their religious hopes, it was as dark an hour morally
and spiritually for the world as it has ever seen.
When the Roman Empire fell and broke to pieces
under the invasions and assaults of the northern bar-
barians the* Dark Ages settled down upon devastated
and chaotic Europe. In a later century it seemed that
Europe was again being trampled to pieces under the
heavy boots of Napoleon, and there were dark days
for us in our Revolutionary War and in our Civil
War. Every war is a terrible tragedy and may seem
to be the end of all things to those who are in the midst
of it.
Yet faith in God as a personal Ruler has survived
all these wars and all the catastrophes of human his-
tory. If war could kill faith it would have been dead
long ago. The human heart has reasons for its faith
that are deeper than all earthly vicissitudes and survive
through all the storms and earthquakes of time. The
great war has surpassed all others in its appalling
magnitude and destruction, but it has introduced no
new difficulty to our faith in the personality of God,
and the human heart will not fail in its faith or fear
though the earth be removed, and though the moun-
tains be carried into the midst of the sea.
112 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
(2) This war has put a heavy but no new strain
on our doctrines of the divine providence and the di-
vine immanence. The world has always been in a
state of eruption, and yet men have always maintained
their faith in the ruling presence and power of God.
His plan necessarily runs through and controls the
thunder and lightning and storm of war as certainly
and surely as through the sunshine and prosperity of
peace. His sovereignty is able, in ways too deep for
us to understand, to turn the wrath of man to his
praise, and the remainder of wrath will he restrain,
however tremendous and violent may be its sudden out-
burst. Gravitation lets no atom slip out of its grasp
in the explosion of a volcano or a cosmic collision of
stars, and much less does divine providence let any
strand of our human world slip out of divine control.
Electricity and chemical affinity and all physical forces
operate with as irresistible certainty and as absolute
exactitude in the throes of an earthquake as they do
on the calmest and brightest day. The sunlight, al-
ways pouring forth from the sun and beating upon the
earth, diffusing itself through the whole atmosphere,
penetrating the soil and quickening every root and leaf,
is not stopped by cloud and storm and is unsullied by
the murky air through which it shines and the slime on
which it falls. In a similar way the divine immanence
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD II3
persists through the convulsion of war unaffected by
its unprecedented violence. God is in his world in
sunshine and storm, peace and war, on the bloodiest
battle field as on the most fruitful harvest field, and is
ever the immanent God. Yet he maintains his own
sovereignty without infringing on human personality
and responsibility and keeps his own purity unstained
by all the sin and crime of the world in which he is im-
manent as Sovereign and Savior.
(3) At this point we may well inquire what effect
the world war has had and is having upon men's faith
in a personal God. Has it crushed this faith with its
intolerable weight of woe, or has it stimulated it to
its highest and most heroic endeavor and mastery?
The general experience of men has been that great
trials and even the greatest disasters confirm rather
than destroy faith. Job in the midst of his accumu-
lated and unspeakable losses and sorrows rose to the
occasion and exclaimed, " Though he slay me, yet will
I trust him." Men often meet appalling calamities in
this spirit. In the darkest night of despair the stars
of faith flash out. Great crises call forth the deepest
and most primal needs and powers of men, and then
they rise to their supremest heights of faith and
achievement. A great battle is a challenge to win a
great victory. The war has been the greatest call to
114 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
faith and courage the world has ever heard. If there
be no God to give meaning to it all and lead men to
some worthy outcome, then the world is only a crazy
ant hill disturbed by the thrust of a sword and is the
wildest absurdity of a disordered dream. Men fly
to God in such an hour as their refuge and strength,
a very present help in trouble.
This has been the effect the war has had in a large
degree on the faith of men. This effect perhaps was
greatest in the trenches, where the need was most ter-
rible and most intensely realized. It was commonly
said that there were no atheists in the trenches and
that one had to go far back to where it was safe before
he would find skeptics. The evidence on this point
was abundant and accumulated in countless private let-
ters and personal testimonies and published articles and
volumes.
In his book, The Glory of the Trenches, in the re-
markable chapter entitled " God As We See Him,"
Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson wrote : " A big sacri-
fice, which bankrupts one's life, is always more bear-
able than the little inevitable annoyances of sickness,
disappointment and dying in a bed. It's easier for
Christ to go to Calvary than for an on-looker to lose
a night's sleep in the garden. When the world went
well with us before the war, we were doubters. Nearly
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD II5
all the fiction of the past fifteen years is a proof of that
— it records our fear of failure, sex, old age and par-
ticularly of a God who refuses to explain Himself.
Now, when we have thrust the world, affections, life
itself behind us and gaze hourly into the eyes of Death,
belief comes as simply and clearly as it did when we
were children. Curious and extraordinary ! The bur-
den of our fears has slipped from our shoulders in
our attempt to do something for others; the unbeliev-
able and long coveted miracle has happened — at last
to every soul who has grasped his chance of heroism
quick-coming death has become a fifth-rate calamity."
