'■»'Tn!"^i»«r»:N-»r: Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tile Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029488032 _„_, Cornell University Library BX8713.P27 E71 1866 Essays (2d ser.1 1 oljn 3 1924 029 488 032 ESSAYS BY THEOPHILUS PARSONS. (SECOND SEBIES.) THIRD EDITION BOSTON: WILLIAM CARTER AND BROTHER. 1866. (0 Knteied according to Act of Congress, In the year 1856, by Thkophilcs Paesohs, in tlie Clerk's Office of tlie District Court of tlie Distarict of Massachusetts. CONTENTS. Page THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL ... 1 THE SENSES 49 THE MINISTET OF SOEEOW . . . " .115 THE SABBATH 149 THE FOUNDATION OF DUTT 215 DEATH AND LIFE . . .... 255 NOTE. The first series of my Essays was published ten years ago ; and these have been written at various periods since. They are now pub- lished, after a long delay, from a conviction that it is not right to withhold what may do some good, only because it cannot do much. Ko systematic exposition of the doctrines of the New Church is attempted in either volume. The topics discussed with more or less fulness in these several essays are distinct and different They are, however, connected ; and there may seem to be much repetition, to those who do not know the interdependence of the leading doctrines of the Church. That which relates to the universal Father is the centre of all truth ; and other doctrines, as that concerning His Word i and that concerning Life, which should be governed by His Word ; and that concerning another world in which Life is continued and de- veloped, lie near the centre. Begin where we may, with any topic or any treatment of it, every attempt to present it accurately leads us towards these doctrines, as necessarily as the radii of a circle point to- wards its centre. Every essay, therefore, contains statements of these doctrines, or allusions to them. It would have been easy to have les- sened the appearance of sameness ; but it was thought better to permit all these views to present themselves to the mind of the reader in the same way and in the same connection in which they occurred to the mind of the writer. In one sense there is little repetition ; for the same thing must present a different aspect when seen from a different point of view, or in a different relation. It was indeed thought that it might not be useless thus to exhibit the fact, that all religious truth flows from and returns to these central and universal doctrines ; and to show bow either of them, as its face is turned towards one or another dis- tant or particular truth, throws upon it especial illustration, and re- ceives from it new proof and confirmation. T. P. Cambbidoe, July, 1856. THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. All knowledge that the Seeming is not the Actual, is a discovery. The infant sees, hears, touches, and believes. In the beginning of human experience aU things are equally true and equally real, and all objects are equally near. The moon is no farther from the cradle than the lamp. Persons bom blind have received sight in after years from a surgical operation ; and although they have previously learnt much of the relation of place by the experience of touch and motion, and although the process by which they . learn to see things in their right places is usually brief and rapid, this is still a necessary process. With those who are bom in possession of aU their senses, this same process is so far completed before memory begins, that we have little or no recollection of it, and are seldom conscious of it after- wards. There is, therefore, a certain amount of correction of the Seeming which is common to aU men. It is finished in early childhood ; and, while itself forgotten, it becomes thenceforth the basis of aU further progress. This progress continues through life in a great variety of forms. The most ignorant and degraded races — the na- tives of Australia or Patagonia — acquire, and keep up by transmission through successive generations, some knowl- edge of the Actual, which lios within the Seeming. As 4 THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. nations advance in civilization and culture, this knowledge grows, and they grow wiser. Experience accumulates. The observation of a few discovers truth for many. And thus, in various directions, much is learnt so well and so universally, that they who learnt it forget that there was a time when they knew it not. It is difficult to conv&ce an ignorant man that he did not know the relative distances of objects as soon as he could see ; that his own child does not know it as soon as its eyes are opened. And there is a great deal of the diversified knowledge which all civilized men possess, which was gradually acquired by earlier gen- erations and gradually learnt by themselves in early life, but which is so certainly possessed that it seems to belong to the constitution of the mind ; to have never been learned, but to be seen at once, by all persons of common sense, intuitively and necessarily. This work of correction goes on constantly, but not rapidly nor universally. And when nicer, more extended, and more patient observation has supplied materials for more profound and far-reaching thought, and wiser and classified results, then what we call Science is bom. Be- tween the ordinary knowledge of mankind, and what we mean by Science, there is no sharp dividing-line, — no