By J. L. Dagg
Chapter
1
Existence of God THERE IS A GOD.[1]
The doctrine that God exists, is not now to be demonstrated as a new truth.
It has been supposed in all the preceding pages; and the proofs of it have been
brought to view, in various ways. But, for the sake of systematic arrangement,
it will be proper to collect these proofs under one head; and a clearer
statement of them will tend to the confirmation of our faith.
1. Our moral nature demonstrates the existence of God.
Our moral nature is adapted to moral government. We find this government
within us administered by conscience, and it meets us from without in the
influence which we experience from the moral judgments and feelings of others.
It restrains our appetites and passions; and, however unwelcome this restraint
may be to our vicious propensities, every one knows that it is conducive to his
well-being.
We are social as well as moral beings. The circumstances in which we enter
the world, and the propensities which we bring with us, unite to render the
establishment of society necessary. The birds congregate in flocks, and the
bees in swarms, and their instincts are adapted to the social relations which
they form. To man in society, moral principles are indispensable. Banish from
every member of human society the restraints which his conscience and the moral
sense of the community impose on him, and you will desolate the earth or
convert it into a hell. Brute-force and diabolical cunning, under the dominion
of lawless passions, will take the mastery of the world, and fill it with
wretchedness.
From the combined influence of our moral and social principles, civil
governments have originated, and their existence has been found by experience
indispensable to the well-being of society. These governments have differed
very widely in their degrees of excellence; and some of them have been most
unrighteously and cruelly administered; yet the very worst of them has been
considered preferable to wild anarchy.
The notion of moral government, and the feeling of its necessity, spring up
naturally in the human mind; but no earthly form of it satisfies our desires,
or meets our necessities. Conscience restrains us; and, when we have
disregarded its monitions, stings us with remorse; but men are still wicked.
Public sentiment stamps vice with infamy; but, in spite of public sentiment,
men are vicious. Civil government holds out its penalties, and the ruler
brandishes his sword; but men persevere in wickedness, and often with impunity.
The voice of nature within us calls for a government free from these
imperfections. If, from the idea of a petty ruler over a single tribe or
nation, we ascend to that of a moral governor over all intelligent creatures;
if instead of the imperfect moral judgments and feelings which we find in men,
we attribute to this universal ruler, all possible moral perfections, if we
invest him with knowledge sufficient to detect every crime, and power
sufficient to manifest his disapprobation of it in the most suitable and
effectual way; and if this exalted sovereign, instead of being far from us, is
brought into such a relation to us, that in him we live, move, and have our
being; we shall have the most sublime conception of moral government, of which
our minds are capable. This conception is presented in the proposition, THERE
IS A GOD. The idea of God's existence, as the moral ruler of the universe,
accords precisely with the tendencies and demands of our moral nature; and,
without admitting it, our moral faculties and the phenomena which they exhibit,
are totally inexplicable.
The moral principles of our nature find occasion for development and exercise,
in the relations which we sustain to our fellow-creatures. But, for their full
development and exercise nothing furnishes opportunity, but the relation which
we bear to God, and his universal dominion. This exercise of them constitutes
religion. Religion is, therefore, the perfection of morality; and the
fundamental doctrine of religion is the existence of God.
2. The existence of the world and the contrivances which it contains,
demonstrates the existence of God.
While our moral nature leads us to the conception of God, as the moral
governor of the universe, and to the belief of his existence, our intellectual
nature approaches him, as the Great First Cause. Reason traces the chain of
cause and effect throughout its links. It finds every link dependent on that
which precedes it; and it asks on what does the entire chain depend? It obtains
no satisfactory answer to this question, until it has admitted the existence of
an eternal, self-existent, and independent being, as the first cause of all
things. Here, and here only, the mind finds repose.
The argument which has been most relied on in natural religion, to prove the
existence of God, is derived from the indications of contrivance, with which
Nature abounds. The adaptation of means to ends, and the accomplishment of
purposes by contrivances of consummate skill, are everywhere visible.
Contrivance implies a contriver. The intelligence displayed is often found in
creatures that have no intelligence; and in other cases, when found in
intelligent creatures, it is manifestly not from themselves; because it exists
without their knowledge, and operates without their control. The contrivance
must be referred to an intelligent First Cause. This argument for the
existence of God, is of great practical value, because it is presented to our
minds daily, and hourly, in all the works of Nature. We meet it in the
sun-beams, which impart to plants and animals, the warmth necessary to life;
and to every eye, the light without which eyes would be useless. It presents
itself in the eyes of every man, beast, bird, fish, insect, and reptile, and is
most convincingly exhibited in the arrangements for receiving and refracting
the light, and employing it for the purposes of vision; a contrivance as truly
mechanical, and conformed to the laws of optics, as that which is seen in the
structure of the telescope. We behold it in the descending shower which
fertilizes the earth, and causes the grass to grow; and in the bursting germ,
the spreading blade, the rising stalk, and the ripening grain, in all which a
skilful contrivance is displayed, that infinitely transcends all human art. We
discover it in the instincts by which the parent hen hatches her eggs, and
takes care of her young; and in the adaptation of every species of animals on
land, in air, or in water, to their mode and condition of life. It is seen in
the return of day and night, the revolution of the seasons, the wind that
sweeps the sky, and the vapor that rises from the ocean, and floats through the
atmosphere. We find it in the bones of the body, fitted for their respective
motions, and in the muscles which move them; in the throbbing heart, the
circulating blood, the digesting stomach, and the heaving lungs. In every
thing which the eye beholds, or the mind contemplates, we discover the
manifestations of the Creator's wisdom and power. The devotional heart is
struck with the evidence of God's existence, so abundantly displayed in all his
handiworks, and is incited to admire and adore. The whole universe becomes a
grand temple, pervaded with the presence and glory of the deity; and every
place becomes an altar, on which may be offered to him the sacrifice of praise
and thanksgiving.
