-'~-^- PRINCETON, N. J. Shelf. BS 480 .L4 1884 Leavitt, John McDowell, 182 Reasons for faith in this nineteenth centurv REASONS FOR FAITH IN THIS NINETEENTH CENTURY. JOHN McDOWELlK^EAVITT, D.D., President op St. John's College, Annapolis, Maryland. NEW YORK: JAMES POTT & CO., PUBLISHERS, 12 AsTOR Place. 1884. Copyright, JOHN McDowell leavitt. PREFACE. TOURING the last nine years, as President of a Col- -L^ lege, the writer has held a Lectureship of Psy- chology and Christian Evidences for the instruction of a Senior Class. From an extensive annual course he has selected this small volume. Without enfeebling the argu- ment he has sought to transfer it from the confined air of the recitation-room to the wider auditory of the Great Public. St. John's Coli.ece, | January is/, 1884. f CONTENTS. LKCTURB. PAGE. I. The Divine Unity i II. Personality of God 14 III. Mosaic Cosmical Record 32 IV. Incidental Proofs of Scripture 46 V. Adaptation of Christianity 64 VI. Authenticity and Genuineness of the Old Testament 77 VII. Authenticity of the Evangelical Histories go VIII. Supernatural Evidence 106 IX. Presumptions Favorable to Jesus Christ 120 X. Proofs of the Resurrection 131 XI. Narratives of the Resurrection 145 XII. Consequences of the Resurrection 161 LECTURE I THE DIVINE UXITY. THE first verse of the Bible declares God to be the Creator of the universe. On this foundation is erected a system of religion claiming the Almighty as its Author. Differing from Atheism, whicli denies to the universe a God ; from Pantheism, which confounds the universe with God; from Polytheism, which ascribes the universe to many gods, from the beginning to the end, as the cause of all things, the Scrijitures affirm a Being eter- nal in His existence, infinite in His nature, supreme in His perfections, conscious in His personality, and the ever- lasting Governor of His creation. This doctrine per- vades and binds into harmony the system of the Bible. But all the divine attributes imply the Divine Unity, to which the Hebrew people and the Hebrew writings bore peculiar and perpetual testimony. And modern science is pointing in the same direction. By establishing the unity of the creation slie leads to the unity of the Creator. Permit me then to show on this subject tlie wonderful harmony between Science and Scripture. I remark: I. THE SAMENESS OF ITS MATERIALS PROVES THE UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE. Early in this century WoUaston observed dark lines in the solar spectrum. How simple such a fact ! Yet most stupendous the conclusions to which it has con- 2 THE DIVINE UNITY. ducted ! Fraunhofer, of Alunich, studied and mapped the lines. Sir John Hersclicl remarked tliat by volatil- izing substances in a flame these spectral colors might show their ingredients. This timely observation Kir- choff and Bunsen made fruitful in a method of analysis. By ingenious combinations of lenses and prisms numer- ous substances volatilized in flames disclosed to science their spectral lines. The same elements yielding always the same lines can be detected with nice and invariable accuracy. Turned to the heavens the spectroscope gives its most brilliant results. The spectrum from the sun ex- hibits hydrogen, barium, calcium, aluminum, zinc, tita- nium, copper, cobalt, manganese, sodium, iron, nickel, chromium and magnesium, while the moon and planets, shining by his reflected light, afford proofs of the same substances. Even the rays of the fixed stars have been analyzed, and worlds on the confines of the universe have been forced to yield the secrets of their consti- tution. Aldeberan shows spectroscopic lines corre- sponding to sodium, bismuth, tellurium, mercury and antimony. Sirius tells us that he is composed of iron, sodium, hydrogen and magnesium, whose flames display a brilliant white. In Orion an orange-tinted star exhibits sodium, magnesium, bismuth and calcium. The spectra of the nebulai of the heavens show bright lines like those of ignited gases. Thus, the elements of the most distant worlds of space are discovered to be identical with those on our earth. The spectroscoi)e proves the universe to be composed of the same substances. Its lines are not only facts of Science but also arguments of Theology. A further deduction is inevitable. Elements combine chemically under fixed laws and conditions which have THE DIVINE UNITY. 