In a notable article in the Atlantic Monthly for July,
191 7, Maurice Barres, a member of the French Acad-
emy, gave extracts from private letters written to their
friends by thirteen young French soldiers, all of whom
afterwards perished in battle. " Every one of these
biographies," wrote Mr. Barres, '' would tell of the
deepening of the soul; and in the inner sanctuary of
these different souls there burns the same fire. Have
you noticed that they speak constantly of God — that
they pray? " " In this war," said the writer of one of
these letters, " the spiritual element dominates all."
These young Frenchmen probably did not differ relig-
iously from others of their class before the war, but
this fiery baptism cleansed their souls and endued them
Il6 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
with power from on high and turned them into flaming
apostles of faith and heroism and sacrifice. *' This
spirit of religion," says Mr. Barres, " pervades this
whole generation." France with all its reputation for
skepticism and frivolity has found its soul in this war
and profoundly believes in God.
It may be, as some reports indicated, that the
churches in France and England were not as well at-
tended during as before the war, which can be at least
partly accounted for by proper causes, but the spirit
of religion has been broader and deeper and has per-
vaded these nations with faith and prayer. God has
been very real in the thick of this terrible cataclysm and
men instinctively fled to him for refuge and help.
For the belief of men has been that God has been in
this war as a struggling and suffering God. He has
been no mere spectator of it, but had his shoulder under
this burden also. It is true that we were confronted
with the fact that the Germans, while inflicting their
most infernal frightfulness and atrocities, also claimed
God as being on their side, and the German Emperor,
who in his flight made such a pitiful spectacle of him-
self, confidently spoke of God as his private partner.
But we believe there was and is a right side to this
war that stands for justice and liberty, democracy and
brotherhood, and that God is ever on the side of right.
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 11/
Jesus Christ fought our Civil War, as the event has
proved, and we beheve that the Son of God went forth
to win this war. God was in the camp and down in the
trench to give efficiency and spirit to munitions and
men. It is true he gave equal efficiency to German
shells, but this war was not won in the long run by mu-
nitions but by morale, not by shells but by souls. The
spirit of men decided it, human ideas and ideals won it,
and God has been in this spirit and these ideals. That
God was struggling with us in this awful strife has
been a fundamental element in our faith and courage
and confidence. " God himself," says Senator Elihu
Root, '* was on our side."
At various critical points in the war the Allies seemed
to be lost. The first overwhelming onslaught of the
Germans on Belgium, the first pitiful appearance and
futile resistance of the English '' contemptibles," the
first Marne, the terrible drive of the Germans in March,
19 1 8, and their second break through the Marne on their
way to Paris in the following July — we now know
how tragically near to defeat and confusion the Allies
were at these points. And as we look back over these
events it is a dim eye that cannot see the interposition
of Providence. " Was it possible," asks Victor Hugo
in his graphic account of Waterloo in Les Miserahles,
" for Napoleon to win the battle? We answer in the
Il8 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
negative. Why? On account of Wellington, on ac-
count of Bliicher? No; on account of God. Bona-
parte, victor at Waterloo, did not harmonize with the
law of the 19th century. Napoleon had been de-
nounced in infinitude, his fall was decided. Waterloo
•was not a battle, but a transformation of the universe.**
So may we say : Was it possible for the Kaiser and his
hosts to win the war? No. Why? On account of
Haig and Petain and Pershing and Foch? No; on
account of God. The Kaiser, victor in France, did
not harmonize with the law of the 20th century. He
had been denounced in infinitude. The stars were
fighting against him. The Marne was not simply a
battle, but a transformation of the universe. Out of
.such a war God does not come wounded and limping,
but marching in the greatness of his strength, and
through its smoke and mist his personality looms up
in clearer certainty and greater sovereignty.
(4) Let us, however, before leaving the subject, take
a broader view of the world war and see if we can set
it in a larger framework that will help to sustain our
faith in God. The first view of the terrifying spec-
tacle was that all things human were being consumed
in one vast and final conflagration, and it would not
have been hard to believe that the apocalyptic days had
come, when " the sun shall be darkened, and the moon
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD II9
shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from
heaven."
But a deeper and longer view has restored the sanity
and serenity of our judgment and reminded us that
destruction is usually in order to construction. The
fiery volcano, belching forth far-flung destruction and
death, spreads lava that presently crumbles into fertile
soil, and soon its very scorched, scarred slopes are
covered with richly burdened vineyards and orchards.
The storm that sweeps in destructive fury over the
earth leaves fuller streams and greener fields and bluer
skies. A fire in a city burns down old buildings that
are soon replaced by imposing modern structures.
Many a church or college has gone down into ashes to
rise in a more capacious and beautiful building. Into
the glowing blast furnace go raw materials of ore and
coal and coke to come out as molten streams of iron
that is tempered into steel and fabricated into all the
structures of our material civilization. Into the melt-
ing pot of the goldsmith are cast all manner of out-
worn jewelry to be melted and refashioned into new
and more beautiful forms.
The huge melting pot of the world at war has been
no exception to this general principle, but is only its
vastest and possibly most beneficent application. It
may have been hard to see and believe this fact amidst
I20 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
all the blinding smoke and flame and confusion of the
war, and it may be still hard to see it amidst its wide-
spread ruin and wreckage, but the day will reveal it,
and we shall know in time that all things work together
for good and shall wonder at what God hath wrought.