3. The doctrine that there is a God, is confirmed by the common consent of
mankind.
There have been tribes of men without literature, and, to a great extent,
without science and arts; but the notion of an invisible, overruling power,
with some form of religious worship, has been nearly, or quite universal. In
this particular, man is distinguished from all other animals that inhabit the
globe; and if there has been any portion of our race in whom no idea of God and
religion has appeared, it may be said of them, that they have so far brutalized
themselves, as to hide from view the characteristic distinction of human
nature. Now, however it may be accounted for, that a belief in the existence
of God has prevailed so generally among mankind; the fact of its prevalence is
an argument for the truth of the opinion. If it is an ancient revelation
handed down by tradition, that revelation proceeded from God, and therefore
proves his existence; and if it springs up naturally in the human mind, in the
circumstances in which we are placed, what Nature universally teaches, may be
received as true.
4. Divine revelation dispels all doubt as to the existence of God.
In the Bible, the existence of God is from the very first assumed. "In the
beginning, God created the heavens and the earth."[2] The doctrine, though formally declared in scarcely a single
passage, is represented as fundamental in religion. "He that cometh to God,
must believe that he is;"[3] and the denial of
it is attributed to folly; "the fool hath said in his heart, there is no
God."[4] The volume of revelation is a light
emanating from the Father of lights, and is, of itself, an independent proof of
his existence. As we study its pages, in his light we shall see light; and a
more realizing and abiding conviction that he, the great Source of light,
exists, will occupy our minds.
The perfect harmony between natural and revealed religion, with respect to
this doctrine, confirms the teaching of both. "The heavens declare the glory
of God, and the firmament showeth his handiwork. Day unto day uttereth speech,
and night unto night showeth knowledge."[5]
While heaven and earth, day and night, speak for God, he speaks for himself in
his inspired word, confirming the testimony which they give, and completing the
instruction which they convey. Revelation never contradicts or sets aside the
teachings of natural religion. God affirms, that "the invisible things of him
are from the creation of the world clearly seen, being understood by the things
that are made; even his eternal power and Godhead"[6] It is no derogation from the authority or perfection of
the Scriptures, that we study natural religion. The Scriptures themselves
direct us to this study. "Ask the beasts, and they shall teach thee, and the
fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee."[7]
The same God who speaks to us in his word, speaks to us also in this works; and
in whatever manner he speaks, we should hear, and receive instruction.
It is a lamentable proof of human depravity, that men should deny or disregard
the existence of God. We read of the fool who says in his heart, there is no
God; of nations that forget God; and of individuals who have not God in all
their thoughts. Such persons do not delight in God; and therefore they say,
"Depart from us; we desire not the knowledge of thy ways." Of such atheism,
the only effectual cure is a new heart. For the occasional suggestion of
atheistic doubts, with which a pious man may be harassed, the remedy is, a
diligent study of God's word and works, a careful marking of his hand in
Providence, and a prayerful and confiding acknowledgment of him in all our
ways. If we habitually walk with God, we shall not doubt his existence.
The invisibility of God is one of the obstacles to the exercise of lively
faith in his existence. It may assist in removing this obstacle, to reflect
that the human mind is also invisible; and yet we never doubt that it exists. We hear the words, and see the actions of a fellow-man, and these indicate to
us the character and state of his mind, so as to excite in us admiration or
contempt, love or hatred. If, while we listen to his words, and observe his
actions, we clearly perceive the intelligence from which these words and
actions proceed, why can we not, with equal clearness, perceive the
intelligence from which the movements of nature proceed? If we can know,
admire, and love, an unseen human mind, it is equally possible to know, admire,
and love an unseen God. |
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[1] Gen. i. 1; Ps. xiv. 1; Mark xii. 32; 1 Cor. viii 6; Heb. iii. 4. [2] Gen. i. 1. [3] Heb. xi. 6. [4] Ps. xiv. 1. [5] Ps. xix. 1, 2. [6] Rom. i. 20. [7] Job xii. 7. |