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Overland Monthly / OV001 - The Divine Program (I. The Living and True God)
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THE DIVINE PROGRAM
This article is the first of a series of
twelve on a most important theme by Pastor Russell, of the Brooklyn
Tabernacle. Pastor Russell is widely known, both as a writer and
speaker on homiletic themes. —EDITOR OVERLAND MONTHLY.
I.—The Living and True God.
THE STRUCTURE of the brain places
veneration at the very top, and thus, by implication, confirms the
statement of the catechism that "ManÂ’s chief end is to glorify God, and
to enjoy him forever." However great the depravity of our race in the
dark places of the earth, this element of veneration, of an instinctive
appreciation of a God and a feeling of responsibility toward him
constitutes a foundation upon which to build, to reconstruct, to
reorganize the depraved elements of character.
Without this fulcrum, missionaries and
philanthropists might well lose all heart and all hope in respect to
the moral and social uplift of the masses and the classes.
Whoever, therefore, is intelligently a
friend to his race must do everything in his power to maintain this
center of mental balance of mind and to utilize it as an essential
feature in the Divine arrangement for human well-being. Whoever in any
manner or degree undermines this element of the mind is surely doing a
destructive work, instead of a constructive one, whether he realizes
the fact or not. But, alas, that we must say it! Some of the most
intelligent of our most intellectual day are rapidly drifting away from
the fundamental truth that there is a living and true God.
These intellectuals are accepting the
thought of an impersonal God, which, from our standpoint, is tantamount
to saying, "There is no living and true God." This is the position
taken, not only by theosophists and Christian Scientists, but also by
many scientific and professional thinkers. Rarely is an attempt made to
define the impersonal God. Rather the term God is used merely as a
concession to popular sentiment and the "ignorance of the unlearned."
Those who hold this view often use the word nature as a synonym for
God. Their thought really seems to be that there is no intelligent
creator in the universe; that our sun
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and stars and planets are governed by
what they term "natural laws," and that humanity prospers and
progresses merely as it learns by experience the operation of these
laws, and seeks co-operation and avoids conflict with them. Christian
Science, dealing less with the scholastic and more with the ordinary
reason, attempts to explain that the word God simply signifies Good.
And then, with something of a play upon words, which confounds the
reasoning faculties of the untrained mind, they tell us that whatever
is useful is good, and therefore is God. Proceeding with the
explanation, they declare that every tree and rock have good or
usefulness in them, and hence to that extent have God in them.
Elaborating further, they say that God is in the air, because of its
vitalizing effect; he is in the flower because of its goodness and
usefulness for beauty and fragrance; he is in the tea-kettle, because
of its usefulness; likewise in the chair, the table, the floor, the
ceiling—everything.
Whoever entertains such views
proportionately destroys his faith in a personal God, "The Living and
True God," and in the Bible as his revelation. How could an impersonal
God have a purpose, a will, a plan, a program? And how could he give a
revelation of that purpose or program in the Bible or otherwise? "He
that cometh unto God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder
of them that diligently seek him." He shall be found of them. He will
reveal his true character to them. "He that seeketh findeth." But our
Christian Science friends meet our objection with the assertion that
Buddhists and Theosophists hold the same and represent a large
proportion of the human family. Furthermore, they claim that the same
thought of an impersonal God is taught in all the principal creeds of
Christendom, when they declare faith in an omni-present God! Alas, we
must admit that the charge is well founded; that the seed of error on
this subject was planted in our minds and confessions of faith long
ago. Be it noticed, however, that this inconsistency cannot be charged
against the Bible, for, although our confessions of Faith were
ostensibly made to be in harmony with the Scriptures, the truth is,
that not one word of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, declares
Divine Omni-presence, but every utterance on the subject affirms the
personality of the Father, and that our Lord Jesus is the "express
image of his person."—#Heb 1:3 .
"God is a Spirit," but he is a being, a person. The Scriptures
distinctly tell us that a spirit has not flesh and body, as we have,
but they as distinctly inform us of the Divine personality and use the
members and qualities of the human body to bring the Creator within the
range of our apprehension. The Hand of the Lord (his Divine power), and
the Eye of the Lord (his Divine wisdom) are in every place. The Ear of
the Lord is bowed down to hear the groaning of the prisoner. And the
Heart of the Eternal is most wonderfully kind.
Heaven is his Throne and the earth is his
footstool. True, these expressions are pictorial, figurative;
nevertheless they figure not an impersonal Creator, but a personal one,
who feels, who thinks, who exercises his power; who has displeasure
with those who are sinful and loves those who seek to do his will; to
walk in the paths of righteousness. Whoever cultivates this thought of
a righteous, personal God, assists in establishing his own heart along
lines of corresponding character. He seeks a further knowledge of such
a Creator; seeks his compassion and his protecting care, and learns to
love him, as he could never appreciate nor love Nature nor any
disorganized conception of a space-pervading non-entity. He whose mind
and heart grasps the Scriptural Personality of the Heavenly Father
catches the significance of our SaviorÂ’s words, "Are not two sparrows
sold for a farthing? And not one of them shall fall to the ground
without your Father. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered.
