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<h2><span>Discourse III.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Bearing Of Theology On Other Branches Of Knowledge.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
When men of great intellect, who have long and
intently and exclusively given themselves to the
study or investigation of some one particular branch of
secular knowledge, whose mental life is concentrated and
hidden in their chosen pursuit, and who have neither
eyes nor ears for any thing which does not immediately
bear upon it, when such men are at length made to realize
that there is a clamour all around them, which must be
heard, for what they have been so little accustomed to
place in the category of knowledge as Religion, and that
they themselves are accused of disaffection to it, they are
impatient at the interruption; they call the demand
tyrannical, and the requisitionists bigots or fanatics.
They are tempted to say, that their only wish is to be
let alone; for themselves, they are not dreaming of offending
any one, or interfering with any one; they are pursuing
their own particular line, they have never spoken a
word against any one's religion, whoever he may be,
and never mean to do so. It does not follow that they
deny the existence of a God, because they are not found
talking of it, when the topic would be utterly irrelevant.
All they say is, that there are other beings in the world
besides the Supreme Being; their business is with them.
After all, the creation is not the Creator, nor things
secular religious. Theology and human science are two
things, not one, and have their respective provinces,
contiguous it may be and cognate to each other, but not
identical. When we are contemplating earth, we are not
contemplating heaven; and when we are contemplating
heaven, we are not contemplating earth. Separate subjects
should be treated separately. As division of labour,
so division of thought is the only means of successful
application. <span class="tei tei-q">“Let us go our own way,”</span> they say, <span class="tei tei-q">“and
you go yours. We do not pretend to lecture on Theology,
and you have no claim to pronounce upon Science.”</span></p>
<p>
With this feeling they attempt a sort of compromise,
between their opponents who claim for Theology a free
introduction into the Schools of Science, and themselves
who would exclude it altogether, and it is this: viz., that
it should remain indeed excluded from the public
schools, but that it should be permitted in private,
wherever a sufficient number of persons is found to
desire it. Such persons, they seem to say, may have it
all their own way, when they are by themselves, so that
they do not attempt to disturb a comprehensive system
of instruction, acceptable and useful to all, by the intrusion
of opinions peculiar to their own minds.</p>
<p>
I am now going to attempt a philosophical answer to
this representation, that is, to the project of teaching
secular knowledge in the University Lecture Room, and
remanding religious knowledge to the parish priest, the
catechism, and the parlour; and in doing so, you must
pardon me, Gentlemen, if my subject should oblige me
to pursue a lengthy and careful course of thought, which
may be wearisome to the hearer:—I begin then thus:—</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
Truth is the object of Knowledge of whatever kind;
and when we inquire what is meant by Truth, I suppose
it is right to answer that Truth means facts and their
relations, which stand towards each other pretty much
as subjects and predicates in logic. All that exists, as
contemplated by the human mind, forms one large
system or complex fact, and this of course resolves itself
into an indefinite number of particular facts, which, as
being portions of a whole, have countless relations of
every kind, one towards another. Knowledge is the
apprehension of these facts, whether in themselves, or in
their mutual positions and bearings. And, as all taken
together form one integral subject for contemplation, so
there are no natural or real limits between part and
part; one is ever running into another; all, as viewed
by the mind, are combined together, and possess a
correlative character one with another, from the internal
mysteries of the Divine Essence down to our own sensations
and consciousness, from the most solemn appointments
of the Lord of all down to what may be called the
accident of the hour, from the most glorious seraph down
to the vilest and most noxious of reptiles.</p>
<p>
Now, it is not wonderful that, with all its capabilities,
the human mind cannot take in this whole vast fact at a
single glance, or gain possession of it at once. Like a
short-sighted reader, its eye pores closely, and travels
slowly, over the awful volume which lies open for its inspection.
Or again, as we deal with some huge structure
of many parts and sides, the mind goes round about it,
noting down, first one thing, then another, as it best may,
and viewing it under different aspects, by way of making
progress towards mastering the whole. So by degrees
and by circuitous advances does it rise aloft and subject
to itself a knowledge of that universe into which it has
been born.</p>
<p>
These various partial views or abstractions, by means
of which the mind looks out upon its object, are called
sciences, and embrace respectively larger or smaller portions
of the field of knowledge; sometimes extending far
and wide, but superficially, sometimes with exactness
over particular departments, sometimes occupied together
on one and the same portion, sometimes holding one part
in common, and then ranging on this side or that in absolute
divergence one from the other. Thus Optics has for
its subject the whole visible creation, so far forth as it is
simply visible; Mental Philosophy has a narrower province,
but a richer one. Astronomy, plane and physical,
each has the same subject-matter, but views it or treats
it differently; lastly, Geology and Comparative Anatomy
have subject-matters partly the same, partly distinct.
Now these views or sciences, as being abstractions, have
far more to do with the relations of things than with
things themselves. They tell us what things are, only or
principally by telling us their relations, or assigning predicates
to subjects; and therefore they never tell us all
that can be said about a thing, even when they tell something,
nor do they bring it before us, as the senses do.
