The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible.

The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible.

    Wash me throughly from my wickedness,
    And cleanse me from my sin. 
    Cast me not away from Thy presence,
    And take not Thy Holy Spirit from me.

To enter into the spirit of this sigh of penitence is a new knowledge of the human heart.  The Bible thus leads men to live as in the presence of an awful Power of Holiness, which is searching through and through our beings.  We cannot understand the Biblical “salvation” unless we have fathomed, at least, the shoaler experiences of these saintly souls of old, and know some little of the depths of sin.

5. The Bible wakens in the breast of man an ethical passion for the ideal and eternal law, which, apart from early Buddhism, has no parallel in history.

The prophets are aflame with the ardors of this sacred enthusiasm.  The ordinary passions of mankind are rivaled in intensity by the mystic passion of their souls for the Heavenly Wisdom.  They stand amid the wild whirl of selfish strife in the society of their day, and lift on high the holy forms of Justice and Brotherhood, as though expecting their commonplace cotemporaries to turn aside from practical affairs, and seek for them; and, so subtle and searching are the appeals of these heavenly visions, men do actually turn from mammon to worship these impoverishing divinities; and a great movement arises, looking to the bringing down of these ideals upon the earth, as the ruling powers in the court and the exchange.  The regenerating force of Christendom has lain in the coming of these prophets, generation after generation, to the children of men, to lead them upon the mount where they should clearly see those lofty shapes, commanding instant loyalty from honest souls.  The ominous travail-throes of society to-day await one stimulus to free the new order that is struggling to the birth—­the passion for ethical and social ideals, which the Bible, rightly administered, would inspire.

The prophetic spirit is the vital force of the Bible.  Its insistent power reappears in Paul; a man consuming in the fires of this holy passion, and kindling its ardors in the souls of untold myriads.  His great letter to the Romans, so strangely misread as a mere dogmatic treatise, breathes and burns with this lofty enthusiasm.  Its central thought, its threading motif, heard anew in every critical movement of the argument, is—­Righteousness.  The Master in whom the Bible centres, enriches earth with a new benediction: 

   Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness.

This highest passion of mankind is wakened by the Bible as by no other book.  Through it, the mystic Forerunners reveal themselves to the human soul most alluringly; enthralling it with their pure charms, dispelling the illusions of the senses and the glamor of the world, in the light of their holy loveliness.  The Eternal Wisdom calls from out these pages to the sons of men: 

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Project Gutenberg
The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.