Fear not, therefore; ye are of more value than many sparrows." Such may
worship in spirit and in truth proportionate to their knowledge of the
Infinite One, whom they were directed to address, "Our Father, which
art in heaven." Thinking of the Almighty as everywhere present is
entirely unsatisfactory to our comprehension, which calls for a God
whose throne is in heaven. This was
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the same thought that our Savior again
impressed on the women who met him after his resurrection. To these he
said: "I have not yet ascended to my Father, and to your Father; to my
God and to your God." Thus the general trend of Scriptural testimony
confirms the thought which we receive by nature, and intensifies and
elaborates it, by giving location and quality of heart and mind and
power. Regardless of the truth of the two theories, the Bible
presentation is surely the one most helpful to humanity.
To have no personal God must eventually
signify to the reasoning mind no Law-Giver, no Judge, no justice, no
love, no mercy, no personal relationship, as between father and child.
Thus would be lost the very basis of Christian faith and doctrine.
The Scriptural presentation of the
Almighty is, therefore, the one most consistent to our reason and most
helpful to us, namely, that he is a great God, infinite in his wisdom,
his justice, his love and his power. His personality has heaven for his
locality, but his influence and powers pervade the universe. We may but
imperfectly imagine the various channels of his information and the
innumerable agencies through which he can exercise the Almighty Power.
But in the light of present day invention, we have at least suggestions
of it, for cannot man communicate by wireless telegraphy over hundreds
of miles? And not only so, but cannot he use the Hertz-waves for the
transmission of power? And can he not with the telescope greatly
enlarge his vision, and with the microscope see things otherwise
indiscernible? And if puny man, imperfect and fallen, "Born in sin and
shapen in iniquity and of few days and full of trouble," can thus
enlarge his natural powers, what limitations might he justly or wisely
set upon the intelligence and power of his Creator? "He that formed the
eye, shall he not see? He that formed the ear, shall he not hear?" He
that gave to humans our sense of justice, shall we not consider him the
very Embodiment of Justice? He who gave to us the power of sympathy and
compassion and love, shall we not consider him, the Author of our
powers, as infinitely superior to the very highest of our human ideals?
For our present purpose it is not even necessary that we be believers
in the Bible in order to formulate before our minds something of the
glorious character and attributes of our Maker. True, correct views of
the teachings of the Scriptures will surely aid us in our conceptions,
but at this time we are addressing not merely believers in the
Scripture, but also unbelievers. We urge, then, that rational thought
on the subject bids us believe that man is the highest type of earthly
intelligence, and this teaches us that there must be an intelligent
Creator as much superior to us as we are to the crawling worm. Yea,
more than this, that he who gave us our intelligent being must be
separated from us by a still wider gulf than that which separates us
from the worm, because we cannot even create a worm. And it is but a
logical process of reasoning that the noblest of our talents and powers
are but feeble reflections of the same qualities in our Creator.
From this standpoint, how great is the
God which our intelligent reason would picture! How worthy of our
reverence, our devotion, our love, our service! The Scriptures assist
us by showing that the blemishes which we find in ourselves and others
are results of disobedience to the Divine instruction—the results of
the fall from the more particular image and likeness of our Creator.
Filled with so noble a conception of Deity, we would naturally hasten
to worship and bow down, but are stopped by the voices from the Dark
Ages, which misrepresent the Almighty, implying that he is not the
embodiment of justice, wisdom, love and power. These voices assure us
that, although we are commanded to love our enemies, to do good to them
that hate us and persecute us and say all manner of evil against us
falsely, nevertheless the Almighty, who gave these commands, does not
love or forgive his enemies, and does them good but inadequately, and
has made preparation for their eternal torture. There is something
wholly inconsistent between these voices from the past and the voice of
our reason. It is claimed by many that the Bible substantiates the
voices of the Dark Ages, the creeds, but we hold that this is a
mistake, partly attributable to poor translation and partly to
misunderstood parables.
The reasoning mind
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surely rebels against the theory which in
the Dark Ages held sway and led to the Inquisition and the stake. And
it is glad that it has gotten rid of so gross a misconception of the
"Father of Lights." A well-balanced and reverential intellect will
rejoice to find and to recognize a God that not only is not devoid of
justice, wisdom, love and power, and on a plane lower than our own, but
who, on the contrary, is infinite in these attributes and worthy of our
reverence and worship. We assent that the Divine Word, the Bible, has
been greatly misrepresented by us all in the past, and deserves
reconsideration. If our forefathers read the Bible with smoking lamps
and blurred vision, and nevertheless got some blessing, what a power of
God it should be to us now, if, in the light of the electric arc, we
should find it the store-house of Divine grace and truth, perfectly
co-ordinated and surpassing our highest ideals!
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