3 been ascertained, and even tabulated by science. In- deed, by a curious nomenclature their atomic proportions are exhibited to the eye. Whether the elements exist as gases, liquids or solids depends on pressure and temper- ature, but in every state they unite in their definite and invariable relative quantities. Moreover, chemical affini- ties are connected with electricity, which probably con- trols all the subtle and infinite combinations of the ma- terial universe. Similar molecules in the earth and in the stars obey similar laws. The chemistry of our globe applies to all the worlds of space. In our earth, in the moon, in the planets, in the sun, in the most distant sys- tems of creation, the elements are the same, electricity is the same, chemical affinities are the same. The vast and varied processes of the universe are carried forward by the same substances and according to the same laws. Now, the architecture of a country is known from the materials of its structures. Only the clay and bitumen of Shinar could have built the walls, palaces and temples of Babylon. The tower of Belus lifted to the stars bricks of the Mesopotamian plains. In the white marbles of the statues and edifices of Athens were expressed, not only the genius but the nationality of the artist. The delicate stone of modern Paris from the quarries of Chantilly has a color peculiar to France. Over the world you may distinguish a country by the material of its buildings. And thus with the creation. It is proved one in plan by the identity of the substances employed in its architecture. II. THE SAMENESS OF LIGHT PROVES THE UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE. Place sodium in the flame of your spectroscope ! You detect the characteristic lines! Turn your instrument to Aldeberan ! You perceive the same peculiar lines. 4 THE DIVINE UNITY. Light has been refracted with tlie same results, and shown to be the same in the lamp and in the star. Ex- amine a dew-drop with your microscope ! In that globe glittering on a leaf of your rose-bush you see disclosed millions of minute monsters ! Point your telescope to Sirius ! You pass from the small to the great, from the insignificant to the magnificent, from a leaf on your lawn to the limit of the universe ! Yet the light-beam, in its reflections and refractions, here, there, everywhere, is governed by the same laws. The glow-worm and the moon, the rain -drop and the planet, the gas-jet in your parlor and the star whose rays for ages have been trav- elling to your eye exhibit one universal mode of action. Thus the light which makes earth daily visible, and sparkles nightly in the heavens, demonstrates the unity of nature through her illimitable dominions. But the argument is intensified if we accept the modern undulatory theory. Newton supposed that luminous bodies flash forth particles of their substance, which, en- tering the eye, give perceptions of objects. Now it is be- lieved that, as the air encircling the earth by waves im- pinging the ear produces sound, so a luminiferous ether pervading the universe by waves impinging the eye pro- duces sight. Differences of color are caused by differences of vibrations. As the intensity of sound increases with the amplitude of the undulations of the air, thus the in- tensity of sight increases wilh the amplitude of the undu- lations of the ether. A liody appears white when it reflects all the vibrations; black, when it reflects none of the vibrations; and red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo or violet in the solar spectrum in the proportion of its reflected vibrations. Science even tabulates in the bil- lionths of an inch the wave-lengths of the luminiferous ether. According to this theory we have the universe THE DIVINE UNITY. 5 clothed with a marvellous mantle, itself invisible, yet pen- etrating all, enfolding all, displaying all — at the centre and at the circumference of nature — disclosing the same laws, producing the same results and revealing the ampli- tude of the creation according to the same plan through the circuit of its infinity. III. THE SAMENESS OF GRAVITATION PROVES THE UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE. The ancients were continually seeking for the cosmos a common principle, but they reached towards a mystery which forever baffled them. In all pertaining to form and expression they excelled ourselves. It was when they began to question nature about force and law that they became bewildered. What are the elements ? What is the earth? What is the sun? What are the stars? Of all, what is the origin? In attempting to answer these questions ancient philosophers were curious children. To the populace the moon was a god, the star was a god, the sun was a god. Our earth was sometimes considered as an animal and sometimes as a divinity. No wisdom of Chaldea, Egypt, Greece or Rome could explain the ter- restrial or the celestial phenomena. Thus, age after age, the ancients wandered on in a hopeless maze, puzzled, awed, confounded before the mystery of the creation, forever speculating and forever dissatisfied, building sys- tems only to destroy them, dreaming, questioning, discus- sing, yet unable to penetrate the darkness of the scheme of the universe. Nature seemed to hide herself in an eter- nal gloom. AVas she not contrived