They arrange and classify facts; they reduce separate
phenomena under a common law; they trace effects to a
cause. Thus they serve to transfer our knowledge from
the custody of memory to the surer and more abiding
protection of philosophy, thereby providing both for its
spread and its advance:—for, inasmuch as sciences are
forms of knowledge, they enable the intellect to master
and increase it; and, inasmuch as they are instruments,
to communicate it readily to others. Still, after all, they
proceed on the principle of a division of labour, even
though that division is an abstraction, not a literal
separation into parts; and, as the maker of a bridle or
an epaulet has not, on that account, any idea of the
science of tactics or strategy, so in a parallel way, it is
not every science which equally, nor any one which fully,
enlightens the mind in the knowledge of things, as they
are, or brings home to it the external object on which it
wishes to gaze. Thus they differ in importance; and
according to their importance will be their influence,
not only on the mass of knowledge to which they all
converge and contribute, but on each other.</p>
<p>
Since then sciences are the results of mental processes
about one and the same subject-matter, viewed under its
various aspects, and are true results, as far as they go,
yet at the same time separate and partial, it follows that
on the one hand they need external assistance, one by
one, by reason of their incompleteness, and on the other
that they are able to afford it to each other, by reason,
first, of their independence in themselves, and then of
their connexion in their subject-matter. Viewed altogether,
they approximate to a representation or subjective
reflection of the objective truth, as nearly as is
possible to the human mind, which advances towards the
accurate apprehension of that object, in proportion to
the number of sciences which it has mastered; and
which, when certain sciences are away, in such a case has
but a defective apprehension, in proportion to the value
of the sciences which are thus wanting, and the importance
of the field on which they are employed.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
Let us take, for instance, man himself as our object of
contemplation; then at once we shall find we can view
him in a variety of relations; and according to those
relations are the sciences of which he is the subject-matter,
and according to our acquaintance with them is our possession
of a true knowledge of him. We may view him
in relation to the material elements of his body, or to his
mental constitution, or to his household and family, or
to the community in which he lives, or to the Being who
made him; and in consequence we treat of him respectively
as physiologists, or as moral philosophers, or as
writers of economics, or of politics, or as theologians.
When we think of him in all these relations together, or
as the subject at once of all the sciences I have named,
then we may be said to reach unto and rest in the idea
of man as an object or external fact, similar to that which
the eye takes of his outward form. On the other hand,
according as we are only physiologists, or only politicians,
or only moralists, so is our idea of man more or less
unreal; we do not take in the whole of him, and the
defect is greater or less, in proportion as the relation is,
or is not, important, which is omitted, whether his relation
to God, or to his king, or to his children, or to his own
component parts. And if there be one relation, about
which we know nothing at all except that it exists, then
is our knowledge of him, confessedly and to our own
consciousness, deficient and partial, and that, I repeat,
in proportion to the importance of the relation.</p>
<p>
That therefore is true of sciences in general which we
are apt to think applies only to pure mathematics, though
to pure mathematics it applies especially, viz., that they
cannot be considered as simple representations or informants
of things as they are. We are accustomed to
say, and say truly, that the conclusions of pure mathematics
are applied, corrected, and adapted, by mixed;
but so too the conclusions of Anatomy, Chemistry,
Dynamics, and other sciences, are revised and completed
by each other. Those several conclusions do not represent
whole and substantive things, but views, true, so far
as they go; and in order to ascertain how far they
do go, that is, how far they correspond to the object
to which they belong, we must compare them with the
views taken out of that object by other sciences. Did
we proceed upon the abstract theory of forces, we should
assign a much more ample range to a projectile than in
fact the resistance of the air allows it to accomplish.
Let, however, that resistance be made the subject of
scientific analysis, and then we shall have a new
science, assisting, and to a certain point completing, for
the benefit of questions of fact, the science of projection.
On the other hand, the science of projection itself, considered
as belonging to the forces it contemplates, is
not more perfect, as such, by this supplementary investigation.
And in like manner, as regards the whole
circle of sciences, one corrects another for purposes of
fact, and one without the other cannot dogmatize, except
hypothetically and upon its own abstract principles. For
instance, the Newtonian philosophy requires the admission
of certain metaphysical postulates, if it is to be more
than a theory or an hypothesis; as, for instance, that
what happened yesterday will happen to-morrow; that
there is such a thing as matter, that our senses are trustworthy,
that there is a logic of induction, and so on.
Now to Newton metaphysicians grant all that he asks;
but, if so be, they may not prove equally accommodating
to another who asks something else, and then all his
most logical conclusions in the science of physics would
remain hopelessly on the stocks, though finished, and
never could be launched into the sphere of fact.</p>
<p>
Again, did I know nothing about the movement of
bodies, except what the theory of gravitation supplies,
were I simply absorbed in that theory so as to make
it measure all motion on earth and in the sky, I should
indeed come to many right conclusions, I should hit off
many important facts, ascertain many existing relations,
and correct many popular errors: I should scout and
ridicule with great success the old notion, that light bodies
flew up and heavy bodies fell down; but I should go on
with equal confidence to deny the phenomenon of capillary
attraction. Here I should be wrong, but only because
I carried out my science irrespectively of other
sciences. In like manner, did I simply give myself to
the investigation of the external action of body upon
body, I might scoff at the very idea of chemical affinities
and combinations, and reject it as simply unintelligible.
