W' ' mJ^m IS BIBLE OR ATHEISM, ■ BY J. RANDOLPH TUCKER, ESQ., ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, / • THE BIBLE OR ATHEISM. To the Young Soldiers of the South : While the writer dares not trench upon the peculiar duties of sacred office; yet he may seek to offer to those, who like himself. often©* thrown within the vortex of a world's skepticism, than the members of the clergy, some thoughts which may be of value, in aiding young men to resist the assaults of error, on the one hand, and to embrace that system of truth on the other, which it should be our primary purpose to maintain and establish. I say 'young men,' for 1 well know how prone are such to the de- lusions of a supposed rationalism, which presumptuously claims to be able to fathom the unsounded depths of the Divine Omniscience and to grasp the unknown elements of the Divine reason. Young Man ! my object is to warn you of your danger; to ] out the true method of religious investigation; to lead you by its adoption to the only solution of that most solemn question, which haunts us in our day-dreams, which breaks in with solemn note upon our revels, which speaks to us in the day's business, which whispers to us in the night's stillness ; which, banish as we may — avoid as we may — take, though we may, the wings of the morning and flee into the uttermost parts of the sea, Omnipresent still is there, pr- ior its answer, and yet with angel wings, hovering in mercy over us ! Who has not heard the question from within — by whom asked, he knows not — What am I now? and wnAT shall I be hereafter? How few have answered it at all! How many evasively! How few hon- estly ! How many drown the voice of the earnest querist, that the) may frame an answer which will serve the present moment, and avoid that response whose joyous echo shall resound forever ! How many young men have I seen fight their way from the Camp of Christianity, into the tents of Infidelity, and even atheism ! an i answer the question thus: "Dust lam — to dust I will return!' How many turn from the peaceful ways of the Christian's life. Tj. dreary gloom of a cheerless materialism, from the calm unpertu tranquillity of the one, to the feverish delights, or the revulsive mel- ancholy of the other ! If to our reasoning upon religion, we apply the same principles which we employ to guide us in other investigations, I venture the affirmation, that our conclusions will place us upon the firm and sta- ble ground of the Christian's faith. The error, which is committed by free-thinking unbelievers, is, that they cover themselves with the vestments of a cast off and worn out philosophy, which .they would shame to throw around any of the sciences, of which the world now boasts. They insist upon testing religious truth by the standard of their religious theories, while they test other truth by the facts upon which it is found to depend. In religion, they begin at their con- clusions, and reason back to their postulates — while in physics, they start with established postulates, and advance to their conclusion.^. Apply the system in vogue in physics, to religion, and the sway of Christianity would be as universal as the progressive advancement. of the physical sciences. On the other hand, apply to physics, fchi system of reasoning adopted by Infidelity in opposition to Christiani- ty, and you would quench the blazing light of the mid nineteenth century, in the superstitious gloom, and theoretical fancies ftf the ilark ages ! Let the principles then, on which you search the secrets of nature, be those on which, with reverential step, you seek to learn something of nature's God ! I need not do more than refer to the fact, that the principles the Greek philosophy were superseded by those of the Baconian ; that while the former was subtle, refined and theoretic — the latter is experimental as to its foundations, careful in its inductions, and practical in its conclusions. The one jumped to its conclusion, and then eagerly sought the means of proying it ; and thus while the logical sequence of its propositions may have been perfect, the con- clusion itself may have been untrue. The other searches for its postulates, establishes them as facts, and then inductively rea its conclusion, which is safe and true, because logically deduced from premises experimentally proven. Let me illustrate, by examples, the pernicious use of the old fys r tern of investigation, when applied to the subject of religion. Mr. Hume had settled in his own mind the untruth of the 'chris- tian system. He believed in the existence of a God, with the attri- butes, ordinarily conceded, as belonging to Him. A system of reach' ;aine to him with internal and external demonstration of its di- vine origin ; the former in the teachings [themselves, the character of the teacher, His life and His death,— the latter in the miracles He wrought, and the wonders He performed. These last were attested by eye witnesses, to all appearance, credible, capable, and sincere if believed, his infidelity was folly, and faith became his duty; for the miracles, if true, constitute conclusive proof of the revelation, they are designed to authenticate. Now, Mr. Hume, theorizes, that to believe sifch things as mira* is irrational, because it is impossible to prove them; and being therefore incredible, teachings resting their claim to divine origin upon alleged miracles, may still be only human, because there is and can. in the nature of the case, be no proof that they were ever per- formed. It is evident that Mr. Hume, in order to destroy the power of the argument from miracles, reasoned from his hypothesis of the untruth of Christianity, to the conclusion that no miracles had been performed; (/because had they been performed, the hypothesis of it,-> untruth would have been false, and the conclusion of its truth inev- itable;) and then still further to confirm the conclusion, which upon ypothesis he has reached, he invents the sweeping dogma, that no miracle can be proved by any evidence. Thus instead of usin^ the direct inductive process, that is, to consider the sufficiency of the evidence^ to establish the existence of miracles (which is'the matter established or overthrown, as a postulate,) he adopts the rel- ative process, of arguing the insufficiency of the evidence, becau^ 1 of the impossibility of ]>>■(>< f; or, in other words, the entire non- proveability of miracles. No wonder he establishes the falsity oi Christianity, and of the miracles adduced to prove it. How can ha do otherwise, when he '/(duces his postulates that no miracles ar* proved from the assumption of its falsity, and then reversing the toning, proves its falsity from the postulates, so deduced? Look at its absurdity! That an omnipotent Goq can perform miracles, has not been, cannot, will not be denied. That such a Being, if he deemed it wise to do so, in order to induce belief b - his creature in Him and His commands, should find it impossible to furnish proof of such miracles, it were vain, if not blasphemer, affirm. And yet, the argument of Mr. Hume, in full effect, denies to the Almighty, the power to prove to his intelligent creature, by any evidence whatever, extraneous to himself, the/ ^tand point, he surveyed the works of creation " an undevout astron- omer j" and in its wondrous plans, from which he excluded its more wondrous architect, could see only inherent and inevitable necessity. And, then, with this subtle poison thrown into his views of nature ; law inherent, law fixed, as essentially hers, without which she could not have been, but is because it is hers inalienably if not eternally ; how can the magician astonish any one in the secret of his necro- mancy, ichen he proves from his postulates a conclusion which he had ality assumed in order to prove them ? These instances may suffice to show what is lamentably the truth, that where there is a will there is a way; that the deductions of the -uind are the dictates of the heart, and that over mental operations, the will — man's supreme ruler — sways a sceptre which exacts obe- dience, abject and universal. "The heart aye — is the part aye That makes us right or wrong I" Beware, young men, that your minds do not become the slave- of corrupt and rebel wills — making the imagination wild and way- ward — blindirigthe reason — darkening the understanding — unseating the judgment — corroding the conscience — until your thoughts,words. and actions become only the manifestations of a perverse antago- nism to the God who created you, It is evident, that the religious idea must either have sprung from the human mind, as a creature oj* its own faculties ; or have been communicated or implanted in the mind by some external influence- ft is either a mere idea, born of the soul .itself; or is realized by the fcoul. from the perception of an object outside of itself. Belief in 'God has been universal in the history of num. It is true, as an universal fact, that among all people, nations and tribes, from the learned European to the besotted Hottentot; upon the icy continents of Arctic darkness, in the busy marts of Chris- tendom, and amid the Islands of the sea,;, within the barred gates of Japan or the walls of China; with every other variety, there is one unity ot thought — Humanity everywhere believes then /.