to baffle her inquirers ? Men saw the sun and moon and stars revolving about the earth, and, believing their senses, were deceived. It is not strange that the multitude parcelled earth and sky into innumerable dominions and assigned them to their count- less deities, when the philosophers during centuries 6 THE DIVINE UNITY. watched and mapped the heavens without being able to explain a single celestial movement. Only within three hundred years has the veil been lifted. Pythagoras had a glimmer of the truth, with no possible means of establish- ing it. Even Copernicus, who suggested the true system, did not produce convincing proofs. He placed the sun within the orbits of each of the planets but not at the centres, and thus while the distributor of light he had no influence on motion. Assisted by the tables of Tycho Brahe the illustrious Kepler at last attained the truth. Yet, misled by the old fancy that celestial motions must be in circles, it was by inspiration rather than proof he perceived that the orbits of the planets must be ellipses, and in the focus of each, the sun. Soon he was led to his wonderful laws of the celestial revolutions. One thing remained. What causes these motions of satellites about their primaries and of ])lanets about the sun? Whence these stupendous circlings of worlds .'' Where does the power reside? Is it without? Is it within ? Is it a familiar force? Is it an undiscovered energy? It was the glory of Newton to answer these questions and estab- lish forever the unity of the creation. He showed that visible about us every moment are the effects of that power impelling the unnumbered globes of our immeas- urable universe. Men had always seen it and never known it. The infant dashing his toy to the floor gave proof of its existence. The boy who hurled his ball circling through the air was a witness of its effects. The apple dropping from a limb felt its energy. Each insect, each bird, each beast, each man, each tree and twig and leaf, the sand-grain on the ocean shore and drop within the vast abyss were subjects of its sway. Not an atom of dust in a sunbeam, or at the centre or circumference of our globe, that did not obey the force controlling the THE DIVINE UNITY. 7 mightiest spheres of the universe. A triumph of our modern science has been to show that the mystery of the ages was to be solved in an energy known to all men at every moment of their lives, and which actmg thus visibly and familiarly on earth, yet operates in the moon in the planets, in the comets, in the sun, m all the wor Ms of space at all tunes and in all places, bmdmg together the universe in one fellowship of existence. Each atom is related to every other atom. Each globe is related to every other globe. Each system is related to every other system. Science thus again demonstrates for religion the unity of the creation. So far our argument has been strictly along the path of inductive science. We now pass into a region of specu- lations which are almost certainties. IV. THE SAMENESS IN ITS SYSTEMS PROVES THE UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE. The fixed stars are suns. Shining by reflected light their rays could not sparkle through immeasurable distances. To be visible in such brilliancy they must be vastly larger and brighter than our own splendid orb of light and life Indeed they burn and shine during cycles, magazines of inexhaustible flame. In some cases we see two, three, even four turning round each other. Hence the conclu- sion that about these as central suns must move planets and satellites, like our own, but whose light, absorbed in the darkness of infinite space, is invisible even to the tele- scope As we have proved unity in molecules and unity in masses, we thus also discover unity in systems. These are numerous as the sands of shores, the leaves of forests, the drops of clouds, the waves of oceans, and their worlds vastly exceed our own in size and brilliancy. Ac- cording to one common method we have, system after system, wheeling and glittering over the creation. 8 THE DIVINE UNITY. V. THE SAMENESS IN ITS PROBABLE EVOLUTION INDI- CATES THE UNITY OV THE UNIVERSE. The efforts of the ancients to refer the cosmos to a common principle sprang from the constitution of the human mind, which, by a law, would resolve the many into the one. They erred, not in aim, but in method. Conclusions were deduced from insufficient premises which made philosophy contemptible. But by a different path inductive science is none the less surely leading us onward to the true unity. Of this the nebular hypothesis affords us proof. Space is peopled with worlds which, so far as ascertained, alike in elemental constitution, dif- fer widely in size, shape, density and appearance. In our own system, as you recede from the sun there is a diminution in density. Comets, which move into