Were I a mere chemist, I should deny the influence of
mind upon bodily health; and so on, as regards the
devotees of any science, or family of sciences, to the exclusion
of others; they necessarily become bigots and
quacks, scorning all principles and reported facts which
do not belong to their own pursuit, and thinking to effect
everything without aid from any other quarter. Thus,
before now, chemistry has been substituted for medicine;
and again, political economy, or intellectual enlightenment,
or the reading of the Scriptures, has been cried up
as a panacea against vice, malevolence, and misery.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
Summing up, Gentlemen, what I have said, I lay it
down that all knowledge forms one whole, because its
subject-matter is one; for the universe in its length and
breadth is so intimately knit together, that we cannot
separate off portion from portion, and operation from
operation, except by a mental abstraction; and then
again, as to its Creator, though He of course in His own
Being is infinitely separate from it, and Theology has its
departments towards which human knowledge has no
relations, yet He has so implicated Himself with it, and
taken it into His very bosom, by His presence in it, His
providence over it, His impressions upon it, and His
influences through it, that we cannot truly or fully contemplate
it without in some main aspects contemplating
Him. Next, sciences are the results of that mental
abstraction, which I have spoken of, being the logical
record of this or that aspect of the whole subject-matter
of knowledge. As they all belong to one and the same
circle of objects, they are one and all connected together;
as they are but aspects of things, they are
severally incomplete in their relation to the things themselves,
though complete in their own idea and for their
own respective purposes; on both accounts they at once
need and subserve each other. And further, the comprehension
of the bearings of one science on another,
and the use of each to each, and the location and limitation
and adjustment and due appreciation of them all,
one with another, this belongs, I conceive, to a sort of
science distinct from all of them, and in some sense a
science of sciences, which is my own conception of what
is meant by Philosophy, in the true sense of the word,
and of a philosophical habit of mind, and which in these
Discourses I shall call by that name. This is what I
have to say about knowledge and philosophical knowledge
generally; and now I proceed to apply it to the
particular science, which has led me to draw it out.</p>
<p>
I say, then, that the systematic omission of any one
science from the catalogue prejudices the accuracy and
completeness of our knowledge altogether, and that, in
proportion to its importance. Not even Theology itself,
though it comes from heaven, though its truths were
given once for all at the first, though they are more
certain on account of the Giver than those of mathematics,
not even Theology, so far as it is relative to us,
or is the Science of Religion, do I exclude from the law
to which every mental exercise is subject, viz., from that
imperfection, which ever must attend the abstract, when
it would determine the concrete. Nor do I speak only
of Natural Religion; for even the teaching of the Catholic
Church, in certain of its aspects, that is, its religious
teaching, is variously influenced by the other sciences.
Not to insist on the introduction of the Aristotelic philosophy
into its phraseology, its explanation of dogmas
is influenced by ecclesiastical acts or events; its interpretations
of prophecy are directly affected by the issues
of history; its comments upon Scripture by the conclusions
of the astronomer and the geologist; and its
casuistical decisions by the various experience, political,
social, and psychological, with which times and places
are ever supplying it.</p>
<p>
What Theology gives, it has a right to take; or rather,
the interests of Truth oblige it to take. If we would not
be beguiled by dreams, if we would ascertain facts as
they are, then, granting Theology is a real science, we
cannot exclude it, and still call ourselves philosophers.
I have asserted nothing as yet as to the pre-eminent
dignity of Religious Truth; I only say, if there be
Religious Truth at all, we cannot shut our eyes to it
without prejudice to truth of every kind, physical, metaphysical,
historical, and moral; for it bears upon all
truth. And thus I answer the objection with which I
opened this Discourse. I supposed the question put to
me by a philosopher of the day, <span class="tei tei-q">“Why cannot you go
your way, and let us go ours?”</span> I answer, in the name
of the Science of Religion, <span class="tei tei-q">“When Newton can dispense
with the metaphysician, then may you dispense
with us.”</span> So much at first sight; now I am going on to
claim a little more for Theology, by classing it with
branches of knowledge which may with greater decency
be compared to it.</p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
Let us see, then, how this supercilious treatment of so
momentous a science, for momentous it must be, if there
be a God, runs in a somewhat parallel case. The great
philosopher of antiquity, when he would enumerate the
causes of the things that take place in the world, after
making mention of those which he considered to be
physical and material, adds, <span class="tei tei-q">“and the mind and everything
which is by means of man.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_8" name="noteref_8" href="#note_8"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">8</span></span></SPAN> Certainly; it would
have been a preposterous course, when he would trace
the effects he saw around him to their respective sources,
had he directed his exclusive attention upon some one
class or order of originating principles, and ascribed
to these everything which happened anywhere. It
would indeed have been unworthy a genius so curious,
so penetrating, so fertile, so analytical as Aristotle's, to
have laid it down that everything on the face of the
earth could be accounted for by the material sciences,
without the hypothesis of moral agents. It is incredible
that in the investigation of physical results he could
ignore so influential a being as man, or forget that, not
only brute force and elemental movement, but knowledge
also is power. And this so much the more, inasmuch
as moral and spiritual agents belong to another,
not to say a higher, order than physical; so that the
omission supposed would not have been merely an
oversight in matters of detail, but a philosophical error,
and a fault in division.</p>
<p>
However, we live in an age of the world when the
career of science and literature is little affected by what
was done, or would have been done, by this venerable
authority; so, we will suppose, in England or Ireland, in
the middle of the nineteenth century, a set of persons of
name and celebrity to meet together, in spite of Aristotle,
in order to adopt a line of proceeding which they conceive
the circumstances of the time render imperative. We will
suppose that a difficulty just now besets the enunciation
and discussion of all matters of science, in consequence
of the extreme sensitiveness of large classes of the community,
clergy and laymen, on the subjects of necessity,
responsibility, the standard of morals, and the nature of
virtue. Parties run so high, that the only way of avoiding
constant quarrelling in defence of this or that side of
the question is, in the judgment of the persons I am supposing,
to shut up the subject of anthropology altogether.