The fearful destruction of our Civil War was the con-
struction of a more solid and glorious republic, with a
flag saved from the rent of disunion and cleansed from
the blot of slavery, and God is now building a better
Europe and a better world.
The fundamental meaning of the war, at first ob-
scured in the smoke of its outbreak, is now shining out
clear. It has not all been a mad welter of insanity
about nothing, but it was a tremendous struggle of
(lemocracy with autocracy, and all nations are being
cast into the melting pot of freedom. Russia has
fallen as one huge continental mass into this crater
and almost in a day has melted into democracy. Its
elements are more or less dissociated in the initial
stages of the process, but they are sure in time to be
recast in the molds of law and liberty. The old Rus-
sia is gone forever, and the new Russia, it is hoped,
will take its place, it may be after long trial and tra-
vail, among democratic governments. Autocratic Ger-
many itself has been undermined and destroyed by the
very war it started. The German people are now in
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 121
the travail of a new birth and through grave perils and
great pangs will be born, it is hoped, as a modern con-
stitutional or republican nation.
Out of the ruins of the old world we already see the
promise and potency of the new world that is to be.
Potentates are growing smaller, and the people are
growing larger. Thrones and crowns are being re-
placed by parliaments and presidents. The war at last
definitely turned into a gigantic and determined war
against war in which war wrote its own doom. All
these old and new terrible engines of destruction have
made war more difficult if not finally impossible in the
future. The world is at last drawing nigh to the real-
ization of the vision so long beheld afar by prophets
and poets, when nations shall beat their swords into
plowshares and shall build the parliament of man and
the federation of the world. Out of such travail will
come the new heavens and new earth wherein dwelleth
social righteousness and peace. Our whole social fab-
ric, industrial, political, educational and religious, will
be reconstructed along the lines of the new era. Al-
ready yesterday seems far away and we are rapidly
moving into the new to-morrow. God is abroad in his
world, saying, " Behold, I make all things new."
Such a view of the outcome of the war sustains our
faith in God. He still sitteth upon the circle of the
122 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
heavens and ruleth amongst the children of men.
Faith in the personahty of God will have no difficulty
in maintaining its life and pov^^er in such a world.
These lives that flamed up and burned out as fuel in this
awful world conflagration have not been uselessly
wasted, but are the sacrificial price and means of a new
world. Their blood will be the blessing of a thousand
generations to come and will ever keep the world green
and beautiful.
Our faith in the personality of God in these trying
times, as in all times, will be vigorous and fruitful
as we turn it into fact. Obedience is ever the convinc-
ing organ of knowledge and sweeps doubts from the
field as it presses on to victory. Belief in God ac-
cepted as a mere creed and as a result of logic and
controversy, the personality of God maintained as a
mere proposition, is likely to be pale and impotent; it
is ever resting on an insecure footing and at any step
may slip and fall. But faith that girds itself up for pa-
tient well-doing and fights the good fight of faith in
God and in a better world gathers strength from the
conflict and is sure of the rock under its feet. If we
doubt whether there is a God and then do nothing we
shall presently live as though there were no God and
slip down to a lower life; but if w^e live as in the pres-
ence of God and do all things as for him, we shall
IN THE LIGHT OF OUR MODERN WORLD 1 23
grow sure of him and not fail to catch visions of his
face. If we beheve, with William James, that the uni-
verse " feels like a real fight," and with Donald Hankey
that " True religion means betting one's life that there
is a God," and then make the venture and plunge into
the fight, we shall be able to declare, with Paul : " I
know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that he
is able to keep that which I have committed unto him
against that day."
We are living, we are dwelling,
In a grand and awful time,
In an age on ages telling,
To be living is sublime.
Worlds are charging, heaven beholding,
Thou hast but an hour to fight;
Now the blazoned cross unfolding,
On, right onward, for the right !
XI
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY
The lines of thought we have been pursuing con-
verge to their conclusion and cHmax in personality as
the supreme fact and worth of the universe.
I. Personality is the supreme worth of our human
world. All theories of his rank admit that man stands
at the top of creation, the highest and finest product of
evolution. His erect form and upward looking face
distinguish him among animals, and his whole physical
organization, brain capacity and mental power lift him
out of their class. His moral and spiritual nature ele-
vates him still higher, and he alone among creatures
known to us is crowned with personality. This is in-
deed a crown that gives him sovereignty and a scepter
over creation. He captures and trains into nimble
servants all the forces of nature and subdues the earth
and turns its wilderness into cultivated fields and splen-
did cities. His soul secretes civilization, and the whole
vast material structure of our human world is simply
the outgrowth and extension of his personality.
In his science man reveals the rank of personality
124
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY 125
as he reaches immeasurably beyond his hands and even
his eyes into the world as it recedes into the infinitely
small and stretches away into the infinitely great.