space often unestiniated distances from their centre, are com- posed largely of thin, diffused and often transparent mat- ter. Also, discernible over the heavens are enormous nebulae ever changing in size and aspect, and which seem formed of incandescent gases. Our own earth, as proved by geology, in its physical structure and also in its vege- table and animal life, has been plainly developed from a simpler to a more complex condition, and gives many evidences of having passed from an original gaseous to a liquid, and then to its present solid state. Now the ro- tations of a nebulous ether about its axis would produce such a system as ours, with its sun, its planets, its satellites, its comets, having the same relations, sizes, forms, densi- ties and motions, and indeed account for the grand geo- logical and astronomical conditions of our globe. It is not, therefore, strange that all the worlds of the universe should be conceived as emerging from the revolutions of this i^ristine matter revealed in space to the telescope, and believed to constitute the storehouses of systems, the THE DIVINE UNITY. 9 magazines of the creation, and from which, according to the same laws, by the same methods, and with the same results are shaped during cycles those innumerable spheres which adorn the scheme of visible nature. Nor is this all. What we esteem elements may be such only in our ignorance and our impotence. More powerful agencies may reduce them even to a single substance, possibly, it is thought, to the luminiferous ether, from whose delicate maternal bosom, therefore, alone the whole universe may have been evolved. Yet more. The force of the entire creation is now supposed to be a unit — one in its charac- ter and invariable in its sum — vanishing here to appear yonder, but incapable of increase or diminution. These are indeed speculations; yet they are prophecies' of the future, and show the tendencies of even inductive science towards unity as the crown and perfection of the creation. VI. THE UNITY OF THE UNIVERSE IS INTIMATED BY ITS SEEMING REVOLUTION ABOUT SOME COMMON CENTRE. Upon this sublime speculation I will not dwell as an argument. It is sufficient to mention that certain celes- tial motions strongly show that, while all worlds are im- pelled by the same gravitating forces, and are grouped in the same fellowship of arrangements, also, all systems together throughout illimitable space have a motion about one point in the heavens, which has even been boldly located in a star of the constellation Hercules. Now the power of moving such a universe must be in- finite. Billions on billions of worlds wheeling and rush- ing cycle after cycle! In our own planet consider the might of oceans, earthquakes, tempests, volcanoes, and then the less violent but perhaps greater potencies of electricity, combustion, steam, and vegetable and animal growth! Columns of flame dart out from the sun one lO THE DIVINE UNITY. hundred thousand miles. The aggregate impelling power of such a creation is manifestly infinite, and commensurate with the force is the intelligence. AVe raise now no questions of personality These are reserved for our next lecture. We here only assert that modern science leads us to the conclusion that the proved unity of plan in this illimitable creation implies a corresponding unity in some infinite power, and infinite intelligence. But this precise truth is involved in Christianity. Thus far Science and Scripture harmonize. Induction prepares for Revelation, and Revelation amplifies Induc- tion. They are one, as dawn and day. The unity of the force and the intelligence in the limitless plan of nature is the conclusion from Science, and the unity of the Being who supplies the force and intelligence from His own infinitude is the doctrine of the Scriptures. During fifteen centuries hear their constant, their consistent, their sublime testimony! " The Lord our God is one Lord. For thus saith the Lord that created the heavens — God Himself that formed the earth: 1 am the Lord; there is none else." Here, however, remark that while science and Scrip- ture agree in the unity of the acting force in universal nature, they are at this very point opposed by all the religious systems of the world underived from Christi- anity. Not even a philosophic Pantheism has preserved its disciples from idolatry. While a few intellectual dreamers profess faith in an impersonal and unconscious Primal Substance, the multitude are framing for them- selves gods innumerable. First they personify, and then they adore the jjowers of nature. Sun, moon, stars, rivers, winds, mountains, trees, birds, fishes, beasts, rep- tiles, lightnings, thunders — these have been the divinities of men. Yet amid this universal superstition, the scorn THE DIVINE UNITY. 