The Commoner NOVEMBER, 1916 15 A CHRISTIAN PRECEDENT Nineteen -hundred years ago wise men came from the Bast, following the Star of Bethlehem and seeking Him who was to be born the Prince of Peace. If they could do this, inspired only by nrophecy unfulfilled, this great Christian nation, after nineteen centuries of demonstration, should bo able to go as a wise nation from the west, carrying gift to relieve the distress on both' sides, and appeal to these people to come with us and, in the name of the Prince of Peace, lift the world out of the bloody mire and up to a plane upon which a permanent peace can be bUSome talk about going into this war,, if honor requires. Oh, my countrymen, there is no honor that we can secure or defend by going into -this war this is comparable with the bonor that wo can win if we can, persuade the warring nations T to turn, like prodigal sons, from the husks on , which they have fed and make the future. of the. world bright by substituting co-operation .for . combat, and friendship for the hatreds, out, of , which wars grow.. ' l . (From Lalce Mohonk Speech.) . . ,.-. t . RELIGION ' f a-; REIilGION DEFINED RELIGION HAS BEEN DEFINED BY TOL STOY AS THE RELATION WHICH MAN FIXES BETWEEN HIMSEL'F AND HIS GOD, AND MOR ALITY AS THE OUTWARD MANIFESTATION OF THIS INWARD RELATION. Every one, by the time he reaches, maturity has fixed some re lations between himsefr and God and no material change in this relation can take place without a revolution in the, man, and this relation is the most potent influence that acts upon a human (From The Prince of Peace.) - ' '' " '".,. Tffl5. BASIS OF RELIGION Even some olderi-peope profess to regard re-, ligion as a superstition, pardonable in the ig norant but unworthy of the educated. Those who hold this view look down with mild con tempt upon such as give to religion a definite place in their thoughts and lives. They assume an intellectual superiority and often take little pains to conceal the assumption. Tolstoy ad ministers to the. Ycultured crowd" (the words quoted are, his-), a, severe rebuke whence de clares that the reHgious sentiment rests npt up on a superstitious fear of the invisible torces of nature, but. upon man's consciousness of his finiteness amid anvinflnite .universe and of his sinfulness; and this consciousness, .the .great philosopher addg. .mqn. can never outgrow. Tol stoy is right; man je'epgnizing how limited are his own powers add how vast is the. universe, leans upon the .arm that is- stronger than his. Man feels the weight of his sins and looks for One who is sinless.; - (From The Prince of Peace.) MAN A RELIGIOUS BEING Man is a religious being; the heart instinct ively seeks for a .(oL. Whether he worships on the banks of the. .Ganges, prays with Ms face upturned to the suti, kneels toward Mecca, or, regarding all space as 'a temple, commutes with the Heavenly Father according to the Christian creed, man is essentially devout. ' '",.' (From T?he Prince of Peace.) , , GOD j The existence bit-God need hot be proven; 'it is a self-evident truth. "In the 'beginning was God" we can riot' go beyond that. We must commence somewhere; we must start with some thing, and the Christian starts with Jehovah. The mystery of creation is not made clear by assuming that matter and force are eternal; the Christian begins with a more reasonable as sumption, namely, that God is eternal. If it is difficult to Understand how there can be an all-pbwerful, all-wise, and all-loving God the Creator of all things, it is still more difficult to understand how there can be a world-, such as we see about .us, without such a supreme and eternal being as its author and director. 'It is r . for the numan miQd to believe in such a God than to believe in any other theory of creationhence the almost universal belief in a Creator. 'The heavens declare the glory bt God; and the firmament showeth His handi work. His power, His wisdom, and His love are all manifested in the provision Ho has made for the welfare of His children. And how de pendent we are upon Him! "Give us this day our daily bread," is not a formal petition. If He ceased to gather the mists from the ocean and formhem into clouds, all life would dis appear from the earth, but wo have His prom ise, of the early and the latter rain, of seed time and harvest. If He drew a veil botweon us and the sun, night would bring with it a sleep that would know no waking, but light and heat are meted out to us each day according to our needs, and he gives as freely to the humblest as to the greatest. No. wonder He Is called Father, and Father of all, whether they acknowledge: their Indebtedness to Him or not. (From The Fruits of The Troe.) - THE BD3LE Next to the belief in God I would' placo the acceptance of the Bible as tho word of God. I need not present arguments in its support; its claims have been established tho burden of proof is upon those who reject it. Tlibse who regard it as a man-made book should bo chal lenged to put their theory to the test. If man made the Bible; he is, unless he has degenerated, able to make as good a book today. Judged by human standards, man is far bet tor prepared to write a Bible now then ho was when our Biblo Was written. The characters whose words and deeds are recorded, in tho Bible were members of a single race; they lived among the hills of Palestine in a territory scarcely larger than one of our counties. They did not have printing presses and they lacked tho learn ing of tho schools; they had no great libraries to consult, no steamboats to carry them around the 'world and make them acquainted with tho various centers of ancient civilization; they had no telegraph wires to bring them tho news from the ends of the earth and no newspapers to spread. before them each morning the doings of the day before. Science had not unlqcked Na ture's door and revealed the secrets of rocks be low and stars aboye. From what a scantily sup plied storehouse of knowledge they had to draw, compared with the unlimited wealth of informa tion at man's command today! And yet these Bible characters grappled with every problem that confronts mankind, from, the creation of the. world to eternal life beyond the