Contemporary Literature [pp. 175-196]

The Princeton review. / Volume 3, Issue 9

1874.] CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE. 175 tors, without one gleam of high or holy tradition to enliven the procession; and for the future, the prospect that the poor mass of protoplasm which constitutes the sum of our being, and which is the sole gain of an indefinite struggle in the past, must soon be resolved again into inferior animals or dead matter. That men of thought and culture should advocate such a philosophy, argues either a strange mental hallucination, or that the higher spiritual nature has been wholly quenched within them. It is one of the saddest of many sad spectacles that our age presents. Still these men deserve credit for their bold pursuit of truth, or what seems to them to be truth; and they are, after all, nobler sinners than those who would practically lower us to the level of beasts by their negation even of intellectual life, or who would reduce us to apes, by making us the mere performers of rites and ceremonies, as a substitute for religion, or who would advise us to hand over reason and conscience to the despotic authority of fallible men dressed in strange garbs, and called by sacred names. The world needs a philosophy and a Christianity of more robust mould, which shall recognize, as the Bible does, at once body and soul and spirit, at once the sovereignty of God and the liberty of man; and which shall bring out into practical operation the great truth that God is a Spirit, and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth. Such a religion might walk in the sunlight of truth and free discussion, hand in hand with science, education, liberty and material civilization, and would speedily consign evolution to the tomb which has already received so many superstitions and false philosophies." Id. pp. 395-397. ART. XI.-CONTEMIPORARY LITERATURE. THEOLOGY. HiIunalitfy Immortal; or, Clan Tried, Fallen, and Redeemed. By LAURENS P. HICKOK, D.D., LL.D. Boston: Lee & Shepard. This new work by Dr. Hickok is the sequel and completion of his "Creator and Creation," which has been noticed in our Review. The two volumes make up a system of theology, though developed and arranged in a different method from that of the ordinary text-books. All that pertains to the being, nature and workings of God was speculatively treated in the "Creator and Creation;" the "History of Humanity" is the special subject of the present volume. "The work now before us," says the author, "is to trace, in general outline, the specific History of Humanity, from its beginnings to its consummation in the eternal state, with the communings and collisions that may occur with other orders of spiritual intelligences; taking as our guide the offered light from speculative reason, and from divine revelation, and, so far as the facts of experience may be gathered, from the records of past ages. The light shining from all these sources must give in all readings the same one mean


1874.] CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE. 175 tors, without one gleam of high or holy tradition to enliven the procession; and for the future, the prospect that the poor mass of protoplasm which constitutes the sum of our being, and which is the sole gain of an indefinite struggle in the past, must soon be resolved again into inferior animals or dead matter. That men of thought and culture should advocate such a philosophy, argues either a strange mental hallucination, or that the higher spiritual nature has been wholly quenched within them. It is one of the saddest of many sad spectacles that our age presents. Still these men deserve credit for their bold pursuit of truth, or what seems to them to be truth; and they are, after all, nobler sinners than those who would practically lower us to the level of beasts by their negation even of intellectual life, or who would reduce us to apes, by making us the mere performers of rites and ceremonies, as a substitute for religion, or who would advise us to hand over reason and conscience to the despotic authority of fallible men dressed in strange garbs, and called by sacred names. The world needs a philosophy and a Christianity of more robust mould, which shall recognize, as the Bible does, at once body and soul and spirit, at once the sovereignty of God and the liberty of man; and which shall bring out into practical operation the great truth that God is a Spirit, and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth. Such a religion might walk in the sunlight of truth and free discussion, hand in hand with science, education, liberty and material civilization, and would speedily consign evolution to the tomb which has already received so many superstitions and false philosophies." Id. pp. 395-397. ART. XI.-CONTEMIPORARY LITERATURE. THEOLOGY. HiIunalitfy Immortal; or, Clan Tried, Fallen, and Redeemed. By LAURENS P. HICKOK, D.D., LL.D. Boston: Lee & Shepard. This new work by Dr. Hickok is the sequel and completion of his "Creator and Creation," which has been noticed in our Review. The two volumes make up a system of theology, though developed and arranged in a different method from that of the ordinary text-books. All that pertains to the being, nature and workings of God was speculatively treated in the "Creator and Creation;" the "History of Humanity" is the special subject of the present volume. "The work now before us," says the author, "is to trace, in general outline, the specific History of Humanity, from its beginnings to its consummation in the eternal state, with the communings and collisions that may occur with other orders of spiritual intelligences; taking as our guide the offered light from speculative reason, and from divine revelation, and, so far as the facts of experience may be gathered, from the records of past ages. The light shining from all these sources must give in all readings the same one mean

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Contemporary Literature [pp. 175-196]
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