RELIGION AND MffiACLE AND MIEACLE BT GEOKGE A. GOKDON mNISTHR OF THE OLD SQUTH OHTJBCH BOSTON BOSTON AND NEW TORE HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 1909 I dedicate this Book to the Inspiring Memory of my Father, GEOEGE GORDON, of loach, Scotland, born and bred to the vocation of farmer a brilliant mind, one of the bravest of men, to whom the order of summer and winter, seed-time and harvest was a token of the Infinite good-will, and who toiled in the Fields of Time in the sense of the Eternal PREFACE WHE
...N a teacher and preacher of the Christian religion moves from the circumference toward the heart of faith, miracles fall out of the sphere of his vision. He may not deny the reality of miracles, but more and more mir acles cease to be significant for him. He is dealing with the Eternal as it shines by its own light, and in that case outward witness of any kind for the things of the soul becomes super fluous. For many years I have lived in this mood. Slowly miracles have ceased to serve me in the evolution of my belief, in the moral campaign of my spirit. For me the heart of the universe is God, the Eternal Spirit the permanent force in man is the soul that an swers to the Infinite soul the incomparable genius of Christianity is in the way in which it enables human beings to live in the con sciousness of our Father in Heaven. Christian ity is, in my judgment, incomparable as the viii PREFACE religion of revelation and reconciliation it brings spirit to light, the Divine and the hu man it hrings peace. The words of the great prophet of the exile describe with rare felicity the privilege of the Christian preacher How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publish eth peace, that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth l It is said of Christ He came and preached peace to you that were far off, and peace to them that were nigh for through him we both have our access in one Spirit unto the Father. 2 For the great apostle to the nations the gospel became essentially one thing, the gospel of reconciliation. Into these divine depths in Christianity, the su preme religion of the spirit, all devout and happy disciples of the Master and preachers of his message at length come. Sharing in this universal discipline of hon est and advancing souls, it never occurred to me to write anything upon the subject of re-1 Isaiah lii, 7. 3 Ephesians ii, 17-18. PREFACE ix ligion and miracle. I had for many years dwelt in a sphere far removed from outward signs and wonders I had, therefore, quietly ceased to regard the tradition of signs and wonders that accompanied the Lord. One day, however, I fell into conversation with a com pany of young ministers I found them greatly troubled. They felt that as honest men they could not say that they believed in miracles and that incapacity created suspicion as to how much of the gospel remains when the miracles are set aside This question I was invited to discuss at our Boston Ministers Meeting two or three years ago, and the response which I then re ceived, alike from men of conservative opin ions and from men of radical views, led me to reconsider the whole subject. At the same time there came the invitation to lecture on the Nathaniel W. Taylor Foundation in Yale University. In this way the little volume now published came into existence. I am unwilling that any one who may look into this volume should fail to grasp my pur x PKEFACE pose in writing it. I have no interest in the destruction of the belief in miracle. I am con cerned to show that where miracle has ceased to be regarded as true, Christianity remains in its essence entire that the fortune of religion is not to be identified with the fortune of miracle that the message of Jesus Christ to the world is independent of miracle, lives by its own reality and worth, self - evidencing and self-attesting... --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.
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