< a God! Xay, more — in the morning of its' birth, as far as tradition or ms tells its story ; in its infancy; in its heyday of glory; in the dark age of barbarism; from its cradle to its meridian prime; amid all other changes and revolutions; in religion, with an unbroken unity of expression — Hummnity still declares there is a God! Nay. more— where science soars through the illimitable Empyrean, and sees im- mensity strewn with living, speaking worlds — grander and nobler than our own — and where ignorance only seep the blue tapestried for man's dwelling, spangled with bright jewels, which earth might hide in her own great bosom, whether the savan or the unity of chorus — Humanity itiU proclaims three is a God I Xow this universal belief, in every age. in ev6ry condition, of the the world's history is conclusive of the fact, that then rod. It unshed the belief of the • No-God" from the world. Atheism is a non-existence among men; or so" rare, as to find n«» place in human creeds. But, if a God there be, how would belief in Him have become so. firm and universal, had not God at some time in awful manner im- "d the perception of bis being upon mankind? Does not this unextinguishable and universal belief persuade us to the conclusion that God not only is, but that He has somewhere and in sou communicated the fact to His creature? Does not this great prove His Being, and that it has b«en made known in a f >rii t'ion? I concede that there are great evidences of His power and God- head patent to the mind of all, after the idea is once conceived — but would these have generated this universal belief, had not God once spoken to man ? The source of the idea of God in the world is one thing ; the evidence which confirms it, is another. Certain facts and phenomena in history, are inexplicable to me. except they prove, that the science of a belief in a God. is higher than human reason, in that it is derived from the voice of God. speaking to man. Permit us to examine some of them : 1. Where humanity can take but limited views of its relations to nature (as among the ignorant tribes of Africa,) there is no sufficient power of abstraction to deduce, by its reason, the conclusion of an invisible Creator; nor is th£re sufficient inventive power to conceive the idea irrespective of outward impressions; nor is their knowledge of nature so dignified in its character as to produce such grand con- clusions. How does reason in such cases reach the idea of Deity '( Is it not a tradition of the original .revelation ? 2. If reason be the guide to Theism, it would follow that, the wider the range which science gives to human thought, the grander the views of nature presented to the mind, and the more improved the reason, the clearer should be the conviction of the existence of a God! — and yet it is remarkably true, that in Barbarism, Atheisjn is unknown; and it only springs forth as the fungus of the learning, science, and philosphy of an advanced civilization. 3. The universality of the Theistic belief in all ages ; its strength in the beginning of history, and its influence in the origin of society ", its permanent and continuing strength and influence now; the moral hold it takes of human conscience, making a man even resist the efforts of reason to refute it— so unlike any other belief or idea in human history — would lead to the conclusion that it came to man in its origin, armed with a sanction so tremendous and producing such a sensation on the minds of the fathers of the race, that its very mention thrills every fibre of humanity now. and must do so eter- nally. It is, indeed, no dream of human fancy — no conclusion from the terms of a human syllogism, but a fact manifested by divinity, in such a manner that, from age to age, history and tradition hav? handed it down to fill the wicked with terror and fear : the pious with devotion, reverence, and love. 4. But I argue, there must have been such a revelation, because the non-existence of it is so improbable — and if there was such a revelation, it was obviously the power of the idea of God in the world. Can any man tell me why, for 6000 years, our Creator should hide himself from his intelligent creatures ? Why he should refuse a knowledge of Himself to those who search to know and to reverence, or who refrain from knowing, that they may do evil with impunity? Why he should have withheld a revelation from our first parents (supposing our race had a beginning) groping their way through life to the tomb, with no teacher to tell of their origin, or to show them their destiny? Can any man. who believes there is a God, think thus of him? Some speak of the possibility, some of the probability, some of the reasonableness of the revelation. I maintain if there be a God, (a fact not now denied, but admitted by universal human conscious- ) there must hair been a revelation. Xo rational attributes can be attached to his being which would give the slightest pretext for the conclusion that, of purpose, God should never, in 6000 years, have spoken to his poor and needy creatures, who would aspire to k-now and to love him. As well blot out his being from the sum of human belief, as to assign to Him a character which revolts the mor- al instincts of his creatures. 5. History teaches there was a primeval revelation, and all tradi- tions and fables confirm it. The oldest books in the world, the first written — are the books of Moses. I take them not now as revela- tions — I am willing, pursuing the inductive method, yet reserving my profound reverence for them as the books of God, to treat them merely as history, and their pretensions to Revelation as 'fables. These books declare that the morning hours of our race were passed in near and intimate intercourse with the Creator. They tell of the strange communion of the writer of them with the God of Israel. They tell of wondrous laws on tables of stone committed to one people — a peculiar people then — made so by these alleged super- human communications — a marked people now. They tell of food from heaven ; of water hurstihg from the rock, stricken' by the ser- vant of God ; of the pillar of fire and cloud ; of the obedient wave? of the Red Sea ; of the miraculous Jordan passage ; of the father of the faithful, his son, his sons' son, and generation upon genera- tion, who heard and spoke to God. And, strange to say, the im- pression made by these strange old books, is a standing miracle in the world. For. while Plato, and Socrates, and Seneca are buried with all their followers, centuries ago, nearly thirty-five hoary cen- turies have failed to efface from the Jewish mind the belief, that amid the thunderings of Sinai the law was given to Moses, and that the Jehovah, whom they this day worship, is the God who spake to their law-giver, and to the patriarchs. Nfey more — the believers in 10 •■loses to-day are more numerous than tliey were thirty-five centuries What gave such a sanction to the precepts of Moses, that time -viil not, can not wear out, but seems only to strengthen ? What damped that eternal gravity upon the Jewish creed, which settles yet upon the brow of the son of Abraham when he dreams of