tpmb. They have given us a diagram of man'.s existence from the cradle to the grave and they have set up warnings at every dangerous point along the path. We turn back to the Bible for the Ten Com mandments which fprm the foundation, of bur statute law and for the Sermon on the Mount, which lays down the rules for our spiritual growth. The Biblo gives us the story of the birth, the words, the works, the crucifixion, the resurrection and the ascension of Him whose coming was foretold in prophecy, whoso arrival was announced by the,. Angel voices, singing Peace and Good-will the history of Him who gave to the world a code of morality superior to anything that the world had ever known be fore or has known since the thrilling story of One who is the growing figure of all time, whom the world Is accepting as Saviour and as the Per fect Example. ' ' Let the athlests and the materialists produce a better Bible than ours, if they can. Let them collect the best of their school to bo found ambng the graduates tit universities as many as they please arid from every land. Let the members of this selected group travel whero they' will, consult such libraries as they please, and empldy every modern riieans of swift com munication. Let themglean in the fields of geol- ogy, botany, astronomy, biology and zoology; and then Toam at will wherever science has opened the way; let them take advantage of -all the progress in art and in literature, in oratory and in history let them use td the full every in strumentality that is employed in modern civil ization. And when they have exhausted every source, let them embody the results ofttheir best intelligence in a book and offer it to the world as a substitute for this Bible of ours. Have they the confidence that tho Prophets of Baal had- in ' their God? Will they try? If not, what excuse will they give? Has man fallen from his nigh estate, so that wo can not rightfuUy expect as much of him now as nineteen eenUrles ago? Or does the Bible come to us from a source that is highor than mam which? But our case is evon stronger. The opponent of the Biblo can not tako refHge in the plea that man Is retrograding. Thoy loudly proclaim that man has grown and that ho Is growing still. They boast of a world-wldo advance and their claim is founded upon fact. In all matters except in tho scienco of life, man has made wonderful progress. Tho mastery of tho mind ovor tho forces of naturo seems almost complete so far do wo surpass tho anclenta In harnessing tho water, tho wind and tho lightning. For agos, tho rivers plunged down tho mountain-sides rind exhausted their onorgles with out any appreciable contribution to man's ser vice; now they are estimated as so many units of horse-power and wo find that their fretting and foaming Were merely a language which they omployed to toll us of thoir strength and of their willingness to work for us. And, while falling water is becoming each day a larger factor in burden bearing, wator, rising in tho form of steam, is revolutionizing tho transportation methods of tho world. Tho wind that first whlsporcd Its sccrot of strength to tho flapping sail is now turning tho wheel at tho well. Lightning, the red demon that, from tho dawn of Creation, has been rushirg down its zigzag ' path through tho clouds, as if Intent only upon spreading death, having beon metamorphosed into an errand boy, brings ua Illumination from tho sun and carries our messages around tho globe. Inventive genius has multiplied tho power of the human arm and supplied tho masses with comforts of which tho rich did not dare to dream a few centuries ago. Science is ferreting out the hidden causes of disease and' teaching us how to prolong life. In every lino, except In tho lino of character-building, the world seems to have been made over, but tho marvelous changes by which old things have becomo now only emphasize tho fact that man, too, must be born again, while they show how impotent arc material things to touch the soul of man and r transform him into a spiritual being. Whorever the moral standard Is being lifted up wherover life Is becoming largos In tyro vision that directs it and richer In Its fruitage, tho imprpvemont is traceable to tho Bible and to the influence of the God and Christ of whpm the Biblo tells. The atheist and the materialist must confess that mart ought to bo able to produce a better ' book today than man, unaided, could have pro duced in any previous age. The fact that they have tried, time' and time again, only to fall each time'moro hopelessly, explains why thoy will not why they can not-accept tho chal lenge throwji down by the Christian world to produce a book' worthy to' tako the Bible's place. They havo prayed to their God to answer with r fire prayed to inanimate matter with an earn- ' cstness that is pathetic and they havo em-' ployed in the worship of blind force a faith greater than religion requires, but their al- ' mighty is asleep. How long will thoy allow the search for the strata of stone and fragments of fossil and decaying skeletons that are strewn around the house to absorb their thoughts to -the exclusion of the architect who planned it -all! How long will tho agnostic, closing his eyes' to the plainest truths, cry "night, night," ; when the sun in his meridian's splendor an nounced that noon is here? To the young man "who is building character ' I present the Bible as a book that is useful al- ways arid everywhere. It guides the foosteps of tho young; it throws a light upon tho path way during the mature years, and It is the only book that one cares to have beside him when tho darkness gathers and he knows that the end, is near. Then he finds consolation in the promises of the Book of Books and his lips repeat, even -when his words aro inaudible, "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil, for Thou art with me, Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me," or "I,go, to prepare a place for you' "that where I am, there ye. may be also." " ' . . (From The Making of a Man.) j J , fc ' CHRIST The divinity of Christ is a material parta'bfc' the Christian creed; it can not be omitted. . IV -Christ is to be a Saviour, or even an authorita- - si J . t ,, a