, ssss , o si GWLMO Vol. 4. {msivflfid'fifflzwssss "} CHICAGO AND CINCINNATI, siTUBDAY, MARCH 26,1887. {THHTEYHCSXENANT} No. 13. J The Unihersalist. A RELIGIOUS AND MlllLY WEEKLY. Universalist Publishing House, PUBLISHERS. CHARLES CAVERLY, General Agent. Issued by Western Branch. 69 Dearborn St., Rooms 40 and 41, OXSIO^-O-O, XXriZrf. LORD A THOMAS, MANAGERS ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT. ^Tcrtiis : Postage Pa*een answered a thousand times, but from I lir frequent re currence, by honest people, suspeot such answers, if made, are not n 3i!y acceptable to the general public. “Lil upon line, and precept upon precept ” are Soessary to im press the truth upon men Iminds. Is it, then, wrong to ask Mr. Sa^br some other of our able correspondent®^) make these things clear? “The true way, it seems t^ke,” says Mr. Saxe, “toevercome skeptic® objections of this kind, is to show the gtttndlessness of each charge when made.” b it seems to me, and therefore the euggbion above. I hope Mr. Saxe will pardon but I am of the opinion that such answebs he has made will not oonvince many sketbs. Richmond, 111. iii. ; Rev. J. B. Saxe in Reply to tt kbove Articles. My article seems to ! ve attracted considerable attention. will respond briefly to some of the e Seisms upon it. Mr. Marsh thinks tl New Testa ment contradicts the O r and quotes Matt. v. 43. The refer ce is not to the Old Testament, bi probably to some Rabbinical writinj No part of the Bible commands us t< late enemies, though such hatred was < mmon, if not universal. If the Bible lad not been inspired, it would almost ertainly have contained such a comm id. lie also thinks the character as :ibed to God contradictory. He is angr; repents, etc.; and yet he is love, omnisc >nt, and so on. I suppose such objection were once re garded as having force, i lalileo came near losing his life for (aching that the earth went round e sun, thus contradicting the Bible bich declared the sun rose and set 1 IWe laugh at such opinions now. E«ry boy knows that the Bible speaks aiding to the appearance, j'ust as we 4o in our ordi nary speech. Suppose wie should say, instead of the sun rose, Ijbe. earth’s axis turned into such a pos^ion as to per mit the sun to be seen fe^Chat would be worse than anythingfcter told of a Bo3ton girl! But this winy of speaking according to the appearMpe, was much more common in the pogfahl languages «**■#(*- niwfct-Wciw iwir common idiom. Everybody understood it. When God was said to repent, he appeared to change the course of provi dential dealings; when angry to inflict pain, or bring calamities. Our modern critics are not to assume that these old Bible writers were fools—especially they are not to predicate such assumptions on their own ignorance of the use of language in those days. It was a com mon use of language to say one had seen God, when he had seen a messen ger of God, or any manifestation of di vine power or glory. I could produce a hundred instances. To pretend that such a declaration contradicts St. John, would be as ridiculous as was the papal charge against Galileo I The 109th psalm is simply a prayer, in the highly rhetorical and figurative language of the East, for justice upon great criminals; and Christ teaches the same doctrine. Because he also teaches something more, does not make him contradict David. I remember to have read a long list of similar “contradic tions,” prepared by Thomas Paine. I could easily drive a coach and six through every one of these objections. We claim no “perfection” for the Bible. I, for one, do not believe in plenary inspiration. It contains a rev elation ; but much of it is simply his tory. It nowhere claims to be “inspir ed all through;” therefore it might contain one, or many contradictions without “invalidating the authority of the whole,” as Mr. Bennett says. Why he regards Dr. Beecher’s answer as a “quibble,” or unsatisfactory, he does not say. The rope might have broken. It often occurs in modern times, when ropes are much better made than they were of old in the East. I have read of such instances in the newspapers within a few years. If it did, the two accounts are harmonious. This may not satisfy every “honestly doubting mind;” but you can’t charge “contradictions,” when so simple, “reasonable,” and probable a supposition will dispose of the difficulty. That the Hebrew word rendered “day” in the account of creation, orig inally and literally meant a period of twenty-four hours, no one ever doubt ed; and the English word means pre cisely the same. “Therefore, in effect,” says Mr. Bennett, “the work of crea tion was performed in exactly six days of tweuty-four hours each.” Such reasoning ought to make Aristotle turn in his grave ! If you could only com plete the syllogism 1 Major proposi tion': day literally means twenty-four hours. Minor: it is never used in an accommodated sense. Conclusion : therefore, etc. When I wrote to a friend, as I did a month ago, “Such thiugs were not done in your mother’s day,” I referred to some particular twenty-four hours of his lifetime of three-score and ten years! Common sense is a good thing to have about