the ploughed up Hill of Zion? Can you answer the question in any other way than this? — God did give the law to Moses, and in the face of all the people, manifes- ted his presence as its seal and its sanction. But all other nations fill -the pages of history and the ears of tra- dition with stories of Divine communications. Incredible to me. leeause their deities are merely human in intellect, and bestial, cruel, and debauched in passion. Yet, does not the fact, that sa- cred and profane history, written in the early ages of the world, re- cord traditional gftories of Divine apparitions, wonderfully increase the probability that they were made in reality — though many of these are but travesties of the real. 6. I advance another step — It will be admitted that the only rational Theism is Mono-The- ism. Nor will it be denied that no people have ever sanctioned it, save those who have adopted the Mosaic system; and that none who have adopted the Mosaic, have ever failed to sanction it. The Bible is the history of the war of mono-theism with poly-theism- These facts show that the tendency of merely rational, or r I might say, human theology, is to poly-theism, and that the only re- sistant it has is the Mosaic system. As an historic fact, human rea- son, unconnected with the Mosaic record, has often turned from mono-theism to poly-theism — but has never turned from the many Gods to the one only living and true. Now, if the mono-theistic creed be the true, then had any revela- tion been made it would have been of that creed. Now, to find this great system prevalent in our day amid the light and civilization around us, might not have surprised us. It might be urged that we had so far advanced as to be able to throw aside the errors of the opposing belief, and fight our way with reason's aid to the ,belief of the one God. But to find an enslaved people in the dawn of human history, breaking away from their masters, the worshippers of many Gods, to erect an altar to the one God in the wilderness — settling a new land, and hallowing it for more than twelve centuries with the 11 one God Jehovah's name — wandering a captive people in a ifcrange land, and now an outcast race far and near, with this one creed in their hearts — these are facts which refuse all other solutions, except that the revelation of the unity of God was made to them, with such sanctions annexed as left an indelible impress upon this people to the remotest generation. A knowledge of Mono-theism once acquired, may have been lost. as I have shown; but without the aid of Moses, has never been re- gained ; while its existence, begun in the heart of Judaism, has continued for thirty-five centuries ; and how upon the facts stated.it can be rationally explained, without the hypothesis of a revelation to them, that the Jewish people alone, began, continued, an&perpetv- ■ ■•■ d Mono-thi ism — how that it dates its rise with them, and by them has never been lost. T confess my inability to conjecture. 7. There is one other view, which should be added to these al- ready presented. I think it will be found, that the Theistic truth has made its impression less upon the reason, than upon the con T science of man ; a phenomenon, inconsistent with the idea, that it- is obtained as a deduction of the reason. For while the reason i isfied with the conclusion, that there is a God — yet human logic may be so shaped, as to throw a stumbling block in the way of reason's coming to this conclusion ; and reason, when assiduously cultivated, has strangely reached the Atheistic, as the" just conclusion from the facts. And I confess, that left to reason alone, I doubt whether the argument in favor of a First Cause, to which to attribute the evi- dences of design around me, would be sufficient, to overcome the objections that this first cause, self existent, and with no pre-existenr, cause, so infinitely superior to the work of His hands, only increases the logical difficulty, which the argument is framed to avoid. Thus reason, claimed as the source of the belief in God, may turn traitor, and lead us to the creed of no God ! Yet it never has.— Why ? Because a power above reason, human conscience, throws itself across man's path, and turns him from the road to destructive error and untruth. It meets the traitor reason, on the soul's thresh- hold, and drives back the destroyer of its peace, and closes and bars its dcor against comfortless, rayless, hopeless Atheism. Now, while this fact is conclusive against the idea that reason is the source of human belief in God's existence, it is likewise, I think, strongly suggestive that its source is revelation. For while the con- science is incapable of originating ideas in its primal condition, it i- 12 capable of receiving truth only;, and, like the strung harp, mute when untouched, it awakes to melody when its chords are swept by the fingers of its master, or murmurs its song under the inspiring breath of Heaven. Thus it is, that this truth, once revealed, is so strongly retained by the human race. As each generation received it, this treasure- keeper of the soul, Conscience would secure it from the spoiler. To recall the figure already used ; an invisible power first strung the harp of conscience, while the primal revelation breathes upon the soul and attunes its response to harmony with its God. Whether the testimony to His perfect benevolence be as unive*- sfcl as that of His being, it were needless to enquire, though the at- tribute is generally attached to Him, in a pure or polluted form, in ever}' Theistic system. The inductive method will easily satisfy u> upon that point. The senses of men are fitted to be avenues of exquisite pleasure ; and though, in consequence of sin in the world, they are avenues to pain, yet it is evident this- is not the design in their original consti- tution, but is a condition superinduced upon it. But, even with these evils, the senses convey vastly more pleasure than pain; and are so constructed in many instances as to refuse the latter, and only receive the former. As a test of the first proposition, that they con- vey more pleasure than pain, where is the man who would surren- der either ? Where the man who would close his eye forever upon the beauties around him, to shut out objects offensive to it? Who would stop the ear forever to sweet harmony to avoid the crash of discordant sounds? Who would yield the delights of perfumed air, to shut out noisome odors? )Vho would lose a limb, though racked with pain and waisting by disease, where hope even faintly promised its ;'^3c■ law ; inspires hope, as the condition of yielding it, and dread, as the condition of refusal. Search the world over, and this fact, aj> universal as the belief of the existence of a God, exerts a more pow- erful influence upon the race than all other facts, and posses hold upon man which he can never break. It became his companion in the dawn of his history, has so continued for s?>/y centuries, and is noir. as ever, universal and powerful. It has survived all revolutions in Government, all mutations of destiny, all systems of philosophy, everything but his own soul, the Bible, and his Maker. Universal consciousness proves human responsibility to God ! Let me ask in passing, who told him he was responsible to his God? Who told the Hottentot, the Greenlander, the Jew, the Gen- tile ? Who told all the members of all the races of all the world ? Reason ! Its universality most powerfully suggests that it was the voice of God, speaking to the fathers of the race! Can it be indeed true that mere abstract reason can create such a dread sense of re- sponsibility ? But whether upon this point we conclude that this sense is the result of reason or of a primal revelation, is a matter of indifference to the argument — since the seme of actual responsibility can in no way be accounted for, except upon the ground of its actual existence. For even, if not revealed, why should the Creator (whose existence, whether known through revelation or by reason, has been established 14 or conceded,) so constitute the human mind, as to lead it to a conclu- sion which produces a profound impression on the human conscienc the first of -which is fallacy, and the last is chimera. Is