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.
that scarce would let them keep down to the plodding steps of social progress; that constantly rapt them away into the future, whence their voices echo back the gladness of their visions.  The good time is coming on the earth.  The longings of man’s soul are to be realized.  Crushed by no disappointments, wearied out by no delays, the prophets maintain an indomitable hopefulness; their voices the carollings of the birds that greet the dawn of day: 

    Sing, O Heavens; and be joyful, O earth;
    And break forth into singing, O mountains. 
    For the Lord hath comforted his people;
    And will have mercy upon his afflicted.

One treads here the upper zones, where the air is rare and every draught an inspiration; where the Laws are seen majestically sweeping every force into the measured movement which is making all things work together for good to them that love God.

With a tact truer than any theory, our canon of scripture has been closed in the Book of the Revelation; whose visions look beyond the break-up of Jerusalem and shadow on the far horizon, where earth and heaven melt in one, the fair form of the City of God, coming down from out the skies upon the new world wherein dwelleth righteousness.

In these days, when “joy is withered from the sons of men,” it is like drinking from the Castalian springs to draw within our souls from the Bible the sense of that kingdom of God which is joy in the Holy Ghost; into which men are to come

    With everlasting joy upon their heads: 
    They shall obtain joy and gladness
    And sorrow and sighing shall flee away.

You learn the power of the Bible as you find how the joy of the Lord is your strength.

8. The Bible leads this sense of Law into that awful vision wherein “Conscious Law is King of kings."

The Laws appear substantial and real inasmuch as they are seen to be but phases of the Infinite and Eternal Being, the Righteous Lord who loveth righteousness.  It is a conscious, intelligent, holy Being, whom Israel worships through these ideal forms of goodness.  However He transcended their poor personalities, as transcend them they knew He must, God was yet best expressed in the form of the human, conscious personality.  Man, the highest creature, must be, they said, most nearly in the form of God.  As man takes up the noblest characteristics of the life below him, so his own noblest characteristics must be taken up into the Lord of Life.  God cannot be less than personal, however much more than personal He may be.  He is to be thought of by us, in lack of nobler imagination, as personal.  Israel thus grew into the conception of the Infinite Power, manifest in the order of nature and in the order of conscience as conscious Power; One in whose image man was made, the Father of the mystic “I”; whose nature is the law of creation, whose purpose is its plan, whose will is its exhaustless energy.

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