when reading any book. How many English words have not acquired a sec ondary meaning V And this meaning often supersedes the literal one. IIow is the term day used in the Bible ? See Gen. xix. 37, 38; xxvi. 33; xxxi.40. Isa. xiii.6; xix. 16, 18, 19, 21, 23. In all these instances, and I might quote an hundred more just like them, the word is the same in the original that it i3 in the first chapter of Genesis; and in every instance it stands for an indef inite period of time. A few years ago the Index (and that is a paper agnostic enough to satisfy any reasonable skeptic,) contained an article which declared that there was such a remarkable agreement between the science of geology and the first chapter of Genesis, that the science, (as the theory of inspiration was inad missible,) must have been as well un derstood in ancient times as now ! This reminds me of a story told of Horace Greeley. When any one told him a story that taxed his credulity too much, he would say, “Tell that to Mrs. Gree ley. She will believe anything—except the Bible!” I have seen men with the same kind of a twist in their mental constitution. I only indicated the agree ment between Genesis and geology in my article. I might show it at length, and in detail. Perhaps I will sometime. If the “divine” mentioned really meant to say that the Hebrew word, rendered day, always stood for a pe riod of twenty-four hours, he was, as I have shown, poor authority “in the original tongue.” Of course we would expect an inspired book to be consist ent with itself, and with truth, “no matter how many persons were the writers.” The Bible is consistent. There fore it is inspired. I said it was a1 ‘ mar vel,” because inspiration is. Mr. Bennett and the “skeptics” he mentions, seem to have opinions of their own about the relation of the Ni cean council to the Bible. It is as im portant for skeptics to know what they are talking about, as for anybody. They ought, therefore, to know that the fa mous council of Nice was held in the year 325; and that more than two cen turies before that date, the Bible had been translated into many languages, and manuscripts of all these versions had been multiplied all over the world. Many of these versions, and even some or immediate cop ies of them, still exist, and have been laboriously collated by learned men, to ascertain the true text. Moreover, the church had long been divided into hostile sects as it is to-day, each jeal ous of its peculiar opinions, and each watching the others, expressly to pre vent him tampering with the text. It was as literally impossible for the Ni cean council, or any oth9r body of men, or any available human agency, to corrupt the Bible in the way sup posed, as it would be for a sectarian convention to do it at the present day. The assumption is utterly preposter ous. The council had as much to do with shaping our Bible as the man in the moon. It is derived from sources much earlier than the date of this as semblage. That it attempted some thing of the kind may be true. As to rejecting apocryphal bocks, or retain ing canonical ones, the opinion of the council goes for what it is worth, and no more. The talk so common among unbelievers of a certain calibre, about the absurdity of voting books into or out of the Bible, (I have heard it ever since I can remember), only causes a well informed man to smile at their simplicity. Every book in the Bible stands on its own footing and its can onical character is determined by evi dence entirely independent of the vote of any council. It ia not to be supposed that a man will be impressed with the evidences of the inspiration of the Scripture, if he has never studied the subject—if the most he knows about the Bible is de rived from Paine’s “Age of Reason,” or some similar book. It is well to read such books; but if he seeks the “real truth,” let him also read such works as Horne’s “Introduction,” Dr. Geikie’s “Hours With the Bible,” or others like them. A brief newspaper article cannot contain what a ponderous quarto is not large enough to hold. I have also received a communica tion on the sul ject, from a Dr McKay, of Seneca, Kansas. He thinks the Old Testament ought not to be regarded as a part of “our Christian Bible,” because in the New, Christ is said to be the ful fillment of the “law and prophets.” That would be the reason, or one of the reasons, I should give on the other side of the question. Of course, the Old is not to be taken as equal in importance, or in fullness of revelation, to the New. Take it for what it claims to be, or what the New claims for it; no more and no less. It: was'mainly designed for the use of the Hebrew people. It ia an ab surd use of it to make its commands to keep'the seventh day, or to be cir cumcised, binding upon us. He refers to the genealogy of Christ, as given by Matthew and Luke. They are entirely different—contradict each other, and] unbelievers would say they were undoubtedly transcribed from the public registers,’and anybody could ver ify or contradict them by consulting the record. Why are they different? The most reasonable conjecture is, I think, that one is the