This is accordingly done. Henceforth man is to be as if
he were not, in the general course of Education; the moral
and mental sciences are to have no professorial chairs,
and the treatment of them is to be simply left as a matter
of private judgment, which each individual may carry out
as he will. I can just fancy such a prohibition abstractedly
possible; but one thing I cannot fancy possible,
viz., that the parties in question, after this sweeping
act of exclusion, should forthwith send out proposals on
the basis of such exclusion for publishing an Encyclopædia,
or erecting a National University.</p>
<p>
It is necessary, however, Gentlemen, for the sake of the
illustration which I am setting before you, to imagine
what cannot be. I say, let us imagine a project for
organizing a system of scientific teaching, in which the
agency of man in the material world cannot allowably
be recognized, and may allowably be denied. Physical
and mechanical causes are exclusively to be treated of;
volition is a forbidden subject. A prospectus is put out,
with a list of sciences, we will say, Astronomy, Optics,
Hydrostatics, Galvanism, Pneumatics, Statics, Dynamics,
Pure Mathematics, Geology, Botany, Physiology, Anatomy,
and so forth; but not a word about the mind and
its powers, except what is said in explanation of the
omission. That explanation is to the effect that the
parties concerned in the undertaking have given long and
anxious thought to the subject, and have been reluctantly
driven to the conclusion that it is simply impracticable
to include in the list of University Lectures the Philosophy
of Mind. What relieves, however, their regret is
the reflection, that domestic feelings and polished manners
are best cultivated in the family circle and in good
society, in the observance of the sacred ties which unite
father, mother, and child, in the correlative claims and
duties of citizenship, in the exercise of disinterested
loyalty and enlightened patriotism. With this apology,
such as it is, they pass over the consideration of the
human mind and its powers and works, <span class="tei tei-q">“in solemn
silence,”</span> in their scheme of University Education.</p>
<p>
Let a charter be obtained for it; let professors be appointed,
lectures given, examinations passed, degrees
awarded:—what sort of exactness or trustworthiness,
what philosophical largeness, will attach to views formed
in an intellectual atmosphere thus deprived of some of
the constituent elements of daylight? What judgment
will foreign countries and future times pass on the labours
of the most acute and accomplished of the philosophers
who have been parties to so portentous an unreality?
Here are professors gravely lecturing on medicine, or
history, or political economy, who, so far from being bound
to acknowledge, are free to scoff at the action of mind
upon matter, or of mind upon mind, or the claims of
mutual justice and charity. Common sense indeed and
public opinion set bounds at first to so intolerable a
licence; yet, as time goes on, an omission which was
originally but a matter of expedience, commends itself
to the reason; and at length a professor is found, more
hardy than his brethren, still however, as he himself maintains,
with sincere respect for domestic feelings and good
manners, who takes on him to deny psychology <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">in toto</span></span>,
to pronounce the influence of mind in the visible world
a superstition, and to account for every effect which is
found in the world by the operation of physical causes.
Hitherto intelligence and volition were accounted real
powers; the muscles act, and their action cannot be represented
by any scientific expression; a stone flies out of the
hand and the propulsive force of the muscle resides in the
will; but there has been a revolution, or at least a new
theory in philosophy, and our Professor, I say, after speaking
with the highest admiration of the human intellect,
limits its independent action to the region of speculation,
and denies that it can be a motive principle, or can exercise
a special interference, in the material world. He
ascribes every work, every external act of man, to the
innate force or soul of the physical universe. He observes
that spiritual agents are so mysterious and unintelligible,
so uncertain in their laws, so vague in their operation, so
sheltered from experience, that a wise man will have
nothing to say to them. They belong to a different
order of causes, which he leaves to those whose profession
it is to investigate them, and he confines himself
to the tangible and sure. Human exploits, human devices,
human deeds, human productions, all that comes under
the scholastic terms of <span class="tei tei-q">“genius”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“art,”</span> and the metaphysical
ideas of <span class="tei tei-q">“duty,”</span> <span class="tei tei-q">“right,”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“heroism,”</span> it is
his office to contemplate all these merely in their place
in the eternal system of physical cause and effect. At
length he undertakes to show how the whole fabric of
material civilization has arisen from the constructive
powers of physical elements and physical laws. He
descants upon palaces, castles, temples, exchanges, bridges,
causeways, and shows that they never could have grown
into the imposing dimensions which they present to us,
but for the laws of gravitation and the cohesion of part
with part. The pillar would come down, the loftier the
more speedily, did not the centre of gravity fall within its
base; and the most admired dome of Palladio or of Sir
Christopher would give way, were it not for the happy
principle of the arch. He surveys the complicated
machinery of a single day's arrangements in a private
family; our dress, our furniture, our hospitable board;
what would become of them, he asks, but for the laws of
physical nature? Those laws are the causes of our
carpets, our furniture, our travelling, and our social intercourse.