1 1 of Science, the Bible has stood a witness for the unity of the Creator. The oneness of the Deity is the glory of the Scripture. Nor was the multiplication of gods a proof of intel- lectual inferiority. The sublime pyramids were erected by loathsome idolaters. Luxor, matchless in grandeur, shed the glory of genius over the adoration of beasts. The noblest temples of Egypt enshrined or worshipped a cat, or ox, or monkey, or crocodile. All the splendid culture of the land gf the Nile revolved about Polytheism. The tower of Belus, that loftiest wonder of the world, lifted its flame in honor of the Babylonian sun-god. AVHiat has ever exceeded the grandeur of the Parthenon, and the majesty of the Olympian Jupiter.? The genius of Homer was consecrated to the deities of Greece. Those ancient classic nations whose literature we imitate, whose art we revere, whose achievements we emulate, gave their treasures of wealth and soul to the magnificence of mul- tiplied gods. Yet in protest against both the culture and the ignorance of Polytheism, the Scriptures, before the grand nations of antiquity, were the sole witnesses to the unity of the Deity. And in their doctrine of unity they are con- firmed by all the discoveries of Science, which has as- sisted Christianity in hurling from their temples both the classic and tiie popular gods. With every triumph of inductive research, from tlie earth round the circum- ference of the universe, we have the same ever-increasing testimony to a fundamental truth of the Bible. Among the deities of Babylon, and Egypt, and Greece, and Rome, and India, and China, except where genius or tra- dition gives a glimpse of the Hebrew Jehovah, nothing accords with the grandeur of such an impersonal creative force as our atheistic science would accept. Yet in the 12 THE DIVINE UNITY. Bible all descriptions surpass even the conceptions of modern research. How does this happen? The Book of Job preceded the Iliad of Homer by more than five centuries. Moses wrote hundreds of years before Hesiod. The Psalms of David, breathing and burning with pious adoration to Jehovah, were older than the immortal odes of Pindar. Isaiah penned his prophecies, and proclaimed the majesty of the one God before ^.schylus and Sophocles and Euripides consecrated their genius to the Grecian divinities, and made the Athenian theatre the pulpit of the Athenian idolatry. The Proverbs and Canti- cles of Solomon antedated the wit and music of Horace, while the predictions of Jeremiah and Ezekiel were old when the epic of Virgil pleased Augustus and delighted Rome. The majestic descriptions of the Scripture, be- gun in the morning of the world, before Art, before Literature, before Science, before Philosophy, are yet such as Art, and TJteraturc, and Science, and Philosophy will forever admire, and can never approach. How does this occur? Suppose science should ad- vance her conclusions from an impersonal evolving force to a personal creating God; could she then discover an attribute unrevealed in the Bible? Let her reach the ideal of her attainment; let her carry us round the circle of the earth; let her explain from centre to circumference the laws of a universe; will she ever transcend the sub- limity of the sacred writers? Not if to the triumphs of inductive research she should add the loftiest inspirations of human poetry. Can she exceed eternity? Can she surpass omnipresence, omniscience, omnipotence? Can she exalt herself above llie wisdom, the love, the justice, the holiness of Jehovah as revealed in the Scripture and manifested in the universe? Forever above her will be the Infinite and the Everlasting God. As unfolded in THE DIVINE UNITY. 1 3 the Hebrew oracles, the Divine Nature is beyond the measure of human capacity and the march of human progress. The descriptions of Moses, the delineations of David, the sublimities of Isaiah, the conceptions of St. Paul, above all, the simple, touching, and majestic words of Jesus Christ, produced, some before the dawn, others in the twilight of science, not only may express the devotions of a Bacon, a Newton, and a Herschel, but are worthy the worship of the most exalted intelligences ever depicted in the glory everlasting. What is the explanation? Whence this wisdom resid- ing alone in the sacred writers? Against all the idola- tries of all the ages of all the world, why does the Bible, in language of such power, beauty, comprehensiveness and majesty, inculcate a belief in the unity of an infinite Power? And this testimony is being every moment estab- lished by every advance of science, where, had the teach- ing been in conformity to the other religions of mankind, they would have exposed Christianity to certain over- throw. I will not say that this fact alone is proof of the truth. But I will affirm that it is a potent presumption in favor of the inspiration and authority of the Scriptures as divine oracles