it not mon- strous to suppose, that he should give us faculties which must delml \ us. and not enlighten, and do so unnecessarily. For if not subjects of law, why should^ we be led to believe tliat we arc. Nor is it any answer to say, that the idea is permitted in order to operate as a restraint ; for while such a result equally follows, if the idea were * founded in fact, it does not, as this does, involve the slander on the Omnipotent Omniscience, that to accomplish his designs, it becam n'cessary for him to perpetrate a fraud, or be privy to a falsehood. Thus the universality of the religious sense is conclusive to my mind, if a God there be, whether it springs from Reason, oris derived through revelation, that man is responsible to his Creator. In fact, the existence of conscience is a phenomenon, otherwise wholly inex- plicable! The gift of such a faculty involves an obligation to use it; and where there is obligation, there must of necessity be responsi- bility. This conclusion of man's responsibility is not successfully met by any argument which leads to fatalism in any of its many. forms. It will not avail to say there can be no responsibility, because there can be no real free action on the part of a creature, whose nature, such as it is, is given by the Creator. That may be theory, but what is fact ? Whether under the name of predestined fate, or necessitarianism. it is equally insufficient to refute the conclusion to which we have come. Because: 1st. In our inductive method, theory and conjecture must be ex- cluded, since in our ignorance of the Divine Counsel, (and if we rea- son with one who denies all revelation, in our tptal ignorance,) we cannot assume, as facts, premises which, for, aught we know, may be false. 2nd. But our inductive method must take the facts before us to o-uide our reasoning, and can take nothing else. Our gallows and oui prisons are standing witnesses to responsibility under human systems, and the fate of" their victims teaches human temporal responsibility under the Divine system, thus showing the fact, that man is respon- sible, to refute the theory that he is not. The degree and term of his responsibility is the only question left open. If he loses life and liberty for crime against human law, then, as human law is a part of 15 the divine system, man's responsibility under divine law is proved to be a fact against all theory upon the subject. I submit to any one who rejects Christianity, because it teache- human responsibility, involving as he thinks, injustice on the part of God, how can he consistently avoid plunging into Atheism when any other system of theism he may conceive of, involves the same ob- noxious doctrine ? But mark the result! If a God there be, and man is resppnsibl i to him, what question next? How responsible? For what? Und- what lavx? Leave these questions unanswered, and what On a wide sea, with sails spread, without helm, or chart, or anchor &g e — h^ reason baffled — his conscience tortured — driven by the rough winds of heaven — the creature of God, and yet without hope — without God in the world! Left so by his benevolent Creator, whos.' only gifts to his creature arc a reason to raise doubts, a judgment without a decision, a conscience startled with dread of horrors, which, if real, he cannot avoid, and which, if unreal, constitute a fraud by the Almighty upon the poor creature of His Omnipotence. Now, let any lational man, with no prejudice for Infidelity, n ^repossessions for the Bible, attempt to answer these terrible que^ tions. Let him stand at any point in the world's history, outside of Palestine, and shutting out the wide spreading light of the Christian system,give an answer which shall clear away the doubts that "becloud reason, and relieve the agonies of a self-torturing conscience. If h. be a skeptic, let him tell me the faith upon which he reposes to dis- pel doubts and quiet fears. He cannot. Peace, a* a word, ha* no place in the vocabulary, as it has none, as a fact, in the troubled heart of Atheism or Infidelity. Will any such ma,n as I have mentioned, take these two classes of tacts — God the Creator, Man the responsible creature— and, there- fore,, under law — Man in darkness, seeking' light — Man in a state of unrest, pining for rest, stability, assurance; and then tell me whether he thinks it conceivable, that for 60 centuries no light from God has poured a single ray into the dark cell of man's earthly dungeon. [ will not persuade a favorable answer by asking if he does not think 't probable there may have been such light, but I demand, if he thinks it possible, there has been none. If he does, let him frame a theory, which reason will take, as rationally consistent with the two facts already established. It cannot be done. If then all nature cries aloud there is a God, if all humanity with 16 united voice confesses its responsibility to Him — the same nature. the same humanity, by its reason, its conscience, its yearning search. for truth, proclaims that He, who made us responsible, must have revealed, somewhere and somehow, the law and condition of our sub- jection to His will. One other thought in this connection. Reason and conscience almost as universally as in respect to either of the other two facts already noticed, point to a hereafter. Whether resting upon these supports, it be conjecture, probability, or certainty, I have not time to enquire fully ; but content myself with taking it in either light the reader may desire. Certain it is, that it has passed beyond the bounds of mere conjecture, and ma.y reasonably be taken to be a probability. If, then, to the ideas of God and human responsibility, be added that of immortality, an immense enchantment of interest is involved in the enquiry as to the place and the mode of Divine revelation ; and a higher and stronger reason is presented, why there should be such to guide this immortal being in the pathway of his' fearful res possibility. We have thus by a simple, but, I think, fair and inevitable induc- tion, reached the conclusion that a revelation from God to man is not only reasonably possible, and rationally probable, but is in a very high degree probable or morally certain. To be told there is a heaven of peace and rest from doubts and fears for the world-tost humanity, is indeed to open the windows of the darkened soul to receive the pure light and air of Heaven. To such a mind, in such a search, I would say — " Ask and ye shall receive, seek and ye shall *rlnd, knock and it shall be opened to you." We approach the enquiry, where is God's revelation to man I with the strongest moral probability, that our enquiry will meet an an- swer, our anxious doubts yield to assurance, and our unrest find re- pose. A primary question would be — are there any evidences in the world, of claims to Divine revelation ? If there were none, we would be driven to retrace the steps of our induction, to see where the fal- lacy in our progress was, which had resulted in a conclusion that there is a revelation somewhere in the world, when the fact confronts us that we meet with no 'claim of revelation nor evidence of such in 60 centurios of the world's history. But we are not called to retrace, 17 our steps, for on every hand we meet claims to revelation from God, supported by various evidences. The existence of such is confirma- tory of the conclusion already reached ; and like the proof of pro- phetic vision by its after realization, verifies the reasoning previously adopted. Amid the various claims to Divine revelation, which is the best ;' Because if there be in the world such a revelation, to ascertain the best authenticated, is to determine the true one ; and if with the world's chart spread before us, one is presented with decided marks of Divinity about it which others do not possess or even claim, he must fix upon it as the real offspring of the inspiration of God. If the question comes up in this shape, I submit to an audience of citizens of a portion of Christendom, whether they can hesitate to say, that Christianity presents itself with more of the marks of Divine origin than any religious or philosophical system the world has ever seen. And, if so, (a point I take, as conceded, for I cannot stop