登陆注册
25531900000097

第97章 ATHEIST(3)

3. It may not be out of place at this point to look for a moment at some of the things that agitate, stir up, and make the secret atheism of our hearts to fluctuate and overflow. Butler has a fine passage in which he points out that it is only the higher class of minds that are tempted with speculative difficulties such as those were that assaulted Christian and Hopeful after they were so near the end of their journey. Coarse, common-place, and mean-minded men have their probation appointed them among coarse, mean, and commonplace things; whereas enlightened, enlarged, and elevated men are exercised after the manner of Robert Bruce, Thomas Halyburton, John Bunyan, and Butler himself. "The chief temptations of the generality of the world are the ordinary motives to injustice or unrestrained pleasure; but there are other persons without this shallowness of temper; persons of a deeper sense as to what is invisible and future. Now, these persons have their moral discipline set them in that high region." The profound bishop means that while their appetites and their tempers are the stumbling-stones of the most of men, the difficult problems of natural and revealed and experimental religion are the test and the triumph of other men. As we have just seen in the men mentioned above. Students, whose temptations lie fully as much in their intellects as in their senses, should buy (for a few pence)

Halyburton's Memoirs. "With Halyburton," says Dr. John Duncan, "I

feel great intellectual congruity. Halyburton was naturally a sceptic, but God gave that sceptic great faith."

Then again, what Atheist calls the "tediousness" of the journey has undoubtedly a great hand in ****** some half-in-earnest men sceptics, if not scoffers. Many of us here to-night who can never now take this miserable man's way out of the tedium of the Christian life, yet most bitterly feel it. Whether that tedium is inherent in that life, and inevitable to such men as we are who are attempting that life; how far that feature belongs to the very essence of the pilgrim life, and how far we import our own tedium into the pilgrimage; the fact remains as Atheist puts it. As Atheist in this book says, so the Atheist who is in our hearts often says: We are like to have nothing for all our pains but a lifetime of tedious travel. Yes, wherever the blame lies, there can be no doubt about it, that what this hilarious scoffer calls the tediousness of the way is but a too common experience among many of those who, tediousness and all, will still cleave fast to it and will never leave it.

Then, again, great trials in life, great straits, dark and too-

long-continued providences, prayer unanswered, or not yet answered in the way we dictate, bad men and bad causes growing like a green bay tree, and good men and good work languishing and dying; these things, and many more things such as these, of which this world of faith and patience is full, prove quite too much for some men till they give themselves up to a state of mind that is nothing better than atheism. "My evidences and my certainty," says Halyburton, "were not answerable to the weight I was compelled to lay upon them." A figure which Goodwin in his own tender and graphic way takes up thus: "Set pins in a wall and fix them in ever so loosely, yet, if you hang nothing upon them they will seem to stand firm; but hang a heavy weight upon them, or even give them the least jog as you pass, and the whole thing will suddenly come down.

The wall is God's word, the slack pin is our faith, and the weight and the jog are the heavy burdens and the sudden shocks of life, and down our hearts go, wall and pin and suspended vessel and all.

When the church and her ministers, when the Scriptures and their anomalies, and when the faults and failings of Christian men are made the subject of mockery and laughter, the reverence, the fear, the awe, the respect that all enter so largely into religion, and especially into the religion of young people, is too easily destroyed; and not seldom the first seeds of practical and sometimes of speculative atheism are thus sown. The mischief that has been done by mockery and laughter to the souls, especially of the young and the inexperienced, only the great day will fully disclose.

And then, two men of great weight and authority with us, tell us what we who are ministers would have found out without them: this, namely, that the greatest atheists are they who are ever handling holy things without feeling them.

"Is it true," said Christian to Hopeful, his fellow, "is it true what this man hath said?" "Take heed," said Hopeful, "remember what it hath cost us already for hearkening to such kind of fellows. What! No Mount Zion! Did we not see from the Delectable Mountains the gate of the City? And, besides, are we not to walk by faith? Let us go on lest the man with the whip overtakes us again." Christian: "My brother, I said that but to prove thee, and to fetch from thee a fruit of the honesty of thy heart." Many a deep and powerful passage has Butler composed on that thesis which Hopeful here supplies him with; and many a brilliant sermon has Newman preached on that same text till he has made our "predispositions to faith" a fruitful and an ever fresh commonplace to hundreds of preachers. Yes; the best bulwark of faith is a good and honest heart. To such a happy heart the truth is its own unshaken evidence. To whom can we go but to Thee?--they who have such a heart protest. The whole bent of such men's minds is toward the truth of the gospel. Their instincts keep them on the right way even when their reason and their observation are both confounded. As Newman keeps on saying, they are "easy of belief."

