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And so man is wholly and entirely free, no external power upon him, his inward power is lord of all. That is, that internally he has an intelligent power which meets nothing from without but unintelligent physical laws, and so is entirely without control.

So might the dove, that by chance had fallen into the grosser element of water, and found it to obstruct its flight upon rising into the thinner fluid of air, imagine that all resistance was gone; or that the more it was diminished the more progress it would make.* Whereas, for all external resistance to vanish entirely, would be for all its inner power to be rendered wholly unable. Just so it is with these men, they imagine away the outward Intelligent Power that bears upon man through what we call "circumstance," and think in this of freedom! If this dream were realized, their "Will," would be as the doves' wings, idly fluttering in vacuum, unable and useless.

And their dream of an internal Will, with no external Will modifying it, this is just as vain a paradox as that of the Fatalists; just as vain, for the same consciousness that tells me and all men of an inward power, the Will, that can modify all external circumstances, that same knowledge of myself and of the world shall tell me of an external power working through what I call circumstances that shall modify the result of my action.

The so-called arguments or verbal riddles, that deny, the one the internal power, the other the external power,-occupy, in some books a great space, with us they shall take up none. The evidence that I have for the internal power, the Will, that same evidence, I have in my own experience, and in that of all men, for the external power that acts upon me through the "Circumstance."

And my course of life, both in itself as a whole, and in each act of it singly, is a resultant of these two powers, varied in force, it may be, but still existent each of them in each event, and in the whole result, or entire sum total of my life. I think the experience of each considerate man, apart from prejudice or system, will show him that this is true; and that it is not only in

*This illustration is taken from a well-known, but not well-understood German writer. I use it because as an illustration it suits my purpose admirably. And I mention it lest some censorious person should bring a charge of plagiarism.

accordance with his own experience, but with the nature of power and of action.

And so the two powers being established, the matter of discussion is changed from the old ground-which was, whether the Will was self-omnipotent entirely, or entirely a slave to circumstances—to a new ground, which, instead of denying one force or the other to exist, and arguing for the irresistibility of that which it supposes, admits both to exist, and then discusses their relative powers and effect. This new ground having taken, and thus fairly opened the subject, we shall leave our readers to meditate upon it, and go on to another chapter, wherein we shall discuss the meaning and purport of this that we call "circumstance."

CHAPTER III.

The meaning of "Circumstance."-It does not imply Doom or Physical Necessity, but an ever-present God acting upon us, according to the Laws of his nature and the laws established for us by Him, and therefore good. The question of Freedom different from that of Power.

IN the last chapter, we have shown that in each and every human action, two forces conspire-the internal power and the external "circumstance." It is manifestly necessary to discuss the meaning of this thing "circumstance."

Now the origin of the word, I believe, is not classical, but of the Lower Ages, and it implies "things standing around" us, not simply "things" that exist, but things that are around and act upon us.

And I conceive that the word, whosoever invented it, is a good and an useful one, for, from birth to death, we find that the "I," the being to which we apply "Personality," is ever brought in contact with external forces that act upon it, modifying circumstances itself, and being modified by them. And howsoever men may exaggerate the one force or the other, this is true,-in our being, the internal force exists, nay, is at the centre of the sphere; and the external force of "circumstances,"-"circum stat,'

"stands around," is everywhere in contact with us.

the meaning of the word.

So much for

For the meaning of the thing, how are we to interpret it? Circumstances are manifold, various, innumerable. Are we to take it, that by chance and accident they roll upon us, as the seaweed and marine rubbish from the storm rolls upon the rock, and along with the fortuitous sand surrounds it? Are circumstances the product of chance?

Certainly not. The same marks of design, of purpose, of will, which we discern in the acts that spring from ourselves, and which manifest them to be those of a person-those same evidences we see in the circumstances that operate upon us.

If our own acts are those of a Person, the influences that act upon us show" Will" and "Personality" as much. In fact, by the unanimous agreement and sense of all men, by all the indications that we have from the thing itself, external Circumstance is taken to manifest an external personal agent. The internal power by which we act upon outward things,-this is so far analogous to that external power, that we feel personality as ours is, to be its natural explanation.

And corresponding unto this interpretation is the Revelation primevally given, and thence passing downward through the channel of the knowledge of all nations, of a Being that wields that external power that we find to bear upon us; against whom we can raise no ramparts or circling fortress strong enough to keep Him out for, from the Heavens above, He shall rush down upon us; from the earth beneath, He shall rise up against us: nay, the very armour with which we gird and enclose ourselves against that Power, becomes means and ways of access against us to that Power.