Through his microscope he peers down towards atoms
and electrons, and through his telescope he gazes out
through boundless spaces. Standing on this tiny earth
he throws his net out into the star-sprinkled splendor of
the night and catches suns and systems, sifts them
through his fingers, and analyzes them into their ele-
ments. By means of his spectroscope he seizes the
nebulae, filling with their filmy substance and faint
light vast regions of the sky, and drags them into his
laboratory and crushes them into his crucibles and ex-
tracts from them the secret of their constitution. He
turns up the rocky leaves of the globe and reads in
their hieroglyphics the history of a hundred million
years. He glances backward through illimitable vistas
and sees suns condensing out of nebulae, and forward
through far-stretching aeons and sees them cooling im-
til their fires are extinguished and they are finally cof-
fined in ice. He grasps the universe in its grand law-
saturated totality in which no atom ever gets out of
place and no star ever shoots a forbidden ray. He
relates the near to the far and the small to the great in
one organism of interworking unity and exquisite sym-
pathy from molecule to mountain and from gnat to
126 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
zodiac. He sees that every star lends a friendly ray
to the rose and would not dare deny that the fragrant
breath of the rose is grateful to the constellations. He
perceives that
Rings of wavelets on the water,
Circling flights of butterflies,
Interweave themselves with orbits
Of the planets in the skies.
He knows, with Mrs. Browning, that
No lily-muffled hum of summer bee.
But finds some coupling with the spinning stars;
No pebble at your feet but proves a sphere;
No chaffinch but implies the cherubim.
And with William Watson he can
See that each blade of grass
Has roots that grope about eternity.
And see in each drop of dew upon each blade
A mirrow of the inseparable All.
And yet man's science, while more spectacular, is of
subordinate value to his art and ethics, sociology and
politics, education and religion. His soul blossoms out
into the glorious products of his poetry and painting,
sculpture and architecture and music. He builds gov-
ernment and dreams of a parliament of man. He
studies social problems and perils, feels the sorrows of
society, and strives to construct a social order that will
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I27
give to every human being the opportunity and the
means of a worthy and beautiful Hfe. He dimbs the
stairway of philosophy to catch a glimpse of the Ulti-
mate Reality, and in religion he rises to his highest
and best as he sees and serA'CS the one true and living
God.
Character that is pure and true, good and beautiful
and blessed, has value above every other possession and
power and is the supreme worth and final end to which
all other things are means. This is the diamond that
scratches every other stone, the inner worth that out-
ranks and outshines all outer wealth. And character
is found only in personality and is its crow^n.
Personality is power. It is the master force of
human civilization, without which coal and iron and
steam and electricity could not forge a beam or build
a hut. It is this power that makes the great statesman,
general, orator, preacher, artist or leader in any field.
It was by the force of personality that Demosthenes
swayed Athens, Caesar mastered Rome, Paul drove the
wedge of the Gospel into Europe, Luther created the
Reformation, Napoleon dominated the kings of his
day, and Lincoln liberated a fettered race. It was the
personality of Columbus that, amidst the fears and
appeals and threats of his cowardly sailors as they
cried out against the terrors of the unknown sea, held
128 THE PERSOXALITY OF GOD
the prow of his vessel ever westward, every morning
keeping it in the track of the sun and every evening
driving it deeper into the night. It is personality
that makes great discoveries, writes great books, paints
great pictures, achieves great triumphs and heroisms,
and carves names high up on the pillar of fame. Al-
most e\ery great historic achievement is the lengthened
shadow of some great personality. Personalities arc
the mountain peaks of history that mark the culminat-
ing points in the range of events and lift the level of
their region. And yet even the greatest personality
and most splendid genius only discloses and pushes
into blazing prominence the worth that is at least lying
latent in the humblest human being and even in the
little child.
In our human world all things are interpreted in
terms of and derive their worth from personality.
Soil and shower and sunshine, mineral and vegetable
and all the physical energies of nature, have their value
determined 'by their availability for human use. The
reason an acre of ground in Europe or America is
worth so much more than one in Central Africa is to be
found in the human persons that live on it. Take all
the people out of a rich and splendid city like New York
or London and its value would vanish and become one
with Xineveh and Tyre. Nothing in our human world
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I29
has any worth until it is related to human use. Man's
presence must be indicated in the wildest waste to give
interest even to a painting.
More and more our civilization is exalting the worth
of human personality from the top to the bottom of so-
ciety. It is this sense of the supreme value of per-
sonality that has struck the fetters from the slave, ele-
vated woman, and is throwing protection around the
child. The worth of simple personality is being raised
above the ancient rights of property. It is this that
has brought thrones and crowns crashing down in the
great war that may be the last world convulsion, in
which democracy is asserting itself against despotism
and personality against brute power. It is this that is
also dissolving and leveling special privileges and social
distinctions of royalty and nobility and wealth and is
flooding the world with democracy. It is this that is
ringing out false pride of place and blood and ringing
in the common love of good ; that is ringing in the vali-
ant man and free, the larger heart, the kindlier hand;
ringing out the thousand wars of old and ringing in
the thousand years of peace ; ringing out the darkness
of the land and ringing in the Christ that is to be.
And so all things in our world converge and climax
in the supreme rank and worth of human personality.
Take man off the earth and it would fall to the level of
130 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
a dead world such as we see in the moon, and even be-
low this, for the moon has value as related to man. Of
course earth and moon and all worlds must have some
worth other than that due to man, but such worth must
be derived from their relations to some other persons or
to a Person, for viewed simply as material globes their
whole value vanishes.