communicated to man by God. 14 PERSONALITY OF GOD. LECTURE II. PERSONALITY OF GOD. IN each of us is a characteristic something which dis- tinguishes from every other being in the universe. We must discriminate between the fact and our con- sciousness of the fact. After considering the former, we will attempt to analyze the latter. Each man is a purposed and peculiar part of this vast creation. He appears at a certain time, under certain circumstances, with certain endowments, and in certain relations, which neVer happened before, and which will never occur again. As distinguished from all others, his being, his history, his character are his own. From his conception to his birth, and onward to any point of his development, he has in himself indelible marks which fix his personality. But where does this mysterious prop- erty reside? In his senses? Destroy these ! He sur- vives. In his limbs? Amputate them all! He remains. Take away every portion of his body up to the last pos- sibility of life! He is still himself. Deprive him of memory, reason, volition. Let passion, desire, appetite, affection, fade or rage within him! His personality has not perished. You may call him lame, or deaf, or dumb, or halt, or blind, or idiot, or lunatic, yet, while he lives, he is himself, and the law will recognize his exist- ence and guard his rights. His personality, then, is not in his senses, his limbs, his estate, his reputation, or even in his passions, his affections, his volitions, his intel- PERSONAL/TV OF GOD. 1 5 lections. It is behind tliem all. What uses his senses, controls his limbs, directs his choice, originates his thoughts, and amid the wrecks of the accidents of the man is yet himself? Can we discover that in him which thinks, and feels, and wills, and moves? Then may we reach his personality. I look within and without; I recall my history from my earliest recollections; I survey the universe within the circle of my vision. All has changed. I am myself. My form has enlarged; my features are different; every atom of my body has been renewed; yet, amid these per- petual, although insensible, revolutions my personality is untouched. Earth, sea, air, planet, sun, moon, stars — the universe — has been one ceaseless transition. I have not perished in the eternal change. The same conscious person, I preserve my identity with a tenacity which is indestructible. Nor is my conviction only from recollection. It is deeper than memory. The events of my life seem al- most traced in the soul itself and wrought into its texture. Great facts of personal history, unlike the atmospheric particles which make a mere mechanical mixture, rather resemble the oxygen of the air which enters chemically into the circulation to be incorporated with every part of the physical system. Here is the phenomenon we are to explain. I am, and that I who am have been my conscious self I know, and only annihilation can destroy my conviction. Born amid the infantine efforts of my will to overcome the inertia of external matter, my personality is an ineradicable fact of the universe. If I exist forever, it will share my immortality. Psychology must build on this Selfhood as a founda- tion. Nor is she peculiar in taking for granted such a l6 PERSONALITY OF GOD. fact as the basis of her structure. The whole fabric of mathematical science rests on definitions and axioms which you believe without argument, because you are so constituted that you cannot help believing. Nor are the physical sciences different. You say that they depend on observation and experiment. On what do observation and experiment depend-i* On the testimony of your senses. Reject these, and even the inductive sciences are for you delusive shadows. Nay; receive any possible system of truth, or of falsehood! Why do you believe it.? Because your reason has been satisfied. You then in this and in every conclusion postulate the right constitution of your intellectual nature, and the stability of the order of the universe. Deny the reliability of your healthy faculties, and you abandon yourself to doubt, darkness and de- spair. Your existence is a misery and a failure. Science is impossible; philosophy is impossible; society is impos- sible; moral improvement is impossible. Belief in your personality is at the root of your being. Destroy that and you are lost in the vastness of the darkness of this wide, and wonderful, and fearful universe. Here coincide the conclusions of the philosopher and the belief of the multitude. The faith of mankind, how= ever blind, is not to be despised. It has always some element of truth. Philosophy instead of being opposed to common- sense is the flower of its perfection devel- oped by discipline and study. The man with science and the man without science are not so much fundamentally different in their opinions as in the fact that the