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THE  PERSONALITY  OF  GOD 


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THE  MACMILLAN  COMPANY 

NEW  YORK  •   BOSTON  •   CHICAGO  •   DALLAS 
ATLANTA  •    SAN  FRANCISCO 

MACMILLAN  &  CO.,  Limited 

LONDON  •    BOMBAY  •    CALCUTTA 
MELBOURNE 

THE  MACMILLAN  CO.  OF  CANADA,  Ltd. 

TORONTO 


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. 


-^ 


jQeto  gorb 

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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