And the value of man's personality, we must believe,
reaches beyond this world into the infinite and eternal.
A being of such w^orth was not made to perish as an
insect of an hour and be cast as rubbish to the void. If
the world has climbed up the slow and painful and in-
conceivably long process of evolution only to blossom
in the human brain, which then withers into dust and
leaves nothing as a permanent result, the whole stupen-
dous system ends in utter futility and irrationality.
We refuse to believe in such absurdity, putting all our
powers and hopes to confusion, and we trust all our in-
stincts and our reason and faith in believing that life
means intensely and means good, and such good is only
reached and crowned in immortal personality. This
supreme worth of human personality is a solid step-
ping-stone on which we mount up to the infinite worth
of the infinite Person.
2. Personality is the only adequate explanation of
the universe. We are disposed to think we have dis-
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I3I
covered the explanation of a fact or event when we
have traced it to some law and fitted it as a link or cog
into a mechanical system ; and we further seem to think
that such an explanation rules out God. Some one has
said that when we discover how a thing was done our
first conclusion is that God did not do it. This is why
the doctrine of evolution at first was received with
exultation in some circles and with alarm in others.
Even Huxley thought it ended teleology, and some
theologians thought it was atheism. And so to some
minds the theory of the world as a mechanical system
in which all things interwork as cogwheels and move
one another is an ultimate explanation of it.
But this explanation really explains nothing. Such
a system cannot begin itself or order its plan or supply
its energy. We immediately know order and plan and
energy only in our own intelligence and will, and then
we proceed to extend and apply these inner principles to
external things. We look upon human behavior as it
goes on in business, society, politics, art, literature,
religion, upon the whole swarming ant hill of our hu-
man world, and we infer in these moving bodies the
presence and activity of souls like our own. The
whole human spectacle is meaningless until we thus in-
terpret it, and personality instantly lights it up with
this inner power and explanation.
132 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
An extension of the same principle puts intelligence
and will behind and within all the appearances and ac-
tivities of the universe as its inner reason and energy.
We can really understand these activities only when we
interpret their order and plan as the work of intelli-
gence and their energies as the exertion of will. The
universe also, like our human world, is rationally un-
derstood only as we interpret it in terms of personality;
and then personality becomes our ultimate explanation,
which cannot be explained but must be accepted as at
once the initial and the final fact of existence, the Alpha
and the Omega, the beginning and the end.
Dr. Borden P. Bowne works this view of the world
out in his luminous way in his Personalism, which we
again quote :
The most familiar events of everyday life have their key
and meaning only in the invisible. If we observe a number
of persons moving along the street, and consider them only
under the laws of mechanics, and notice simply what we can
see or what the camera could report, the effect is in the
highest degree grotesque. A kiss or caress described in
anatomical terms of the points of contact and muscles in-
volved would not be worth having in any case, and would
be unintelligible to most of us. And all our physical atti-
tudes and movements seem quite ridiculous whenever we con-
sider them in abstraction from their personal meaning or
the personal life behind them. What could be more absurd
than a prayer described in physical terms of noise and atti-
tude, apart from the religious meaning? Or what could be
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I33
more opaque than a description of a scientific experiment
in terms of bodies and instruments, apart from a knowledge
of the problem and of the unseen persons who are trying to
solve it? But the grotesqueness in these cases does not
exist for us, because we seldom abstract from our knowledge
of personality so as to see simply what sense can give.
These physical forms we regard as persons who are going
somewhere or are doing something. There is a thought
behind it all as its meaning and key, and so the matter seems
to us entirely familiar. Thus out of the invisible comes the
meaning that transforms the curious sets of motions into
terms of personality and gives them a human significance.
Dr. Bowne proceeds to apply this principle of in-
terpretation to literature, history, music, government,
war, battles, and to show that " the whole contents of
human life, in short, are invisible, and the spatial is
merely the means of expressing and localizing this un-
picturable hfe; it has only symbolical significance for
the deeper life behind it." Finally he extends the same
principle to the whole visible creation and concludes
that " for us nature is only an order of uniformity,
established and maintained by an everliving and ever-
acting Intelligence and Will. Nature is a function of
the will and purpose of the ever-present God."
The immanence of God is thus the rational ground-
work and cause of the universe, launching it into exist-
ence and acting as the inner intelligence and will that
constantly sustain it and give it all its order and plan
and purpose, energy and activity, beauty and joy and
134 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
blessedness, and coming to its highest expression in
finite beings in this world in man. This is the final and
only adequate explanation of the universe, and in it we
rest. This is the
Presence that disturbs us with a joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns.
And the round ocean and the living air.
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man :
A motion and a spirit, that impels
All thinking things, all objects of all thought.
And rolls through all things.
— Wordsworth.
3. Personality is the only true and worthy view of
God. The truth of a view is the first and fundamental
aspect of it, but its worth is also to be considered and
enters into the question of its truth. Our whole argu-
ment has converged upon the personality of God as
both true and good, and it need not be recapitulated
here except in a few words. Personality in man is a
reflection of the same power in the First Cause of man,
and nature itself reflects the same image. Religion
and revelation focus their light upon the same truth.