exact distinction. Science is a later and a riper fruit, and usually springs from the exercise of greater powers of mind ; and is, in a greater or a less degree, organized and systematic truth. But when scientific truths are discovered, they gradually become a common possession, and after a while they take their place among the facts of universal cogni- zance ; and at length, perhaps, among those which are thought to be the spontaneous and immediate perceptions of the intellect. The universal observation of all ages has ascertained that the sun rises from one edge of a wide-spread plain, THE SEEMING- AND THE ACTUAL. and sets at its opposite border. We see and we know that it leaves its eastern bed every morning, and, climbing the sky, passes through the refulgence of noon to evening, and then sinks away into its western concealment. Thousands of years ago, the knowledge that this was not just as it seemed existed, and perhaps this knowledge was never wholly lost ; but not until some three centuries since was the actual fact so asserted and so proved as to take a fixed and permanent place in science. The thoughtful man who gave to his age the great truth that the daUy and yearly motions of the sun are but an appearance, — that it remains the steadfast centre of a great system, while the round earth is ever in motion, and, by its constant revolution, gives to the sun this seeming, — this man was arrested and im- prisoned by the dominant power of the Christian Church, and compelled to renounce, upon his knees, this heresy. But it is no longer a heresy : it is a proved and certain truth ; much modified since Galileo's day, but made certain. Multitudes know it as weU as they know the appearance. Greater multitudes do not yet know it ; but the truth is gradually diffusing itself, and after a while it wiU take its place in the mass of universal knowledge. So, too, in the unresting fluctuation of human life and the transientness of all we love and enjoy, some seek re- lief against this painfiil sense of universal and perpetual decay and change, by looking to the "everlasting hills." We see them stand there, catching the first tints that bring the promise of day, or glowing in the sunshine ; and as the evening shadow climbs up their sides, we feel that through day and night, and all the days and all the nights, they have stood and will stand, unchanging in a world of change. And so we call them the everlasting hiQs, and drink in the lesson and the feeling of patient endurance. And now Science has touched them, and they melt away. The 1* 6 THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. clouds — the fleeting and changeful clouds^ their very oppo- sites, giving to the eye a new form, a new tint, a new place, with every new moment — axe not more changeful than the hiDs. The waves of ocean rise and sink rapidly ; the waves of the solid globe, more slowly. It is but a question of time. The moments of cloud-changes or of wave-changes must be largely accumulated to make the periods of hill- changes. But so accumulated we know they have been. We know that what we call the steadfast earth has risen and fallbn, swelled and subsided, just as much as the ocean that the wind wrinkles into wave and valley, while it obeys through storm and calm the beating of its tidal pulse. But this fact is a recent discovery ; as certain as any fact of science ; although it is known to a much smaller number than the movement of the planets round the sun, and is much farther from the point where it will be merged in the tnass of universal knowledge. Again : Science has recently put forth an hypothesis, on grounds which sustain it in the judgment of some thinkers of great power, that all the material of the universe, all matter, is resolvable in the last analysis, not into definite atoms, occupying- space, but into points of dynamic force. And the possibility is dawning upon philosophy, that the idealism which Berkeley, and some greater than he long ages before he lived, strove to estabhsh, has a foundation in fact, though not that which they supposed ; some truth, but not that which they saw ; and that further thought and further discovery will give better reasons than have yet been known for believing that all outward and apparent nature is only phenomenal, in so far that it exhibits and consists of force only, and not substance. This is now only conjecture, not yet discovery ; although so great a man as Faraday supposes himself able to demonstrate it. But certainly we might venture to say that it is probable, pro- THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. 