genealogy of Joseph, and the other of Mary; and that Christ was begotten by ordinary generation, after the marriage of his parents. The passage or two that cannot be explain ed in harmony with this view, might have been interpolated in some of the early manuscripts during the Arian controversy, like 1 John v. 7. We can not yet prove this, as we can in the case of the passage in 1 John, but it is not an unreasonable conjecture. I am by no means over confident of the truth of this hypothesis, and would like very much the opinion of some one better qualified to judge than I am. It would be absurd to claim that any man can solve all the difficulties in the Bible, any more than those in nature. .There are apparent contradictions in science; we do not, therefore, reject science, but believe in it. He also asks how we will reconcile the literal resurrection of Matthew, with the spiritual resurrection of Paul. I see no discrepancy. Christ’s body was reanimated, as others had been, to convince such men as Thomas ; and Paul gave an account of the anastasis into the future life. What finally be came of Christ’s body, I am not called upon to say, for I do not know. I sup pose it went the way of other material bodies. There is certainly no contra diction. Fort Scott, Kan. EDWABDS AND CALVINISM. The Interior,(Presbyterian), of Chica go, has made a bold discovery. It is that Jonathan Edwards was a poet; that he “was evidently a close student of Virgil and of Dante, and he excels both in the appalling realism of his ma terialistic descriptions.” We fear that it is somewhat late in the day to con vert Edwards into a poet, and to take the laurels from the brow of Virgil and Dante to crown the New England the ologian. The unfortunate objection to such a theory is that furnished by the sermons of Edwards themselves. They are not allegories, but carefully con structed arguments. Their terror con sists not alone in their lurid word pict ures, but in the chain of argument and Scripture proofs by which these pict ures are supported. Edwards was sim ply a man who tried to carry out Cal vinism to its logical consequences. It was the consciousness that the natural sentiments of the human heart are op posed to such a terrible belief which made him seek to show, by elaborate argument, that in heaven such senti ments would be so modified that saints could rejoice in the damnation of their parents or their offspring. In the pul pit, Edwards held rigidly to the logic of his system; but the man was better than the God he worshiped, and in his journal could write these benign reso lutions: “Resolved, never to do any thing out of revenge,” and “never to suffer the least motion of anger to irra tional beings.” But the object of the Interior seems not to be so much to shield Edwards as to screen orthodoxy. It thinks it is “un fair to quote the materialism of Ed wards as representing orthodoxy.” If the Interior means that the orthodoxy of to-day is outgrowing such material ism, we agree with it. We said our selves, in making some quotations from Edwards, that “the sublimated selfish ness of these extracts would be repu diated by the majority of orthodox read ers.” They would shrink from his fear ful imagery and his argument that the happiness of the sa:nts is to be increas ed by the pain of the lost. We are rejoiced to believe that our orthodox friends have made some progress ; but we should like to see them acknowledge it themselves, and get from it all the comfort to which they are entitled. And, then, we should like to see them give a little more credit to such men as Mayhew, Murray, and Ballou, who la bored under much reproach and opposi tion to redeem the world from the bond age of views which orthodoxy is com ing to repudiate.—Christian Register. ALWAYS YOUR BEST. A man’s work is always of more im portance to himself than to others. Whether it be teaching, literature, art, or some form of practical endeavor, he is more concerned than those who listen to his words, study his works, look upon his pictures. They may reject him, pass him, ignore him; but he can neith er reject nor ignore himself. The min ister who “preaches down” to his con gregation, the artist who sacrifices his ideal for the sake of immediate popu larity, the writer who tiims his truth to catch the currents of passing inter est-all these defraud others, but they defraud themselves still more. A man’s work is a part of himself; it is a fruit of his living; it takes something from his life. Those about him may lose much if he gives something less than the best, but his own loss is al ways the greatest. A man's work is part of the return he makes to God; if he chooses to pay God in inferior coin, he debases the circulation and others suffer,but the guilt is his alone.