to reasoM it,) here is your dilemma, either Christianity is from. God, or God has given no revelation at all. And as the latter branch of the alternative has been shown to be at least in a very high degree improbable, so it is in like degree improbable, that Christianity should not be true. Nay more — all the universal voice of nature, of humanity — through reason and conscience — the character of the Om- nipotent for love and consideration for his blinded creature, his strug- gle for light amid darkness, for rest in unrest — these united powers of moral evidence which forced us along the pathway of our induc- tion, to the conclusion that there is divine revelation somewhere, combine with all their powers in like manner, to shield with the panoply of moral certainty, the truth of that wondrous Book, which to the soul of man, is light in his darkness, the haven of his rest, the ark of his peace, the anchor of his hope, and his assurance of Heaven. Now, this persuasion in its favor, as you perceive, is independent of every tittle of evidence which sustains it, except its conceded su- periority to other systems. Leaving this important view, important, because of the dilemma it presents to the rational mind of every civilized man, what form I may enquire, would Divine revelation assume and what marks would it possess ? 1st. Its form. If without knowledge upon the subject, we would conjecture one of two modes of revelation. Either a revelation of truth from moment to moment to each man in every age, or a rev.e- 18 lation originally given to some, and perpetuated in some stable form. through succeeding generations. The momentary and personal revelation to all cannot be supposed; because universal experience denies it, and in reasoning from facts he cannot reason wjainst them. The other mode and form would, therefore, be most rational. We would, therefore, expect to find a Revelation in the traditional form, and to the leaders of the race, in the early stages of human history, and assuming the permanent and transmissible form, as soon as human art devised the means for so doing. And, further, if our view- be correct that there was a relation in the early stages of man's his- tory, we would expect to find in the earliest modes by which ideas are perpetuated from generation to generation, traces of this revela- tion. Now, as writing in the former ages was the means which human ••art adopted to hand clown the thoughts of the past to succeeding ages, we should expect to find among the earliest writings in the world, the mandates of God's will revealed to man. So far, therefore, from considering (as a certain class of Religious luminaries hold) a Book revelation to he impossible, it would be the very form which we would expect Revelation to assume. The assumption, in fact, that a Book Revelation is impossible, results in this absurdity, if true : that, what impossible with man is impossible with God. Let me now collate the facts under this head : — 1. Only two sets of writings claim to be from G-od — the Bible and the Koran. This would give to them the preference, under this view, over all others. I do not notice those which have appeared within a century, ihe Sweedenborgian and Morman. When the frosts of age shall gather about them, their claims may command the re- spect of an elaborate criticism. 2. The Koran is dated forty-five centuries after maa's riv and is, compared with the Bible, a modern book — is an imitation of the book Revelation of the Christian, and admits its title, but .- ; to be an appendix to it. This is a fortiori, true of systems of a more modern origin. 3. The oldest books are those of Moses. They contain the history of primal Revelations made before the books were written. mit the perpetual Divine law, in a written form, for thirty centuries. The first pen invented by the art of man, was use! by his hand at the inspiration of his God. 19 ♦ 4. One further remarkable fact, showing the consistency of Bible history . Before the permanent form of Revelation was adopted, personal Revelation, as in the case of the Patriarchs, was constant, and personal communion with God daily. But when the li<-ht assumed its steady flame, after the revelations of Sinai, personal com- munications were less frequent, and when written Revelation ceased, because no more was necessary, the personal revelation ceased en- tirely, also; thus showing the undesigned consistency between Canonist history and the revelation with which it is associated. 2nd. But what marks of Divinity would attend Revelation ? It requires but little logical arrangement to conclude that God cannot speak to man without a miracle. Nor would it be surprising, that to authenticate His revelation to them to whom it is made. He should manifest himself in wonder working power. How should otherwise it be fcnown to the person receiving the revelation, that it was really such, and not a mere phantasy? And how should others credit words as a Divine Revelation, unless they had upon them enstamped the broad seal of Omnipotence ? Hence, if it is not improbable that God should make a Revelation, neither is it improbable that he should perform a miracle to attest it. unless it be impossible for Him to do, so; and why should it be thought a thing impossible that He should raise the dead? « So far, therefore, from being surprised that a claim to Revelation is based upon evidence of miracle.;, we should rather treat the claim as presumptious folly, if it demanded our credence unstsfairjecl by this evidence of its Divinity. And, further, being persuaded that there is somewhere a revela- tion, in our search for it, we should expect to see it attended by these displays of Divine power, as the attestation of its Divine origin. But Mr. Hume contends there is an infinite improbability against ' all evidence for a miracle. I do not propose to go over the argu- ni2nt against this absurd sophism. But if it be true, then, there is ari infinite improbability against that which I have shown, it is highlv probable we shall see evidences of it in our search for revelation ; or, in other words, it is infinitely improbable or impossible to prove what is highly prohahle ; which is absurd. So far from this being true, the presumptions -that miracles were performed as sanctions to revelations, and that a Revelation has been made, create a probability in favor of the existence of miracles, and leave the proof for them upon the rational principles applicable to 20 all evidence. Id truth, as the strongest probability exists that there is a Reve.ation somewhere, and that wherever it is, it is sustained by miracles, the question of the existence of miracles is no longer open, but determined; and the only one remaining is, as to the identifica- tion of certain facts in human history, as the miracles of whose exis- tence we are assured by our former reasoning. I repeat, the ques- tion of miracles is no longer one of existence, but merely of iden- tification. The evidence adduced in favor of them must be such as will remove two difficulties only. 1. As there is only probability, though in a high degree, in their favour, as existences,, the evidence must suffice to remove the partition veil of doubt, which separates moral probability from moral cer- tainty. 