7 vided we are "at liberty to judge by the weight of testimony, and pennit them only to be witnesses who have confronted the question, and examined it with aU the existing aids ot Bcience. These instances are given to illustrate what seems to be one of the laws of human progress; and more might be given, almost indefinitely ; for we should find them wher- ever there has been progress. Beginning with no knowl- edge that there is any difiference between the Seeming and the Actual, we acquire a knowledge of this difference at a very early stage of our" beiug. It is the first knowledge that we acquire, and the foundation of all the rest. Per- haps, too, the whole progress of each individual through life, of the race through all time, of aU men through all eternity, is but the perpetual and progressive growth of this knowledge through all the successive steps of the advance of humanity, and thus an approach towards absolute truth, — an approach which wiQ be eternal, because this truth is always infinitely far from finite comprehension. Such a law, even if it have not the extent and univer- sality supposed, may stiU be worth investigation. And when we look upon it, one of the first things which occurs to us is the fact, that at every stage of our progress, stand where we may, we are prone to believe that we have at last reached the soUd ground of reality. From all that lies behind us the veil has been lifted : we see that we or our fathers were ignorant or mistaken ; that we have gone beyond the positions then occupied ; and we readily charac- terize the whole that was, not as truth, but as a way that led to the truth ; that is, to the point which we have now reached. Undoubtedly Science looks forward ; for it has its aspirations, its hopes, its promises, and, its doubts ; bpt even Science, which ought to know that its whole founda- tion consists of the iU-cemented fragments of past beliefs, — 8 THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. even Science often assumes that it is now building a foundation which will never need to be shaken to pieces ; and is proud of the hope that the future will only raise an ever-growing structure upon this firm basis. If'we speak not of science, nor of philosophy, and not of minds which they have opened and illuminated, we find everywhere and always the most profound conviction, that precisely what is now believed to be, is. Sir William Temple says : " When a man has looked about him as far as he can, he concludes there is no more to be seen ; when he is at the end of his line, he is at the bottom of the ocean ; when he has shot his best, he is sure none ever did or ever can shoot better or beyond it ; his own reason he holds to be the certain measure of truth ; and his own knowledge, of what is pos- sible in nature." He uses this language reproachfully; and undoubtedly this quality or propensity of the human mind may be carried to excess, and often is so ; and then it hinders progress, and fetters thought itself with bands of iron, and brings upon mind that stagnation which is akin to death. So it does great mischief; but this is no more than can be said of every other quality or tendency of our com- mon nature. Which of them all is not liable to excess and abuse, and may not then become the instrument and means of vast mischief? In itself, and in its rightfiil exercise and influence, this same disposition to plant the foot very firmly on the groimd we »at that moment occupy, is not bad, but good. Without this, we should live as in a dream; the present would be only an unstable point between infinite uncertainties ; the past we know to have been full of error, and if we hope that the future may be full of progress, still, if we looked upon the present as only one more mistake, which will soon, join the long procession of discovered falla- cies, we could not have each day the energy and interest demanded by that day's duty. Every man, stand where TH£ SEEMIira AND THE ACTUAL. 9 he will, is in the centre of the sky. Over him and around him the hending dome extends in all directions, as equally as if it were made for him, and from him as its central point. No knowledge prevents this appearance ; nor should it ; for in one sense it is even physically true. And let him stand where he may, the earth and the sky are his, and made for him ; and as completely his for all use that is truly good, as if they were his alone. So, in whatever point of time a man stands, he is in the centre of the two eternities. All that the past has done was for this moment ; and from it, as iiom a new beginning, the future sets forth. And it is right for a man to feel as if the present, and the work he has to do, were all the world to him ; so far, at least, as this is needed to give him interest and energy. It is well that we always feel that we stand now upon firm ground. And there is a view of this subject which may show us that we are always — or may be always ■ — resting upon a reality. Appearances are of two kinds ; for they come from two sources. There are man's appearances and there are God's appearances. Man sometimes invests truth with falsehood ; or what he thinks to be reality with what he knows to be felsity. He wishes to disguise a fact, a feeUng, or a thought, and has no means of doing so but by superinducing a veil of falsity ; and if we would reach the truth, we can do so only by rending this veil away. "We begin by de- tecting the falsity and calling it by its true name ; and we pass, not through it, but from it, to the truth ; from it, and to its opposite. Not so is it with the chain of appearances through which our course lies, as we advance towards that which is absolute truth. For these appearances are God's 10 THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. work, and not man's. They are forms of truth ; they are truth, but truth accommodated to human perception, to human exigency, to human progress. They are envelopes, successive envelopes, which surround truth, and are them- selves formed of modified truth. "When, therefore, we rest upon the clear perception of any one of them, be it the outermost and the first which meets the perceptive powers, or one which lies far within and has been reached