Firm stitches have a natural power, in proportion
to the toughness of the material adopted, to keep
together separate portions of cloth; sofas and chairs
could not turn upside down, even if they would; and it
is a property of caloric to relax the fibres of animal
matter, acting through water in one way, through oil in
another, and this is the whole mystery of the most
elaborate <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">cuisine</span></span>:—but I should be tedious if I continued
the illustration.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
Now, Gentlemen, pray understand how it is to be here
applied. I am not supposing that the principles of
Theology and Psychology are the same, or arguing from
the works of man to the works of God, which Paley has
done, which Hume has protested against. I am not
busying myself to prove the existence and attributes of
God, by means of the Argument from design. I am
not proving anything at all about the Supreme Being.
On the contrary, I am assuming His existence, and I do
but say this:—that, man existing, no University Professor,
who had suppressed in physical lectures the idea
of volition, who did not take volition for granted, could
escape a one-sided, a radically false view of the things
which he discussed; not indeed that his own definitions,
principles, and laws would be wrong, or his abstract
statements, but his considering his own study to be the
key of everything that takes place on the face of the
earth, and his passing over anthropology, this would be
his error. I say, it would not be his science which was
untrue, but his so-called knowledge which was unreal.
He would be deciding on facts by means of theories.
The various busy world, spread out before our eyes, is
physical, but it is more than physical; and, in making
its actual system identical with his scientific analysis,
formed on a particular aspect, such a Professor as I have
imagined was betraying a want of philosophical depth,
and an ignorance of what an University Teaching ought
to be. He was no longer a teacher of liberal knowledge,
but a narrow-minded bigot. While his doctrines professed
to be conclusions formed upon an hypothesis or
partial truth, they were undeniable; not so if they professed
to give results in facts which he could grasp and
take possession of. Granting, indeed, that a man's arm
is moved by a simple physical cause, then of course we
may dispute about the various external influences which,
when it changes its position, sway it to and fro, like a
scarecrow in a garden; but to assert that the motive
cause <em><span style="font-style: italic">is</span></em> physical, this is an assumption in a case, when
our question is about a matter of fact, not about the
logical consequences of an assumed premiss. And, in
like manner, if a people prays, and the wind changes, the
rain ceases, the sun shines, and the harvest is safely
housed, when no one expected it, our Professor may, if
he will, consult the barometer, discourse about the
atmosphere, and throw what has happened into an
equation, ingenious, even though it be not true; but,
should he proceed to rest the phenomenon, in matter of
fact, simply upon a physical cause, to the exclusion of a
divine, and to say that the given case actually belongs to
his science because other like cases do, I must tell him,
<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Ne sutor ultra
crepidam</span></span>: he is making his particular
craft usurp and occupy the universe. This then is the
drift of my illustration. If the creature is ever setting in
motion an endless series of physical causes and effects,
much more is the Creator; and as our excluding volition
from our range of ideas is a denial of the soul, so our
ignoring Divine Agency is a virtual denial of God.
Moreover, supposing man can will and act of himself in
spite of physics, to shut up this great truth, though one,
is to put our whole encyclopædia of knowledge out of
joint; and supposing God can will and act of Himself in
this world which He has made, and we deny or slur it
over, then we are throwing the circle of universal science
into a like, or a far worse confusion.</p>
<p>
Worse incomparably, for the idea of God, if there be
a God, is infinitely higher than the idea of man, if there
be man. If to plot out man's agency is to deface the
book of knowledge, on the supposition of that agency
existing, what must it be, supposing it exists, to blot out
the agency of God? I have hitherto been engaged in
showing that all the sciences come to us as one, that
they all relate to one and the same integral subject-matter,
that each separately is more or less an abstraction,
wholly true as an hypothesis, but not wholly trustworthy
in the concrete, conversant with relations more
than with facts, with principles more than with agents,
needing the support and guarantee of its sister sciences,
and giving in turn while it takes:—from which it follows,
that none can safely be omitted, if we would obtain the
exactest knowledge possible of things as they are, and
that the omission is more or less important, in proportion
to the field which each covers, and the depth to
which it penetrates, and the order to which it belongs;
for its loss is a positive privation of an influence which
exerts itself in the correction and completion of the rest.