This view is the only adequate explanation of the uni-
verse. Take a supreme Personality out of the world,
and it has no inner light and meaning and no originat-
ing and sustaining cause. Put this Personality at the
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I35
center of the universe and immanent in it, and it is at
once lighted up as a glorious temple of science and art
and religion. Deprive God of personality, and he in-
stantly sinks below his conscious creatures or evanes-
cent manifestations of mind and becomes a fearful
specter of unconscious fate.
Personality is worthy of God, for it is the highest
form of being and in him reaches infinite perfection
and power; and it is worthy of him, for it endows him
with all the moral and spiritual attributes of personal-
ity, holy character and conduct, truth and purity, right-
eousness and goodness, mercy and forgiveness, kind-
ness and love, sympathy and service and sacrifice. All
virtues and graces are in him raised to their highest
possible degree and combined in perfect proportion and
poise and power. He is as beautiful as he is blessed, as
blessed as he is good, and as good as he is strong. The
Heaven of heavens cannot contain his glory which
streams through the creation as through a dome of
many colored glass and irradiates the universe with the
beauty of his holiness. Compared with faith in a per-
sonal God deterministic monism and materialism and
pantheism and agnosticism are as starless night com-
pared with midday. We ought not and will not believe
in the personality of God unless we are persuaded of
the truth of this view, but we are assured by every prin-
136 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
ciple of reason in our minds and by every spiritual in-
stinct and high hope in our hearts that he that sitteth
upon the throne of the universe and ruleth amongst
the children of men is a personal God and Father of
our spirits.
4. The personality of God is the only explanation
and guarantee of our own personality. Our person-
ality is a mystery in its origin. It seems to come up
out of the womb of an unconscious abyss, but we can-
not believe this is its real origin, as though it were a
jet shot up so far above its source. Its origin is re-
vealed and explained only when we know that " trail-
ing clouds of glory do we come from God, who is our
home." Then spirit comes from Spirit and intelli-
gence from Intelligence, and our fundamental axiom
of thought is not contradicted and put to confusion.
Then the mystery of our existence and all the mys-
teries of finite existence are swallowed up in the one
ultimate and irresolvable mystery of God, and at last
we rest on an explanation that cannot be explained.
And, further, the personality of God is the only
guarantee of the reality and worth and permanence
of our own personality. If his personality does not
exist, then ours is a shadow without any substance and
thus is emptied of its worth and will presently van-
ish. If we are only bubbles of foam on the ocean of
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY 1 37
the impersonal infinite, we shall burst as do all bubbles
and leave not a vestige behind. When God's per-
sonality is resolved into fleeting manifestations of a
pantheistic substance and disappears from human
thought, then man's personality grows indistinct and
fugitive and disappears from human faith. Then
human life grows cheap and morality and religion and
all the things of the spirit fall into the flesh. It is
ever the highest that holds up the lowest, the sun
holds all the planets in their orbits, and when the cen-
tral sun and attraction of the personality of God
disappears, our human world will go crashing into
ruin.
" Belief in the personality of man," says Professor George
P. Fisher in his Grounds of Thcistic and Christian Belief,
" and belief in the personality of God stand or fall together.
A glance at the history of religion would suggest that these
two beliefs are for some reason inseparable. Where faith
in the personality of God is weak, or is altogether wanting,
as in the case of the pantheistic religions of the East, the
perception which men have of their own personality is found
to be, in an equal degree, indistinct. The feeling of indi-
viduality is dormant. The soul indolently ascribes to itself
merely a phenomenal being. It conceives of itself as ap-
pearing for a moment, like a wavelet on the ocean, to vanish
again in the all-ingulfing essence whence it emerged."
The sun mirrors itself in all the dewdrops, but
when it goes down by night or is obscured by day all
these reflected images of its glory vanish. When
138 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
the personality of God disappears from or is ob-
scured in the sky of our faith our souls will no longer
clearly reflect his image.
5. Finally, the personality of God affords the only
complete and worthy satisfaction of all our needs.
The pragmatic principle that truth works receives
full vindication at this point. Theism works in the
intellectual field, for it issues, as we have seen, in the
only adequate explanation of the universe. The
whole search of science is founded on faith in an in-
telligible world, and such a w^orld is possible only as
the creation and expression of an intelligent Mind
or Person. Our science and philosophy and all our
thinking can find their expectations realized and be
satisfied only as they find themselves in a personal
world. Unless we are in such a world all our
thoughts are but evanescent and meaningless phos-
phorescence; but in a personal world our minds are
at home and shall be satisfied. God is then the un-
explored field of all possible knowledge, and all the
glories of science and art are but gleams of the ever
fuller and more splendid revelation of truth that
shall shine out of the Fountain Light of all our
seeing.
Our affectional and social natures also find their
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY 1 39
realization and satisfaction only in a personal world.