2. It must be sufficient, upon ordinary principles of evidence, to assure us of their identity with the wonders we search for. Now it is not my province to detail, but to generalize evidence Hence I gather under the following heads the logical induction by which the Christian miracles are established. I. As already shown, Humanity demands miracles as proofs of Revelation. "Shew us a sign from Heaven, and we will believe, " is its universal voice. No system has met the demand but one. Mahomet alone reached the point of Book Revelation — the appeal of the permanent record to the judgment of men in all generations. From that all others shrank. Bnt he could only answer the demand for miracles, by- pointing to the Koran as the greatest, and by the assurance that unbelief after evidence of other miracles, would prove the utter, temporal, and eternal ruin of those who required them. "What all others avoid or refuse, Christianity boldly, earnestly, meets. Faith in her creed, consists in the heart belief, that God hath raised its author and finisher from the dead. The man that receives her doctrine, must credit the Resurrection of Christ ! Upon this, the greatest of all miracles, the seal of the truth, and the great- est, and the saving truth itself, she plants her^standard, around which her followers must gather, must fight, and will conquer! Now, when it is remembered that all the probability of Revela- tion equally applies to miracles as its sustaining evidence, and that only one system, which claims to be a Revelation, satisfies this pro- bability, by resting its claim upon miracles, the conclusion is irre- 21 .sistible, which makes a high degree of probability attach to the Christian claim, and a like degree of improbability tp every other In truth, as a question of mere identificatiun, it is virtually closed against all, but one; and if there be a revelation, and miracles to sustain it, it must be that one which alone adduces them as evidence and supports them by proof: — so that the Caviller is reduced to this dilemma: either Christianity is from God, or there are no miracles to prove the Revelation; or, in equivalent terms, no revelation at all. And as the latter branches of the alternative have been shown to b<" highly improbable, it is also highly improbable that Christianity is untrue. II. What is the evidence ? 1st. We have the written testimony of six eye-witnesses of the central miracle of Christian evidence, the central article of the Chris- tian creed; and the written testimony of two others, cotemporary with these, (who mny have been, and probably were, eye-witnesses,) who speak with a calm assurance of the perfect truth of all they state. These writings are twenty-five in number, scattered over a period of sixty years after the death of the founder of the system. and in different parts of the world — indited by the free and the chain - bound captive of religious intolerance. 2nd. We have the history of an eye-witness that the same truth was proclaimed by the twelve in sight of the scenes of the Cru- cifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension ; that it was uttered in the hearing of the Sanhedrim, the persecuting organism of Judaic op- position; that the son of a Pharisee, the converted subject of a miracle, preached it throughout Asia Minor, to the voluptuous Corinthian and to the debased Cretan ; that amid the philosophic and classic shades of Athens, even in the midst of Mars Hill, the dumb, but matchless models of idolatrous art, heard the voice, which, making known the great Unknown, announced the coming day when a riser! Saviour should become the arbiter of all things ; that to the trem- bling Felix, the facile and impressible Agrippa, to the the household of the Caesars, and to the citizens of tire world's mistress, the bold pupil of Gamaliel spoke that which he knew, and testified that he had seen, without fear, though the chains of tyrany clanked upon 'his upraised arm. Nay more — he sent abroad the truth that 500 witnesses, the most part then living, remained attestants of the central fact ; a statement he would scarcely have made, had it not been so, when contradiction would have proved his ruin. 22 ■ In this way we gather the unwritten, but boldly uttered, con- senting testimony of " The Twelve," and of hundreds of others, to confirm the written evidence. These are the witnesses. III. Are they to be believed? t It is imprvoable that so many should concur in a lie. Concurrence between two witnesses is sufficient in the most strictly guarded human trials — but no cause has in human courts ever been lost where a hun- dred witnesses concur in a statement of evidence; unless, it be dis- proved; or is unreliable in its nature, from interest or delusion, or from its manner ; oris incredible in its statements; or unless the whole matter is unreal, a fabricated thing, by others than the wit- nesses, to whom it is attributed. As to the first. The evidence adduced is affirmative. A r o witness contradicts it. No witness declared that he saw what the affirmers say was the risen Christ, and that it was not the Crucified one. The affirmative, sustained by hundreds, is not contradicted, %,one. Second. — Are the witnesses unreliable by ^reason of interest or delusion, or from their manner? What interest? If any man will show me what worldly hope any Christian could base upon proclaiming the tie, that his dead leader was risen, I will be indebted for a novelty which' I have hitherto been denied. Point me to one man, who claimed to be an eye-witness to the falsehood, who ever won any thing, but the glory, that he was counted worthy of suffering for his name. The chain, the stake T the dungeon, and the cross, these were the temptingjewards, which seduced these early witnesses, through the power of self-interest, to perish for a Lie But Delusion ? Delusion exists where a man is the subject of an idea wnich has no existence in reality. Where the matter is one of the sense (as in the case under discussion) a man may often delu-* siyely believe he sees, or hears, or otherwise sensibly perceives an ob- ject which has no existence. But mark the test. No two men ever at the same time were the subjects of the same delusion from the same sense. The concurrence of two sets of eyes, or two sets of ears, in testimony to the same object, is sufficient to attest it as a veritable object, and to disprove it as a subject of sensual delusion. But how vastly is the proof strengthened, when twelve men tes- . iify, that they really saw an object of a particular character at the 2-3 same time; and when this occurred several times. Is not Delu>icn in such case excluded as an hypothesis ? Go read the story as given by John, and Luke, and Mark, and Matthew, and Peter, and James ! One whom for three years they had known — the tones of whose voice could never fail to thrill upon their hearts — the lineaments of whose face death could not steal away from memory — whose hands and side were marked, when and where and how, they could never forget — presents* himself to their doubt- ing faculties; they see, hear, touch, handle, and concur in the testi- mony: '-He who was dead is alive again!" "The Lord is risen indeed I" Was it, could it be, Delusion? It may be true, but not from delusion. But their mourner! There they stand and have stood, in the World's Witness Box, for eighteen centuries, testifying to this mon- strous falsehood, as you say ! Cross-examined by cavillers, infidels, atheist, they still stand there unscathed and unharmed, as the Jewish youths, who in Babylon's furnace walked, because with them stood one like unto the Son of God. With every variety of temper, the ardent Peter; the loving John; the sturdy Jude; the shrewd, common-sense, and caustic James; the publican Matthew; the concisely simple Mark; the historic Luke; the bold, learned, philosophic, heroic Paul ; all less struck with won- der at the miracles, than with awe and admiration of the char of their Divine leader ; every work of wondrous power, rather men- tioned a> illustrative of moral truth, than to furnish food to the lovers of the marvellous; every line telling its story of that glorious orig- inal, from whose presence felt and seen, they drew the historic por- traits, which will be immortal ; these witnesses, boldly, not evasively; firmly, though meekly, stand forth in that genuine truth-telling sim- plicity, which challenges the credence of unbelief itself, and forces scepticism to yield to Faith. Such witnesses must be believed, because testifying against their interest, free from delusion, with sense, candor and sincerity, and in a manner which error cannot rival nor falsehood imitate. 