only by long and laborious efforts and after many successive steps, we may well stand upon it as upon the solid reality of actual truth. Science has made it certain that the sun is always in the centre of the system, or rather, that the centre of the sys- tem is always in the sun, and that its apparent motion is due to the actual motion of the earth. But it is still as true as it ever was, that the sun rises and sets every day ; and that his rising and his setting make the day that summons to labor, and the night that. permits repose. The discoveries of Geology only strengthen the idea of the vast permanence of the mountains. There they still stand, planted by Power itself, and stiU give the idea of power and permanence. There they are, anchored in the rushing stream of time ; and when the mind is tossed upon its waves, and borne by the swift current until the sense of continual change and universal fiuctuation threatens to drag it into this unresting whirl, — then we may still " fiee to the mountains." We may look at them as they stand in their steadfast magnificence, and ask them to give us the thought and feeling that there are some great, enduring certainties ; some of the products of the Almighty Will, upon which the tempest and the w-ave beat in vain. And the answer they give, and always have given, and always will give, makes no discord with the utterance of science ; for that tells only that eternity does not belong to things THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. 11 outside of the soul. And if the progress of science should hereafter count among the conjectures which it had con- verted into certainties, the hypothesis that the ultimate atoms of external nature are only forces, and that matter is therefore, in the last analysis, only ultiniated power, it would never be the less true, that we have a solid world to stand upon, and a home wherein we may do the work appointed to us. For this certainty would not be shaken^ although science should satisfy us that our first concept tions of the nature of the material world were gross and inadequate. As knowledge grows, we know better the extent of our ignorance. Beyond the boundaries of what is known, there lies the unknown ; as these enlarge, so does that ; and the more we know, the more we see afar off that we do not know ; and the deeper seems the mystery that covers with its clouds the distant unknown. The acqui- sition and enlargement of knowledge hav6 often been compared to the ascent of a hill ; and the comparison' may be carried quite far. As one climbs upward, his horizon enlarges. That which before terminated his view, and was seen obscurely, now lies more beneath him, and in full sight. Beyond it spreads a broader field, wholly unseen before. And as he ascends, and his horizon widens and retreats, he not only sees much more of that which he sees dimly because it is at the farthest limit of his vision, but he sees this still more obscurely than- he saw before the things which bounded hia view and formed a nearer and narrower horizon. It may be so with all increase of knowledge. The perpetual law of its growth may be the continual coming within distincter perception of that which was conjectured rather than known ; while all knowledge continually suggests a world of objects without its domain, of which there are yet only very dim intimations and 12 THB SEEMIN'6 AKD TEE ACTUAL. suppositions, or even not so much as these. Therefore progress may be eternal. "We are apt to imagine the highest wisdom as not only bringing the greatest amount ■within the grasp of certainty, but as leaving the least un- certain. The contrary of this last proposition may be true. The highest created intelligence, that has been growing in wisdom for a time nearest to eternity, may be able to solve all the questions which perplex inferior intellects ; but may also see, along the outermost limits of his own knowledge, a vaster mystery than can be suspected to exist by those who have not ascended so high. The nearer he draws to the Infinite, the better he can measure his distance from that goal which he may ever approach but never reach ; and the more profound will be his sense of the unfathom- able depth and measureless extent of truths which lie so far from him, that in an earlier stage of knowledge he could have had no intimation even of their existence. As he grows wiser, he better comprehends eternity, and acquires a more perfect belief in the infinite treasures which eternity cannot exhaust. It may indeed be said that the increase of knowledge never answers a question of moment without suggesting more and deeper questions than it solves. This may be the law of ages as well as of individuals ; and it may be one evidence of the advanced position occupied at this day by the human mind in the more cultivated portions of our race, that strange questions and startling facts are now presented for consideration, which are deeper in their im- port and more difficult of solution than those which men have been in the habit of contemplating. And it may not be evidence that an individual partakes of this advance of intellect, that he ignores these questions because he cannot answer them, or denies or despises these facts because they lie beyond the limits of his customary thought, and reftise THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. 