The human soul is intensely social and absorbent in
nature and cannot live as an isolated individual. All
its faculties and fibers reach out after and seek to twine
themselves around other souls. Life is love more than
anything else, and deprived of this warm atmosphere
and rich nourishment it droops and withers. God hath
set the solitary in families, and only as heart is wedded
to heart in sweet union and communion does life sat-
isfy its own deep yearning instinct and nature and real-
ize itself at its richest and best. This affectional and
social life finds its congenial soil and vital root in faith
in a personal God, for this only gives full meaning to
human love and crowns it with immortal worth and
hope. Robbed of this faith, human love is only an-
other fitful illusion and delusion, but in the light of this
faith it is a shining strand of the love of God, which,
ideally at least, will ever grow stronger and finer and
never be broken.
The fullest and profoundest satisfaction derived
from the personality of God is experienced in our
moral and religious nature. Conscience demands a
Lawgiver and Judge to set up a standard of right and
bestow^ rewards and impose retribution. If there is
no personal God, the universe has no Supreme Court
I40 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
and Judge, and our moral sense is left without author-
ity and meaning. But under the rule of a personal
God our moral life takes on solemn significance and
eternal value.
Deeper still is the religious nature which ramifies our
whole constitution and reaches with all its tendrils after
a personal God. The immortal childhood within us
cries, '* Shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us." This
great cry rises from the whole earth and is deeper and
more urgent than any other human need. If there is
no personal God, this infant in us is crying in the night,
and there is no answer. But in the presence and prov-
idence of a Father who has begotten his children in
love, the religious longing of the human soul finds an
answer in peace and life more abundant and everlast-
ing, as surely as the bee finds honey in the flower and
the migrating bird finds a sunny southern clime. God
has not proved himself true to every instinct in the ani-
mal w^orld and then turned false to this deepest instinct
of man. In him as a personal God and Father man
lives and moves and has his being, and then faith is a
living fact and force, prayer is the natural and neces-
sary speech of a child to its Father, obedience is loyalty,
love, and trust, service and sacrifice are a joy, and our
very sufferings and sorrows are the divine discipline
without which
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I4I
We had not been this splendor, and our wrong
An everlasting music for the song
Of earth and heaven.
Faith in a personal God is a practical force that turns
all life into worth}- and satisfying service. All our
powers of body and mind and heart are made for activ-
ity and cry for it as the body for bread and the mind
for truth. In an impersonal world there is no such
worthy service, for human activity means no more than
the twitter of birds and the hum of bees. There is
nothing better for us to do than to eat and drink, for
to-morrow we die. But theistic faith transforms all
life into a field of duty rising to eternal issues, in which
we may highly resolve to render the most strenuous and
self-sacrificing service and fight the good fight of faith.
Men are then immortal souls capable of helping and
saving one another and of serving and glorifying God.
Children are to be educated and trained in character
and conduct for this service, and all life in the home
and community, business and society, country and
world, is to be turned into this channel.
The w^orld presents a tremendous problem and in-
spiring prospect to such faith and faithfulness. It is
now a scene of more or less disorder and degradation,
but it is capable of being rebuilt into a social order in
which truth and purity and justice and brotherhood
142 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
shall prevail and be the opportunity and blessing of all.
All the barriers that separate men into antagonistic
classes are to be leveled, and humanity is to be welded
into one organism, which may find political expression
in the parliament of man and federation of the world.
The Kingdom of God is to come in widening sweep and
power until its ideal, which has so long hovered in the
imagination of prophets and over the horizon of the
world in various dreams, shall be realized. Christian
faith looks for a city of glory in the heavenly country,
but it is also building a copy of this city down in this
world. Its jeweled walls are even now rising around
our horizon, and we are laying its golden pavements
right under our feet. This is the meaning and object
of all our work and worship, sanitation, education, mis-
sions, scientific and industrial, social and political and
religious progress. This progress often seems pain-
fully and pathetically slow, but it is steadily moving to-
ward its goal as the thoughts of men are widened with
the process of the suns and through the shadow of the
globe sweeps the world into a better day.
Deny and destroy faith in a personal God, and the
vital nerve of this human progress and hope will be be-
numbed, but deepen and intensify this faith and every
force of human good will be reinvigorated. This fun-
damental truth of the personality of God, that to some
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I43
minds may seem abstract and remote from practical
affairs, a mere theological dogma, if really worked out
in all its applications and implications, would solve all
our problems, individual and social, national and in-
ternational, and build a new world of beauty and bless-
edness. Only the vision of theistic faith contains in it
the prophecy and potency of this victory.
All things run up to God for their final explanation
and satisfaction. " We cannot study a snowflake pro-
foundly," says Professor Tyndall, '' without being led
back step b}^ step to the sun.'' Strange that the great
thinker did not see that another step would lead him up
to God. Nature and the mind of man, science and
philosophy and art, history and ethics and religion,
conscience and spirit and all the immortal instincts and
needs and aspirations of the human soul cry out after
the living God. Our hearts have a passionate need
and longing for him which no doubts can hush and
which exclaim, '' Though he slay me yet will I trust
him." If the Great Companion is dead, the human
heart is given a stone for bread and the universe is
turned into irrationality and despair. But shew us
the Father and we find in him the master Light and
Love that turn our life into light and love and reveal a
shining path that runs through this world and leads out
through the gates into the eternal city.