This is a general statement; but now as to Theology in
particular, what, in matter of fact, are its pretensions,
what its importance, what its influence upon other
branches of knowledge, supposing there be a God, which
it would not become me to set about proving? Has it
vast dimensions, or does it lie in a nutshell? Will its
omission be imperceptible, or will it destroy the equilibrium
of the whole system of Knowledge? This is the
inquiry to which I proceed.</p>
<h3><span>7.</span></h3>
<p>
Now what is Theology? First, I will tell you what it
is not. And here, in the first place (though of course I
speak on the subject as a Catholic), observe that, strictly
speaking, I am not assuming that Catholicism is true,
while I make myself the champion of Theology.
Catholicism has not formally entered into my argument
hitherto, nor shall I just now assume any principle
peculiar to it, for reasons which will appear in the sequel,
though of course I shall use Catholic language. Neither,
secondly, will I fall into the fashion of the day, of identifying
Natural Theology with Physical Theology; which
said Physical Theology is a most jejune study, considered
as a science, and really is no science at all, for it is
ordinarily nothing more than a series of pious or polemical
remarks upon the physical world viewed religiously,
whereas the word <span class="tei tei-q">“Natural”</span> properly comprehends man
and society, and all that is involved therein, as the great
Protestant writer, Dr. Butler, shows us. Nor, in the third
place, do I mean by Theology polemics of any kind; for
instance, what are called <span class="tei tei-q">“the Evidences of Religion,”</span>
or <span class="tei tei-q">“the Christian Evidences;”</span> for, though these constitute
a science supplemental to Theology and are necessary
in their place, they are not Theology itself, unless an
army is synonymous with the body politic. Nor, fourthly,
do I mean by Theology that vague thing called <span class="tei tei-q">“Christianity,”</span>
or <span class="tei tei-q">“our common Christianity,”</span> or <span class="tei tei-q">“Christianity
the law of the land,”</span> if there is any man alive who can
tell what it is. I discard it, for the very reason that it
cannot throw itself into a proposition. Lastly, I do not
understand by Theology, acquaintance with the Scriptures;
for, though no person of religious feelings can
read Scripture but he will find those feelings roused,
and gain much knowledge of history into the bargain,
yet historical reading and religious feeling are not science.
I mean none of these things by Theology, I simply
mean the Science of God, or the truths we know about
God put into system; just as we have a science of the
stars, and call it astronomy, or of the crust of the earth,
and call it geology.</p>
<p>
For instance, I mean, for this is the main point, that,
as in the human frame there is a living principle, acting
upon it and through it by means of volition, so, behind
the veil of the visible universe, there is an invisible,
intelligent Being, acting on and through it, as and when
He will. Further, I mean that this invisible Agent is in
no sense a soul of the world, after the analogy of human
nature, but, on the contrary, is absolutely distinct from
the world, as being its Creator, Upholder, Governor, and
Sovereign Lord. Here we are at once brought into the
circle of doctrines which the idea of God embodies. I
mean then by the Supreme Being, one who is simply
self-dependent, and the only Being who is such; moreover,
that He is without beginning or Eternal, and the only
Eternal; that in consequence He has lived a whole
eternity by Himself; and hence that He is all-sufficient,
sufficient for His own blessedness, and all-blessed, and
ever-blessed. Further, I mean a Being, who, having
these prerogatives, has the Supreme Good, or rather is
the Supreme Good, or has all the attributes of Good in
infinite intenseness; all wisdom, all truth, all justice, all
love, all holiness, all beautifulness; who is omnipotent,
omniscient, omnipresent; ineffably one, absolutely perfect;
and such, that what we do not know and cannot even
imagine of Him, is far more wonderful than what we do
and can. I mean One who is sovereign over His own will
and actions, though always according to the eternal Rule
of right and wrong, which is Himself. I mean, moreover,
that He created all things out of nothing, and preserves
them every moment, and could destroy them as easily as
He made them; and that, in consequence, He is separated
from them by an abyss, and is incommunicable in all
His attributes. And further, He has stamped upon all
things, in the hour of their creation, their respective
natures, and has given them their work and mission and
their length of days, greater or less, in their appointed
place. I mean, too, that He is ever present with His
works, one by one, and confronts every thing He has
made by His particular and most loving Providence, and
manifests Himself to each according to its needs: and
has on rational beings imprinted the moral law, and
given them power to obey it, imposing on them the duty
of worship and service, searching and scanning them
through and through with His omniscient eye, and
putting before them a present trial and a judgment to
come.</p>
<p>
Such is what Theology teaches about God, a doctrine,
as the very idea of its subject-matter presupposes, so
mysterious as in its fulness to lie beyond any system,
and in particular aspects to be simply external to nature,
and to seem in parts even to be irreconcileable with
itself, the imagination being unable to embrace what the
reason determines. It teaches of a Being infinite, yet
personal; all-blessed, yet ever operative; absolutely
separate from the creature, yet in every part of the
creation at every moment; above all things, yet under
every thing. It teaches of a Being who, though the
highest, yet in the work of creation, conservation,
government, retribution, makes Himself, as it were, the
minister and servant of all; who, though inhabiting
eternity, allows Himself to take an interest, and to have
a sympathy, in the matters of space and time. His are
all beings, visible and invisible, the noblest and the vilest
of them. His are the substance, and the operation, and
the results of that system of physical nature into which
we are born. His too are the powers and achievements
of the intellectual essences, on which He has bestowed
an independent action and the gift of origination. The
laws of the universe, the principles of truth, the relation
of one thing to another, their qualities and virtues, the
order and harmony of the whole, all that exists, is from
Him; and, if evil is not from Him, as assuredly it is not,
this is because evil has no substance of its own, but is
only the defect, excess, perversion, or corruption of that
which has substance. All we see, hear, and touch, the remote
sidereal firmament, as well as our own sea and land,
and the elements which compose them, and the ordinances
they obey, are His. The primary atoms of matter, their
properties, their mutual action, their disposition and
collocation, electricity, magnetism, gravitation, light, and
whatever other subtle principles or operations the wit of
man is detecting or shall detect, are the work of His
hands. From Him has been every movement which
has convulsed and re-fashioned the surface of the earth.
