Images de page
PDF
ePub

ARTICLE II.

THE HEAD OF THE CHURCH, HEAD OVER ALL THINGS; ILLUSTRATED BY ANALOGIES BETWEen Nature, Providence, AND GRACE.

By W.S. Tyler, Prof. of Languages, Amherst College. [Concluded from Vol. XI. p. 363.]

8. The order of proceeding in nature, providence and grace alike is gradual. The processes are never hurried, often exceedingly slow. The growth of the plant, the animal, the man is by almost imperceptible gradations. Human character and condition are formed and decided by steps equally gradual. And the same is true of the christian character and state.

Look at the same law of order on a larger scale. The work of creation occupied six natural days according to the common understanding of the sacred record. According to the interpretation of many philologists, and the records of geology, many thousand years were occupied in preparing the earth to be a suitable habitation for man.

How slow is the process of civilization, and the progress of society. All Europe was overrun with savage tribes from its first peopling till the supremacy of the Roman empire, and the larger part of it remained in a savage state till after the reformation. It was only within a century, that government began to be administered for the good of the people; and according to the analogy of past history, many and many a year must roll away, before this will become the end of all government.

We need not be surprised then at the slow progress of revelation and spiritual renovation. The human race lived 2000 years without any written revelation, and 2000 years more had elapsed, before the canon of Scripture was completed. A third period of 2000 years has almost passed away, and not one fourth of the human race bear so much as the christian name. Not one fourth of these have the Bible in their own tongue and are able to read it; and of these again, not one fourth probably are real and spiritual Christians. Yet the process has been ever going on and is destined to go on, till the world is converted.

There is the increasing twilight, the gradual dawn, and the slowly advancing day alike in nature, providence and grace.

Everywhere, in every thing in our world, infancy, childhood, youth, manhood succeed each other by almost imperceptible stages.

9. This law of order is not only gradual but progressive. There is a gradual process of improvement or advancement alike in nature, providence and grace. "First the blade, then the ear, then the full-corn in the ear." "The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day." These similes rest on the analogy between the natural and the spiritual worlds, of which I am speaking; and exhibit the order of every thing, which we see under the divine government. If "order is heaven's first law," progression is its second, and no less universal, than the first. Particular illustrations without number will be suggested from the similes of the Bible and from every reader's own observations and reflections. We will confine our attention to the following of a more general nature.

According to the first chapter of Genesis, the order of creation was as follows: first inorganic matter, then successively grass, the herb yielding seed, the fruit tree yielding fruit, reptiles, the monsters of the deep, the fowls of the air, the beasts of the field, the cattle after their kind, and man in the image of God. There is obviously a constant progress from good to better, from less perfect to more perfect forms of organization and modes and ranks of existence. Now whether geology presents us with a record of this same creation, as some maintain, or as others hold, carries us back to an earlier series of creative acts succeeding each other at long intervals, all agree, that it exhibits the same general law of progression from the rudest mineral up through successive stages to the most perfect animal-from mere chrystalization to vegetation, from improving vegetation to dawning sensation, from advancing sensation to commencing sagacity or intelligence, and from rising intelligence to reason and moral sense, where the progression ceases to be transferred from one species to another, but will go on in the same species through the countless stages of improvement, to which man is destined during an endless existence.*

"Geology shows us, that organic beings became more and more perfect from the commencement of life on the earth to the time of man's appearance."-M. Rozet.

See also Buckland, chap. 12. Says Kirby (Bridgewater Treatise

It cannot be denied, that there has been a progression in the providential development of nature's resources to the knowledge and use of man. Look back upon the history of our own country and you see a condensed but faithful epitome of the world's history in this respect.

Little more than two centuries ago, the savage roamed undisturbed over the whole continent, beheld with superstitious amazement or stupid indifference all the energies and operations of nature, and suffered the pangs of want and starvation amid all the exuberance of fertile prairies and teeming forests, mighty rivers and grassy meadows, tropical suns and fertilizing showers.

But the forest has been gradually felled and the prairie subdued; boundless fields of grain and fruit drink in the rain and the sun-shine; the produce of every clime is borne on the mighty rivers, wafted by the wind that whistled idly along their channels, or propelled by steam, that has been elicited from their own waters by fuel, which once stood embowering them above, or lay imbedded beneath and by their side, and where thousands starved, millions now live in plenty and luxury and hundreds of millions might live upon the new and vast resources, which are in a process of daily development. Throughout the world, society on the whole has been on the advance, government has been gradually improved in theory and in practice, the arts and sciences have multiplied and advanced, and the means of subsistence and happiness have greatly increased. There seems to be in society a capacity and a tendency to progress unto perfection, which it is not unreasonable to suppose it may attain in another and a better world.