144 THE PERSONALITY OF GOD
For so the whole round world is every way
Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.
We have come to the end of our study. The vari-
ous roads of thought and meditation, feeling and as-
piration, faith and hope we have been traveling have
converged upon the affimiation, " I believe in God ! "
This is the greatest affirmation the human soul ever
makes, the " Everlasting Yea " that underlies and over-
tops and gives foundation and worth to all other affir-
mations of truth and value. This is the central column
that sustains the whole structure and weight of a ra-
tional and good world, which, being removed, would
let it all crash into ruin ; it is the inner light which irra-
diates it with meaning and glory, or, being extin-
guished, would leave it dust and darkness at the core.
This central fact and faith being once accepted, all
other doctrines of religion, revelation and providence
and prayer, incarnation and miracle, become natural
and easy as rays from the sun. This is the one final
mystery that explains all others. This belief is con-
stitutional and instinctive. '* When the Master of the
universe," says Emerson, *' has points to carry in his
government he impresses his will in the structure of our
minds." This faith is stamped upon every fiber of our
being and is one of the " truths that wake, to perish
never." This ineradicable constitutional faith is the
THE VALUE OF PERSONALITY I45
great background of all our reasonings which would
stand secure should all its outposts of logic fall. Yet
this faith must also come out into the light of reason
and then it is confirmed and stands stronger as the de-
cision and demand of our total nature. Difficulties still
and always will environ this faith ; but ** it is incom-
parably more free from difficulties," says Dr. W. N.
Clarke, " to believe in an all-embracing mind endowed
with goodness than to deny it.'' The modern world
has greater need than ever for this faith, for this need
grows with all its growth. The world is now growing
into unity and facing greater problems and perils and
grander visions and victories than it ever dreamed of
before. The ages are culminating and climaxing.
God is the great Necessity, the final explanation and
completion of all things,
The fountain light of all our day,
A master light of all our seeing.
INDEX
Agnosticism, 2, 55 ff.
Arnold, Matthew, 27, 76.
Atheism, dy.
Augustine, 27.
Balfour, A. J., 88.
Barres, Maurice, 115.
Belief, in God, grounds of, 4-6.
Bergson, 87 ff.
Bowne, Borden P., 63 ff., 'j^^,
132-133-
Bradley, F. H., 50-51, 56.
Browning, 15, 19, 25, 30, 39,
65.
Browning, Mrs., 126.
Caird, Edward, 27.
Cause, principle of, 17-18; as
passage from man to God,
16 ff.
Christ, Jesus, as Messiah, zi-
Clarke, W. N., 145.
Columbus, 128.
Comte, Auguste, 97.
Darwin, 84.
Dawson, Coningsiby, 114-115.
Demosthenes, 128.
Determinism, 68 ff.
Drummond, Henry, 22.
Emerson, 109, 144.
Evolution, 84 ff.
Fisher, George P., 137.
Flint, Robert, 68, 97.
God, manifestation of in the
world, 20-25; doctrine of
struggling and suffering,
102 ff. ; immanence of, 103 11.
See Personality.
Goethe, 53.
Hamilton, Sir William, 55.
Hankey, Donald, 123.
Harris, Samuel, 2)7-
Harrison, Frederic, 94.
Hugo, Victor, 117-118.
Hume, 55.
Idealism, 80.
Illingworth, J. R., 37.
James, William, 90 ff., 123.
Kant, 5, 55.
Law, universality of in nature,
80 ff.
Lincoln, 128.
Lotze, 61 ff., ^2, 83.
Luther, 128.
Marshall, Alfred, 29.
Martineau, 21-22.
Mill, John Stuart, 99 ft'., 106.
Monism, 68 ff.
Morley, John, 27.
Pantheism, dj ; 71 ff.
Paulsen, Friedrich, 50.
Personality, in man, 7 ff.. defi-
nition of, 9; gruwth ot, 1,^-
14; as a product of the world.
17; in God, 17 ft'.; the world
147
148
INDEX
as a witness of, 20-25 ', re-
ligion as a witness to, 26-
30; Christianity as a witness
to, 31 ; Christ as witness, 2>2>-
36; tentative construction of,
40 ff., objections to, 54 ff. ; al-
ternatives to, 66 ff. ; in the
light of the modern world,
77 ff. ; value of, 124 ff.
Pessimism, 57-68.
Probability, in our knowledge,
3-4.
Richter, Jean Paul, 74-75.
Seeley, J. R., 27.
Soul, the, faculties of, 9-11 ;
complexity of. 11-12.
Spencer, Herbert, 27, 51, 56,
58, 94, 100.
Stephen, Leslie, 100.
Tennyson, 6, 144.
Trinity, the, 36 ff. : 48 ff.; 64-
66.
Tyndall, 143.
Value, of personality, 124 ff.
Vaughn, Henry, 45.
War, the Great, no ff.
Ward, Wilfred, 100.
Watson, William, 126.
Wells, H. G., 92 ff.
Will, the, lo-ii; manifested in
the world, 23.
Wordsworth, 134.
World, the, witness to the per-
sonality of God, 20 ff.
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