13 to be classed and named and put upon the shelves whiA have sufficed hitherto to hold all his collections. We have already said that the Seeming which man puts over the Actual is hypocritical and false ; while the Seeming with which God clothes the Actual is itself actual ; is truth, but accommodated truth. This being so wherever that which exists presents itself necessarily to human percep- tions under an aspect which does not disclose all that lies within, it may be worth inquiry, how much of all existence comes under this law. It may be a question whether there is any part which does not, — whether this be not the uni- versal law of being. Possibly w,e may come to ask, whether the work of creation be not itself a work of superinducing externals over internals, — of making ever-existing entities progressively apparent and perceptible, — and nothing else. What is creation ? Is it the calling of something into being out of nothingness by an Almighty fiat ? This is the first and simplest idea of creation ; it is implied in the very word to most minds. This, then, we will assume to be in some sort true. And it must always be and remain true, that whatever is created is then summoned to exist and come forth in a manner and form which never existed before. But this truth is perfectly consistent with the principle, that no thing was ever created out of nothingness. And these two propositions are harmonized into one truth, if we hold that God creates all things from himself; and gives to each thing its own individuality, nature, form, and function. But how does God create all things from himself ? If any one were to say, in the present state of human knowledge, that he understood this fully, and could show it clearly, the utterance of so great a folly would almost require that a sane intellect should listen to him no longer. But it may not be so foolish to say, that we may see this even now as 2 14 THE fctonmlNa AND THE JICTUAL. a very dim and distant truth, and that there are many probable facts, and some certainties, which lead toward this conclusion. One of these is the universal gradation of being. And this fact is now admitted, and forms the basis of classifi- cation in nearly all the kingdoms of visible nature. The gradations are sometimes obscure; their special arrange- ment, or the scientific inferences to be drawn from them, may be uncertain. It may, for instance, be difficult to decide between some animals, which are the higher, or what standard shall determine precedence. But that there is a chain of being, of jvhich the links all touch, and which ascend from the almost inorganic monad up to man, seems to be an almost inevitable conclusion from facts already known. So, too, of dead matter ; there is a gradation from the densest solid to the ether that betrays itself only by retarding a nebulous comet as thin almost as itself; and from this ether we pass to the imponderable fluids, and find gradation in them also. And we find it also in the vegeta- ble world, which, standing between the two kingdoms of dead matter and living animals, draws its own life from the one and then sustains the life of the other. If now we pass in thought to the spiritual world, we shall find little reason to suppose that all who die are, by that great emancipation, made equal and alike. Probably all who believe in a life after death, believe also that we shall find our spiritual home, as we find our natural home, a " house of many mansions." And without pausing now upon the laws which may be supposed to prevail there, it is enough to say, what none will deny, that men there, as men here, must differ, "as one star differs from another star in glory." And not this universal gradation only, but one truth at least concerning it, we may assume. For however uncer- THE SEEMING AND THE ACTUAL. 15 tain it may be where the descending series of beings ends, or however far we may be from knowing on which one of the infinite myriads of existences creative power leaves its last and lowest footstep, we may be sure that its higher extremity, its summit, its beginning, must be God. We may suppose that the first existence proceeding from God may be that which we should describe, so far as we have words or ideas whereby to describe it, as an atmos- phere surrounding him. And if we assume that in him are infinite love and wisdom, we may conclude that these would lead him to give to this, his first work, qualities which would enable it to be the medium by which further creation might go on. It would be the putting forth of his power in a form which would then become the instru- ment of his power. We have used the word atmosphere, in part because modern science is tending strongly to find in atmospheres the means of all action. It is certain that light is produced by the undulations of one ; nearly so, that heat is caused by another ; probable, that electric aetion, in all its vast variety of influence, is connected with another; and suggestions are thrown out from quarters whence even a hint comes with claims to attention, that gravitation may be subject to a similar explanation. This living emanation from the central Divine, call it what we will, may give birth to others, each successive one farther from the other, each adapted to be the parent of lower existences, and the instrument of lower functions. This process may go on until, somewhere, the interval which separates spirit from matter is bridged over, and then the fir.