3d. But it may be disbelieved, because their statements are in- credible ! [ answer, nothing competent for power to perform is impossible with God. Nothing, which is not impobfiible for God to perform, can be incredible. And if, as we have shown a sufficient motive to the putting forth of Divine 'power exists, it cannot be incredible, because not impossible, that he should even raise the dead. 4. But perhaps these are forged testimonies. The evidence for their authenticity is full and conclusive. I dare not go into it at all. One thing only I may say : A critic could draw the characters of the writers of these Books from the writings themselves. ■ They were writ-ten by different per- sons obviously. They bear marks of want of combination, because differences are admitted, where their explanation is hidden ; resem- blances are simple, unaffected, and veritable, and co-incidences are evolved by critical research, which artlessly and undesignedly are uttered by different writers. The theory of fabrication will not hold good. Niebuhr, the great historic critic, when Roman legends fell before the assaults of his acute analysis, admits that the New Testament is a Gibraltar, and its simple histories are proof against the engines of his powerful criticism But another class of miracles are detailed in scattered profusion through these wonderful Books, whose performance is perfected in history. The prophecies of the Bible are perpetual miracles, attesting its divinity. They are sentries stationed upon the outer walls of Chris- tianity, challenging history and demanding its passports. Prophecy, as time unrolls the records of Destiny, points to its passing epochs, and claims them for her own. It would lead me farther than necessary, to make any observations upon this head. The concurrent power of the testimony of proph- ecy, as to ancient times and modern events, has been fully expounded by numerous writers, and no candid mind can refuse his won- dering assent to the singular coincidences, as you may term them, developed by such expositions ; but which you will see to be the voice of the buried past, speaking from the page of Divine history. and summoning to life and action the beings and events in succeeding ages, which man could never have known, but which God alone could descry from the beginning. Miracle and Prophecy — The power and the knowledge of God, imprint upon the Bible the double stamp of its divine author, in his two attributes of Omnipotence and Omniscience. Can you refuse such credentials to his word, as his Power and Wisdom ? Now if the Book so accredited, were in our estimation unworthy < till we could not dare to refuse to it our belief; yet it would tend to weaken the impression of its truth, derived from the views already presented. If, on the other hand, the book bears evidence of its 25 ' • origin in its preceptive and illustrative teachings, how powerfully will it tend to confirm the conclusion to which we have been brought by other evidence, that it is the word of God. It will not be expected, nor would it be desired by you, that I should search the oft exploded mine of Internal evidence, to adduce the demonstrative proofs, that upon its very front, the Bible is a Di- vine Book. Yet. still, I may shadow forth one or two views connect- ed with them. 1. Look at its permanence. Time is the sure test of Truth. Error is short lived in its spe- cialities, though human history shows that in one form or another it is coeval with human existence. But that which of earthly things endures for ages, lacks the characteristic of earth. Its permanence is a characteristic of His creations, ••who spake and it was done who commanded and it stood fast." Truth crushed to earth will rise again, The eternal yeara of God are hers — But Error wounded, writhes in pain. And dies amid her worshippers. Now regard for one moment the facts : Before any known system of moral Truth, which has been taught had being ; before any other book was written, this Book was in part written. Thirty-four centuries have rolled away. All other systems have arisen, and become extinct. " As the old burst, new emerge — lashed from the foam of ages." Babylon. Ninevah, Troy, Tyre, Athens, Carthage, and Rome, have lived, flourished, and died. Their philosophy and their sci- ence have perished. And yet upon the swelling wave of the world's history one Boole survives, not as a' wondrous relict for the curious antiquarian, but as the ark of a living faith in the heart of millions — its vitality real, and increasing — its progress onward — its. march peaceful, but triumphant — its existence in the world, all essential to its well being — and its destruction, if possible, the ill omen of misery and woe. Its prime is not begun — its infancy not yet past. Upon its ancient front no marks of age appear, no chilling frosts, no winkles of decay; but its youth, renewed like the eagle's, is peren- nial, and will be eternal. The Bible has more students and followers to-day than it ever had — and will have more a year hence than now. If human, why so unlike every other human invention ? If not divine, why so like every other divine creation? 26 Its permanence is a mark of its Divinity\ 2. The consistency of its teachings. It is a series of books from Moses to Malachi, and from Matthew to Revelation ; running through nearly fifteen centuries — and yet the teachings of Abrahamic faith by Moses, are echoed in the doctrines of Christian faith by Paul ; and the moral code of the former is in- culcated in the letters of the latter. The prophet, whom Moses pre- dicted God should raise up, to be heard by all the people, sanctioned the profound teachings of the first Law-giver, and melting the frigid exclusiveness of Judaism into the universal brotherhood of men upon the Mosaic law, upreared a system, whose essential consistency with the old, and, and entire consistency with itself, is without parallel in man's history. Where in human annals can be elsewhere found the writings of thirty "authors, in prose and poetry, in history and prophecy, in the joyful anthem and the waiting lamentation, in doctrine and procept through fifteen centuries scattered, which, when gathered together, will present such consistency as here, or any consistency deserving the name ? . ' Its consistency is a mark of its Divinity. o. The strange concurrence of human consciousness with its teachings, and with its view of human nature especially. When it tells of a God of Love and Justice, of Immortality, of responsibility here, reward and retribution hereafter, our reason and consciousness approve it to be true. But what is most strange, when it tells man of his fall, he feels it — when it tells him of his entire de- pravity, he feels it — and yet contests the latter point most zealously in its personal application. Most men have some' model of iniquity, in whom, to their view, vices are pre4ominent, and from whom vir- tues are excluded. All men admit human depravity in its entire- ness in some one of the race, but hate to admit it of themselves. At the same time few men there are who have not some beau ideal of excellence, whose faults are concealed, and whose virtues are exag- gerated. Now, look at the Bible. It is Sin's Biography ! not in exceptional cases, but in the best of men — not foibles, but vices and sin. Weak- nesses, from the publicity of which men shrink, are there exposed by aratobiographers with pitiless candour. The most faithful, distrustful of his Maker, utters falsehoods. The father of the chosen race is the prince of dishonest thrift. The meekness of the writer of the Ex- 27 odus, gives way to an anger for which he accordsto himself Divine punishment. The Royal harper sings with plaintive wail his seen t faults. The wise man details his unexcused follies. The cowardly followers of the Nazarene conceal not their weakness nor their sto- lidity ; and the model Apostle proclaims the deep rooted viciousness of his own personal character. Now, that which man would never tell himself, that, which he hates to hear, and loves to dismiss from memory, the Bible authors tell of the race in general, and of themselves especially; not censo- riously or from misanthropy, but stimulated by love, to reform, elevate, and reclaim it. Can it be a human voice speaking to humanity ? Is it not Divinity uttering to humanity what the conscience is forced to confess, but what the proud heart would ever conceal ? .4. Its morality and its great example. The ethics of the Gospel have been confronted with but one plau- sible criticism : That they are too sublimated to be attainable, too pure to be practical. Whether you read the sermon on the Mount, or the Pauline essay upon that broad Christian charity, which, by including so much more than the highest courtesy