Yes, let man as he will cut himself away from Christianity, and from Revelation, and still, in the sphere of Circumstance by which he is enclosed and environed, he has evidence of another power than his own, that works upon and modifies his action. And even he who in fact has left God, he shall be forced to say,

"Who can feel and dare to say, I believe him not?

The All-Embracing, the All-Sustaining,

Does he not embrace and sustain us himself?

Does not the heaven arch itself above, and earth lie firm below?"

Even such a man as the writer* of this, from the bare consideration of the relation of an external power to the internal force, had to confess an "All-embracer," an "All-sustainer."

But to the Christian, and, in fact, to all men, save those that have of set design placed themselves apart from knowledge, this fact and feeling receives its true interpretation, in the belief of a Personal, Omnipotent, Omnipresent, Omniscient God, surrounding each man, embracing each man within the sphere of Circum

stance.

Such, of the two facts of the internal force and of "Circumstance," is the interpretation given by the primeval revelation, and henceforth, in the Tradition of the Nations, taught by one generation perpetually to another.

But, more than this, the World, as I have shown, is a school of probation, and teaches us this eternally, by the one great idea of Law perpetually suggested-the Law of the Affections, that is, of Love in the Family; of Justice and Equity in the Nation; of Holiness in the Church: and so are "Circumstances" arranged under these three natural organizations, that not as a God of Power only He appears, but a Being of Love, of Justice, of Holiness; for all these moral qualities we, by the fact that the world is a "School of Probation," must attribute to the Almighty, in addition to that of Personality. God is Good, both in name and in reality; and each idea of Him that Society or Nature awakens in our Reason,-each manifestation of his glory that He makes unto man,-at the same time enables us to see in Him a higher degree of goodness, to feel it, and to reach after it. The interpretation, then, that we give to the action of Circumstance upon us, is this:

:

First, that "God is not absent,"-that he has not made the world to go by the machinery of an all-embracing Fate, or of an universal physical law or system of laws embracing all possible contingencies, and then has departed, having by his own machinery filled up the world he had made so that he no longer works personally therein, or is therein present, save by the Decree or by the Law. But, on the contrary, that he is here, present, acting, and that all power comes from him. This is the

* Goethe.

The reader will remember that it is with regard to the physical system of the universe that I speak here, and not in reference to the acts of intelli

doctrine of the Scriptures as to God and his acting, plainly and manifestly laid down.

And he that shall take it and the objections against it, and then take the mechanical theory,-whether the fatalistic one of Doom, or the other of a machinery of Physical Laws,—and the objections against them, he shall find more objections against the Unchristian* than the Christian doctrine.

The objections which may be brought against the Christian doctrine of an ever-present God, are such as this: "I see the phenomena to be regular, and therefore I argue that they are effected by a law, and not by the direct action of a personal being."

To this the answer is easy: Such arguments will exclude a finite personal being, not an Infinite. The action of an Infinite Being is and must be regular, according to the laws of Infinite Perfection. Man's action is and must be irregular; but the action of God upon the physical world is, and must be by his nature, regular, according to the law of his perfection. To see, then, the world so regular that we can express some sequences of its events in regular geometrical formulas, which we call “Laws,” this shows the presence of an "Infinite Cause," whose acts are regular. And to be incapable of expressing all, but day by day to be attaining new perceptions of regularity, this expresses the same idea of one cause working in manifold ways. The sense of regularity excludes a finite personal agent, but not an Infinite

one.

Again, it will be said, "When a personal being acts, we see Will, but not here."

Will, we answer, in all finite beings, is more or less Selfwill, more or less capricious, unsteady, faulty; but the more perfect it is, the more it approaches to a Law. And God's Will is and must be a Law, not capricious, not Self-willed as is man's Will, but uniform. Hence, the actions of God's Will are not

gent beings. All personal agents have the capability of exerting self-derived power by their own being. The evil, then, that they do, they do themselves: God does not do it. Spiritual beings, of their own nature and constitution, as formed by the Almighty, have the capability of originating power, separate and apart from material and physical causation.

* I say “Unchristian," because Fatalism, in its perfection, has been held only in Mohammedan or in pagan countries.

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