one can give reasons for his principles; can discriminate and generalize and classify; can unfold his system in its order, and interpret it in its relations; while the other, however correct in his views, holds them crudely and confusedly, without ability to arrange, defend, and expound. That PERSONALITY OF GOD. 1/ Philosophy makes itself suspected as shallow and con- temptible which would gain reputation by sneering at the common-sense of mankind. We have thus ascertained our Personality to be an indubitable and indestructible fact. It reaches to the roots of our being. It affects all human beliefs. It colors our philosophy, our religion, our lives. Indeed, it is at the basis of all knowledge. Now we advance to analyze the Consciousness of our Personality. In such an inquiry correctness and certi- tude are of inestimable value. Permit me, then, first to show you how wide and how wild the contradictions on the subject. Locke confounds Perception and Reflection, and as- cribes to them the same operations now usually referred to Consciousness. He says, *' The other fountain from which Experience furnisheth the understanding is the Perception of the operations of our minds within us." Almost in the same words he defines Reflection as " that notice the mind takes of its own operations." Dr. Thomas Reed, so far as he goes, is always clear, precise, and consistent. " Consciousness," he says, "is a word used by philosophers to signify that immediate knowledge which we have of our present thoughts and purposes, and in general of all the operations of our minds." On the contrary he invariably applies Percep- tion to external objects. According to Sir William Hamilton, " Consciousness is the knowledge that I, that the Ego exists in some deter- minate state — an act of knowledge may be expressed by the formula, I know; an act of Consciousness by the formula, I know that I know." Yet having thus, like Reed, confined Consciousness to our mental operations, he afterwards makes it identical 1 8 PERSONALITY OF GOD. with Perception where he says, " Perception, or the Con- sciousness of external objects, is the first power in order." Stranger than all, after denying that Consciousness is a special faculty, and calling it a general faculty, he sepa- rates the Presentative Faculty, by a complete reversal of his original definition into External Self Consciousness and Internal Perception. Dr. Mark Hopkins affirms " Consciousness to be the knowledge by the mind of itself as the permanent and in- divisible subject of its own operations." This is the truth, but 1 think, as we shall see, not the whole truth. In its popular sense tlie word " subject " is passive; in its philosophical meaning it may imply, yet does not ex- press, the two distinctive elements which characterize the testimony of Consciousness. In Mr. Herbert Spencer laxit) of definition reaches its greatest attainable limit. His treatment of Perception and Consciousness is a psychological marvel. He con- founds them utterly. " As foregoing chapters," he re- marks, " have made sufficiently manifest, the term Per- ception is applied to mental states infinitely varied, and widely different in their nature. It will be abundantly manifest that the state of Consciousness which we call Perception is scarcely ever discontinuous with its like." With all the assurance of perfect knowledge Mr. Spencer speaks of the consciousness of a fish, and even of an organism. Yet while Mr. Spencer ascribes Consciousness to a gnat, Hartmann denies it to the Deity, styling his system the " Philosophy of the Unconscious." You see how appalling is this confusion. From a conscious gnat to an unconscious deity is a wide range of difference. Amid tliis darkness the first step towards light is a clear and invariable distinction between Perception and rERSONALITY OF GOD. 1 9 Consciousness. This arises from the nature of things and is a philosophical necessity. My knowledge of the external world differs intrinsically from my knowledge of the internal world. In the first the object is matter and in the second the object is spirit. In the first my senses are employed; in the second my senses are excluded. In the first the intelligence is involuntary, while in the second the intelligence is compelled. Here are psychi- cal acts opposite in object, opposite in method, ojjposite in result. The words denoting them should be corre- spondingly different, and no terms can be more significant and convenient than Perception and Consciousness. Representing the poles of our knowledge, they should never be confounded. Perception should always be ap- plied to the soul as knowing what is without, and Con- sciousness to the soul as knowing what is within. Other- wise truth is wounded and the confusion inextricable. Having thus prepared the way, I will define Conscious- ness as that Function by 7i