They cannot keep away from Christ and His church. They cannot turn back. They must go on. Though He slay them they will die yearning after Him. They often fall into great error and into great guilt, but their seed remaineth in them, and they cannot continue in error or in guilt, because they are born of God. They are they in whom "Persuasion and belief Have ripened into faith; and faith become A passionate intuition."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 《圣龙诀》

    《圣龙诀》

    龙天,拥有龙之血脉,看其逆天灭敌,成就无上霸业
  • 七曜的魔法使

    七曜的魔法使

    你们以为这会是网游吗?错了!这只是作者无节操的将整个世界的世界观全部扭曲了而已!所有一切非正常的BUG,请全部联系虚渊玄╮(╯▽╰)╭嘛,有各种意见还是欢迎各位多提意见的,书评区里什么的╰( ̄▽ ̄)╮PS:作者是个笨蛋
  • 武则天之魅力

    武则天之魅力

    武则天活着时是一位最有权威的铁血女皇,死后迄今仍是一位最有魅力的历史人物。读者若不信,请看中国唐史学会的如下报道:中国唐史学会发起、主持的第一次全国性的武则天学术研讨会,1985年10月22日至27日在陕西咸阳召开,会议期间在乾陵博物馆成立了武则天研究会。其后,又连续三年召开了三次武则天学术研讨会。每隔一年就召开一次全国性的、同一专题的学术研讨会,除武则天以外,其他历史人物享受过这种特殊的荣誉吗?这就足以证明,武则天死后近一千三百年还是如此具有魅力!难怪人们称赞她是“中国历史上惟一的女皇帝、封建时代杰出的女政治家”,歌颂她是“一个最伟大的女人。”
  • 暂无灵感

    暂无灵感

    我们很平凡但是我们都有故事。风吹过的.路依然远.你的故事讲到了哪.
  • 强势攻妻:老公夜夜撩

    强势攻妻:老公夜夜撩

    婚礼前夜,她亲眼目睹未婚夫和妹妹在他们的婚床上翻滚,怒极的她亲手导演了一场让那对不要脸的渣男贱女声明扫地的好戏。她却不知,这会引起世上最可怕的男人对她感兴趣。一夜酒醉,她与他缠绵到天亮,他许她婚姻,她许他孩子,各取所需。后来她才知,他娶她是交易中的交易,她嫁他是套中有套。她带着孩子远走他乡,“睡了我就想跑?”她气急败坏,“明明是我吃了亏!”男人瞥了她眼,“嫁我,委屈你了?”她想哭:“不,不委屈……”
  • 吞尽八荒

    吞尽八荒

    吞你血脉,铸我长生!少年吴非,身为饕餮神体,注定走上与世皆敌的道路。吞尽八荒血脉,铸就混沌无极,不正不邪,不死不灭!
  • 守护甜心之凄凉的梦

    守护甜心之凄凉的梦

    (大家一定要看冰魄海洋啊)两年的友情、爱情,我原以为,那两年的友情、爱情是一条项链,项链坚不可摧,比钢铁还坚硬,可一个新同学的到来,就像一阵新来的风,竟吹断了那条坚不可摧的项链,思霞晴梦我恨你,把我们的爱情、友情破坏,我要谢谢你,告诉我们的友情、爱情是多么的脆弱……新的身份,新的家人,新的路程……让我怎么接受这残酷的现实……放弃几斗,选择了你,你却不肯珍惜……
  • 清代圣人陆稼书演义

    清代圣人陆稼书演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 海姆达尔

    海姆达尔

    非我族类,其心必异。德尔萨文明降临,地球联合部研究并建立了一套防御系统——海姆达尔,空天装备
  • 孤岛中的你

    孤岛中的你

    “轰”的一声被踢了出去,整个人瘫倒在地上,血一滴一滴的从不知名的源头流了出来……周围顿时响起了兴奋的噪声,一群人都鼓着掌欢呼着,吹着口哨,像庆祝节日一般,就差没有放烟花和鞭炮了。于音的思绪也跟着停了,不敢置信的捂着嘴巴,瞪大眼睛看着倒在血泊中的白哲,脸色顿时苍白了,身体不停的颤抖起来。所有的理智和冷静消失无踪,什么都听不到,愤怒从胸口慢慢沸腾,泪水奔流而出,用尽全身的力气跑了过去……一直身处在孤岛中的于音,会选择霸道冷酷却一直陪着自己的他,还是温柔多情却是为了报仇而靠近自己的他……到最后才发现自己的哥哥其实是……结局到底是如何?还是会一个人逃离呢?……