—Christ ian Union. gclitoriul Briefs. BY REV. I. M. ATWOOD, D. D. Canton, N. Y. Ann who aret interested in the contro versy over future probation, precipitated by the action of a Committee of the American Board, must be grateful to Prof. George P. Fisher, of Yale, for the calm and lucid discussion of the under lying facts and principles which he pre sents in the last Independent. In this matter, as in another to which Joseph Cook devoted unnecessary space a week ago, there are three classes among Con gregationalists — believers, unbelievers and the perplexed. Dr. Fisher’s paper, equally admirable in itB reasoning and its temper, will bring relief to the last. They will see that it argues nothing against either the sanity or the orthodoxy of a man that he cannot allege a specific and authoritative text for his “specula tion.” —Prof. Fisher is exactly right in say ing that the various mitigations of iron clad Calvinism have been made, not on the authority of any text, bnt in defer ence to the “ prevailing spirit of the Gos pel teaching.” The significant fact about the whole controversy in relation to the future of the unsaved, is that, just in proportion as the Church becomes im bued with what Prof. Fisher calls “ the spirit and drift of the Gospel,” it acquires more hope for the heathen and the unre generate. Hard dogmas relax under the influence of the very religion they were intended to serve. The logic of the Gos pel is against the logic of orthodoxy. —The force of Dr. Fisher’s blow is felt in the editorial office and is attempted to be parried in the editorial columns. Six full columns are given up to the subject. We are gratified to observe that the In dependent has recovered the courtesy which in former articles on this theme it had conspicuously laid aside. The sub ject is discussed with patience and gen tleness. But, alas! what is gained in temper is lost in power. The strength of the editorial is in inverse ratio to its length. _ The Independent is usually direct, vigorous, incisive, whether right or wrong. It is in a bad way, surely, when it adds to the sin of being in the wrong the disgrace of being impotent. —The Evening Record, a bright, newsy penny paper, of Boston, announces that it is about to introduce illustrations. We doubt if its readers will appreciate the improvement. In a paper as large as most of “ the great dailies ” are, illustra tions are not an unmixed evil, because the space they occupy is so much sub tracted from the too vast area of reading matter. Bnt the space of a small sheet cannot be better used than in printing this news and in making sensible and sententious oomments on it. But the fashion must be followed in journalism as elsewhere, we suppose. —It is entirely legit imate for those who think Mr. Beecher's religious liberalism a dangerous thing, to mingle with their eulogy of his great powers more or less depreciation of his theology. But we submit that it is not handsome in them, nor is it logical, to intimate that any un usual laxity which he may (possibly) have exhibited is attributable to the lat itude of his opinions. Fortunately it has been abundantly demonstrated that there is no causal connection between heresy and moral obliquity. The soundest or thodoxy is no safeguard against iniquity. Ou the other hand, all the world has learned that a Christian is not likely to be less pure and trustworthy for being liberal. —George Tioknor Curtis, in imitation of another eminent lawyer, Judge Simon Greenleaf, has taken up by way of diver sion from his professional labors, a branch of theological discussion. Prof. Green leaf examined the testimony for the gen uineness of the Gospels by the rales of evidence. His work, though lacking some of the features requisite to give it the character of an authority, is regarded as an original and valuable contribution to the subject. Mr. Curtis has been for many years a deeply interested student of the modern scientific theory of evolu tion. As time went on he began to feel within him a call to tell the public the re sults of his studies and reflections. Hence a volume entitled, “ Creation or Evolu tion.” —Mr. Curtis explains in his preface under what persuasion he writes: “ The result of my study of the hypothesis of evolution is, that it is an ingenious but delusive mode of accounting for the ex istence of either the body or the mind of man; and that it employs a kind of rea soning which no person of sound judg ment would apply to anything that might affect his welfare, his happiness, his estate, or his conduct in the practical affairs of life.” It is to the prejudice of the theory of evolution, certainly, that the reasoning by which it is supported appears so inconsequent to u miud truined to weigh evidence, and a mind, tno, of the first order of ability. —The question which the distinguished advocate sets himself to answer is one that discussion will net settle. It is a question of fact, but the fact cannot be ascertained. If it could the reasoning would be supeifiuous. No man knows what the fact in the case is. Mr. Curtis helps to muke this point very plain. Those who have pretended to have origi nal information are really as much in the dark as the rest of us. The remaining question is, What are the probabilities as to the fact? Mr. Curtis deals a heavy blow to the affirmative argument for the hypothesis of evolution. Opinions wiil vary as to the force of his own tflirmative argument for the hypotheses of creation. But this book is strong, candid and inter esting.