Religion has also been progressive. Universal idolatry was followed successively by the patriarchal, the Mosaic and the christian dispensations, each of which was a great advance upon its preceding era. The true religion was confined at first to a

chap. 4.) "The first plants and the first animals are scarcely more than animated molecules and appear analogous of each other; and those above them in each kingdom represent jointed fibrils. It is singular and worthy of notice, that the Creator after the creation of inanimate matter probably first imparted the living principle to bodies of the same form with the molecules and fibrils, into which that matter is resolvable, thus uniting by common characters things essentially distinct, and preserving unbroken that wonderful chain, which links together all created things."

single family, then to a single nation. Under the last dispensation, it is enjoined as a sacred duty to propagate it among all mankind, and the church feels more and more every year her obligation and ability to set up in all the earth, that kingdom, which "consists in righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost."

Divine revelation was at first only a faint streak of light glimmering in the East; like the natural sun, it rose gradually into view, till it became full orbed; it has ever since been rising higher and higher above the obscurity of the horizon, and breaking more and more through the mists and clouds of earth; in its meridian splendor, it will enlighten every land; and it will never decline from the zenith, but fade away in the brighter glories of the Lord God and the Lamb in their upper kingdom. Such then is the law of God's universal government;

"From seeming evil still educing good,

And better thence again and better still
In infinite progression."

There have been exceptions to the law of progression in religion. There were sad relapses among the Jews, and Christianity has had its dark ages.

But even here the analogy holds. There have been exceptions to the progress of society. Society has had its relapses and its dark ages.

And there were exceptions to the law of progression in the successive creative acts which geology discloses. There was a general advance from lower to higher grades of existence. But occasionally more perfect organizations, both animal and vegetable, are found to prevail with or even before, the less perfect. As if the Creator, while he usually proceeds according to established rules, intended to show by occasionally departing from them, that he is not necessitated to abide by those rules.

It is worthy of a passing remark here, that in the development of nature, providence and grace to the view and for the benefit of man, there is usually a progress or a relapse together. Witness the dark ages, when the three kingdoms seemed to be all shrouded in darkness-when the light of natural science, of social knowledge and virtue, and of spiritual wisdom seemed at

Buckland, Chap. 12. p. 115. London, 1836.
4

VOL. XII. No. 31.

once to have been extinguished. Look again at the reformation, when the eclipse passed off simultaneously from nature, providence and grace, and they all shone out with unprecedented lustre. In our own day, it were difficult to say, whether discoveries in nature, improvements in society, or the propagation of Christianity are advancing with the most rapid strides.

10. The types and prophecies of revelation are not without analogy in nature and providence. That is, there is something in the constitution and course of nature so analogous to the typical and prophetic parts of the Bible, as to remove all a priori objections against them and even create a presumption in their favor, yet not so nearly resembling them as to invalidate their special sacredness-their peculiar claims to an immediate divine origin.

*

As the former dispensation in religion was typical of the latter, so in the earlier stages of nature, there seems to be something like types of the later stages. The organs of the earlier species of animals were comparatively rude and imperfect, yet they were similar organs to those of the later species and performed similar offices-offices as similar as their situation and circumstances would allow. The common mind would not condemn it as a misnomer to call the forms and features of the monkey types of human forms and features. The naturalist finds such types far down the scale, and far back in the history of animal life. It was this correspondence of parts throughout the animal kingdom, which led Lamarck to broach the theory, that all animals, including man, are but the same species, having the same essential organs, but developing them more fully and perfectly as time advances and circumstances become more favorable. Though clearly false, the theory was founded on indubitable and interesting facts. It is now settled, that the animal species are radically and incommunicably distinct; and the resemblances in general organization between the earliest ruder animals and the later and more perfect animals, result not from natural propagation, and the favor of circumstances, but from creative power exerted at successive periods and according to such a law, as to constitute the first ages, "shadows of better things to come."

*Type is the very word which naturalists have chosen to express the analogy between the earlier and ruder organizations on the one band, and the later and more perfect organizations on the other.

« PrécédentContinuer »