The most insignificant or unsightly insect is from Him,
and good in its kind; the ever-teeming, inexhaustible
swarms of animalculæ, the myriads of living motes invisible
to the naked eye, the restless ever-spreading
vegetation which creeps like a garment over the whole
earth, the lofty cedar, the umbrageous banana, are His.
His are the tribes and families of birds and beasts, their
graceful forms, their wild gestures, and their passionate
cries.</p>
<p>
And so in the intellectual, moral, social, and political
world. Man, with his motives and works, his languages,
his propagation, his diffusion, is from Him. Agriculture,
medicine, and the arts of life, are His gifts. Society,
laws, government, He is their sanction. The pageant of
earthly royalty has the semblance and the benediction
of the Eternal King. Peace and civilization, commerce
and adventure, wars when just, conquest when humane
and necessary, have His co-operation, and His blessing
upon them. The course of events, the revolution of
empires, the rise and fall of states, the periods and eras,
the progresses and the retrogressions of the world's
history, not indeed the incidental sin, over-abundant as
it is, but the great outlines and the results of human
affairs, are from His disposition. The elements and
types and seminal principles and constructive powers of
the moral world, in ruins though it be, are to be referred
to Him. He <span class="tei tei-q">“enlighteneth every man that cometh into
this world.”</span> His are the dictates of the moral sense, and
the retributive reproaches of conscience. To Him must
be ascribed the rich endowments of the intellect, the
irradiation of genius, the imagination of the poet, the
sagacity of the politician, the wisdom (as Scripture calls
it), which now rears and decorates the Temple, now
manifests itself in proverb or in parable. The old saws
of nations, the majestic precepts of philosophy, the
luminous maxims of law, the oracles of individual wisdom,
the traditionary rules of truth, justice, and religion,
even though imbedded in the corruption, or alloyed with
the pride, of the world, betoken His original agency, and
His long-suffering presence. Even where there is habitual
rebellion against Him, or profound far-spreading
social depravity, still the undercurrent, or the heroic outburst,
of natural virtue, as well as the yearnings of the
heart after what it has not, and its presentiment of its
true remedies, are to be ascribed to the Author of all
good. Anticipations or reminiscences of His glory haunt
the mind of the self-sufficient sage, and of the pagan
devotee; His writing is upon the wall, whether of the
Indian fane, or of the porticoes of Greece. He introduces
Himself, He all but concurs, according to His good pleasure,
and in His selected season, in the issues of unbelief,
superstition, and false worship, and He changes the character
of acts by His overruling operation. He condescends,
though He gives no sanction, to the altars and
shrines of imposture, and He makes His own fiat the
substitute for its sorceries. He speaks amid the incantations
of Balaam, raises Samuel's spirit in the witch's
cavern, prophesies of the Messias by the tongue of the
Sibyl, forces Python to recognize His ministers, and
baptizes by the hand of the misbeliever. He is with the
heathen dramatist in his denunciations of injustice and
tyranny, and his auguries of divine vengeance upon
crime. Even on the unseemly legends of a popular
mythology He casts His shadow, and is dimly discerned
in the ode or the epic, as in troubled water or in fantastic
dreams. All that is good, all that is true, all that
is beautiful, all that is beneficent, be it great or small, be it
perfect or fragmentary, natural as well as supernatural,
moral as well as material, comes from Him.</p>
<h3><span>8.</span></h3>
<p>
If this be a sketch, accurate in substance and as far as
it goes, of the doctrines proper to Theology, and especially
of the doctrine of a particular Providence, which is
the portion of it most on a level with human sciences, I
cannot understand at all how, supposing it to be true, it
can fail, considered as knowledge, to exert a powerful
influence on philosophy, literature, and every intellectual
creation or discovery whatever. I cannot understand
how it is possible, as the phrase goes, to blink the question
of its truth or falsehood. It meets us with a profession
and a proffer of the highest truths of which the
human mind is capable; it embraces a range of subjects
the most diversified and distant from each other. What
science will not find one part or other of its province
traversed by its path? What results of philosophic
speculation are unquestionable, if they have been gained
without inquiry as to what Theology had to say to them?
Does it cast no light upon history? has it no influence
upon the principles of ethics? is it without any sort of
bearing on physics, metaphysics, and political science?
Can we drop it out of the circle of knowledge, without
allowing, either that that circle is thereby mutilated, or on
the other hand, that Theology is really no science?</p>
<p>
And this dilemma is the more inevitable, because
Theology is so precise and consistent in its intellectual
structure. When I speak of Theism or Monotheism, I
am not throwing together discordant doctrines; I am
not merging belief, opinion, persuasion, of whatever kind,
into a shapeless aggregate, by the help of ambiguous
words, and dignifying this medley by the name of
Theology. I speak of one idea unfolded in its just proportions,
carried out upon an intelligible method, and
issuing in necessary and immutable results; understood
indeed at one time and place better than at another,
held here and there with more or less of inconsistency,
but still, after all, in all times and places, where it is found,
the evolution, not of half-a-dozen ideas, but of one.</p>
<h3><span>9.</span></h3>
<p>
And here I am led to another and most important
point in the argument in its behalf,—I mean its wide reception.
Theology, as I have described it, is no accident
of particular minds, as are certain systems, for instance,
of prophetical interpretation. It is not the sudden birth of
a crisis, as the Lutheran or Wesleyan doctrine. It is not
the splendid development of some uprising philosophy,
as the Cartesian or Platonic. It is not the fashion of a
season, as certain medical treatments may be considered.
It has had a place, if not possession, in the intellectual
world from time immemorial; it has been received by
minds the most various, and in systems of religion the
most hostile to each other. It has <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">primâ facie</span></span> claims
upon us, so imposing, that it can only be rejected on the
ground of those claims being nothing more than imposing,
that is, being false. As to our own countries, it
occupies our language, it meets us at every turn in our
literature, it is the secret assumption, too axiomatic to be
distinctly professed, of all our writers; nor can we help
assuming it ourselves, except by the most unnatural
vigilance. Whoever philosophizes, starts with it, and
introduces it, when he will, without any apology. Bacon,
Hooker, Taylor, Cudworth, Locke, Newton, Clarke,
Berkeley, and Butler, and it would be as easy to find
more, as difficult to find greater names among English
authors, inculcate or comment upon it. Men the most
opposed, in creed or cast of mind, Addison and Johnson,
Shakespeare and Milton, Lord Herbert and Baxter,
herald it forth. Nor is it an English or a Protestant
notion only; you track it across the Continent, you
pursue it into former ages. When was the world without
it? Have the systems of Atheism or Pantheism, as
sciences, prevailed in the literature of nations, or received
a formation or attained a completeness such as Monotheism?
We find it in old Greece, and even in Rome,
as well as in Judea and the East. We find it in
popular literature, in philosophy, in poetry, as a positive
and settled teaching, differing not at all in the appearance
it presents, whether in Protestant England, or in
schismatical Russia, or in the Mahometan populations,
or in the Catholic Church. If ever there was a subject
of thought, which had earned by prescription to be
received among the studies of a University, and which
could not be rejected except on the score of convicted
imposture, as astrology or alchemy; if there be a science
anywhere, which at least could claim not to be ignored,
but to be entertained, and either distinctly accepted or
distinctly reprobated, or rather, which cannot be passed
over in a scheme of universal instruction, without involving
a positive denial of its truth, it is this ancient, this
far-spreading philosophy.</p>
<h3><span>10.</span></h3>
<p>
And now, Gentlemen, I may bring a somewhat tedious
discussion to a close. It will not take many words to
sum up what I have been urging. I say then, if the
various branches of knowledge, which are the matter of
teaching in a University, so hang together, that none
can be neglected without prejudice to the perfection of
the rest, and if Theology be a branch of knowledge, of
wide reception, of philosophical structure, of unutterable
importance, and of supreme influence, to what conclusion
are we brought from these two premisses but
this? that to withdraw Theology from the public
schools is to impair the completeness and to invalidate
the trustworthiness of all that is actually taught in them.</p>
<p>
But I have been insisting simply on Natural Theology,
and that, because I wished to carry along with me those
who were not Catholics, and, again, as being confident,
that no one can really set himself to master and to
teach the doctrine of an intelligent Creator in its fulness,
without going on a great deal farther than he at present
dreams. I say, then, secondly:—if this Science, even
as human reason may attain to it, has such claims on
the regard, and enters so variously into the objects, of
the Professor of Universal Knowledge, how can any
Catholic imagine that it is possible for him to cultivate
Philosophy and Science with due attention to their
ultimate end, which is Truth, supposing that system of
revealed facts and principles, which constitutes the
Catholic Faith, which goes so far beyond nature, and
which he knows to be most true, be omitted from among
the subjects of his teaching?</p>
<p>
In a word, Religious Truth is not only a portion, but
a condition of general knowledge. To blot it out is
nothing short, if I may so speak, of unravelling the web
of University Teaching. It is, according to the Greek
proverb, to take the Spring from out of the year; it is
to imitate the preposterous proceeding of those tragedians
who represented a drama with the omission of its
principal part.</p>
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