of the most ad- vanced civilization, dwarfs and disparages it; or, gather from the max- ims of that wide and unselfish philanthropy, which loves the unloving, heaps blessings upon the cursing, offers friendship to an enemy, for- gives the unforgiving, and by a comprehensive rule, limit* benificence to others, only by the need of him who bestows it; or, descending from the prime source of truth to the. intermediate fountains of Apostolic injunctions, receive from the brave and inflexible Paul, or the vehement, but subdued Cephas, or the practical and uncompromising James, or the loving and tender John, or the intrepid Jude, lessons in manners, habits, thoughts, sentiments, the affairs of life in duty to God, and to man, you will find a body of moral truths, before whose meridian sunlight, all others fade and shrink into obscurity ! But when we pass from the abstract doctrine to the examples which these books present us, we are lost in wonder* and amazement. I lay out of view the graphic sketches of the Apostolic Martyrs for truth; each of which, on any other canvass, would be a study for the philanthropist and sa Look at the son of Mary ! ,1 dare not attempt to speak one word of criticism upon sucfy a portrait of such an original. His life, alone, furnished the perfect example of that code of morals of which he Z8 wa.s the author. The perfection it enjoined, He practised. The sublimity of its teachings was but the reflex of Him, who in his humanity was the son of Mary, but in his divinity was as truly the son of God. Had such a code, had such a model of moral perfection a human origin ? Could human thought have wrought out the one. or human imagination have conceived the other ? 5. Now, for one moment, look at its origin and destiny ! Its Mosaic foundation was laid in the earliest ages of the world by the leader of an enslaved people, in their Exodus from the land of their bondage into the land of promise. A code of morals whose purity has stood the test of thirty -four centuries, was established by a people, who, 'but for their religion, would have left too brief a record upon the page of history to be re- membered by the student of antiquity. Its impression upon the human race hds not been made by conquest, diplomacy, science, or art. The Jewish nationality was too limited to have performed any considerable part in the struggles for supremacy among ancient na- tions; and was indeed destroyed by the power 01 Babylon, upon whose willows the weeping tribes of Judea hung their silent harps, refusing to, yield their native melody in the land of the enemy of Jehovah. And when that monstrous power, which swept over the world before and since the beginning of our Christian era, subdued the Jew- ish nation; blotted out its place upon the earth's surface; ploughed the Hill of Zion, and. cast down the stones of the temple of God — when the remnant, scattered through every land, refuse to be de- stroyed, and retain the indelible mark of the children of Abraham among all races and tribes of men — the ark of the ancient Jewish faith still remains, and here and everywhere in Christendom are still revered the two tables of stone, which Moses, brought down from the awful heights of Sinai. And at the period when the sceptre of political power departed from Judah, did the Shiloh come ! And who was he ? In the hill country of Judea, there appeared, eighteen centuries ago, a young man, a carpenter's son, whose sublime teachings, whose noble excellence, whose supposed miraculous power exerted, in the cause of an universal philanthropy, and attested by his followers, ex- cited the envy of a jealous priesthood, and aroused the vigilance of the Roman Government. Three years of incessant toil, and solemn, never wearying effort, to restore the Jewish faith to'its Mosaic purity, and to engraft upon it, in his own person, the realization of its signs and the original of its types, closed his career upon earth. He, who ' was cradled in the manger of Bethlehem, died upon the cross of Calvary, and laid in the grave of him of Arimathea. This was the Jewish Messiah — the world's Christ ! A few, a very few followers during his life, fled from him in death; but rallying around his tomb, broken by his Resurrection, and stand- in g on the brow of Olivet, hallowed by the recent pressure of his now heavenward-ascending form, Christianity gained its life from the death of its founder, and soon planted the standard of its power on the throne of the Caesars. The sceptre which Judah lost when Shiloh came, was restored, when faith in Judah's son controlled the heart and guided the hand, which wielded the power of Imperial Rome. • And .what is the destiny of Christianity 1 It is the Light of the world — the parent of civilization. Blot out that light and all is darkness and misery. Wherever it goes, dark- ness flees away. B&ibarism and human* debasement reign where it is not. They are banished from its presence. The banner of the true and simple Bible Christianity, does not float o^cr any people who are not comparatively free, elevated, civilized and happy. It has left the seat of its birth — has spread its benign influence over Europe and America — has planted its seed in Asia and Africa, and gathers its rich harvests in the Isles of the Sea. * It fills the sails of commerce, and compels steam to do its bidding at the press, and on the highways of earth. It unbars the gates of Japan, and breaks down the Chinese walls of exclusion — and filling her bays with the cast-away idols of Paganism, is teaching the land of Sinim the power of eternal Truth. It opens its refreshing streams i a the deserts of Africa, and casts its protecting shadow in the weary land of the Arab. It melts with its tender voice the frozen hearts of Greenland, and rears its never-fading flowers in the wilderness home ,of the American Indian. Its voice is heard ringing through the earth, wafted on every breeze, and thrilling every magnetic wire, to all its inhabitants, in all their labors, in all their enterprises ) whether on the land or upon the sea, from ocean to ocean, from pole to pole, " Prepare ye the way of the Lord I" Every valley shall be filled, and every hill and mountain shall be brought low — and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough ways shall be made smooth — and u,l FLESH SHALL see the SAL- VATION OT GiOD ! 3.0 ' Can any man be a skeptic longer, who looks at this humble be- ginning, and these wondrous results ? who sees the world marking its time by -^distance from the son of /Joseph, and hasting to bend its knee at the mention of His name ? Can you or I refrain from crying out, e f Truly this is the Son of God V* I shall not refer to the experimental evidence which each ma n who has embraced Christianity has tested, and every man who has not, may test for himself. If any man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God. And now look at the corollary from this argument : You will remember thai it is based upon the postulate, sanctioned by reason and the universal opinion of men, of the existence of a God ; upon the fact of human responsibility under law ; and that the conclusion, deduced from that postulate and that fact, is, that there is somewhere a Divine Revelation, and I have then, from the evi- dences referred to, attained the final conclusion, to my mind an ir- resistible one. that Christianity is that Divine system revealed to us by our Creator. The error in my argument, if any, must be in the postulate, or the conclusion from it; the assumption of Theism, or the conclusion of Revelation. There must either be no God, or revelation — and that ■lation, the Bible. How. then, stands the issue — the religious issue of the world ? It pfesents the inevitable alternative; Jehovah or the "No God," Cjtistianity or Atheism. [he thought, which it has been my purpose to illustrate, was the tsaglcious reflection of the late John Randolph. Thirty years ago he said. " Throw aside Revelation, and I will drive any man, by ir- resistible induction, to Atheism. John Marshall could not resist me." • IpII have succeeded in impressing upon .you this thought; with fhe ijlwer which it has exerted upon my own mind, in turning me from skepticism into the path of truth, his words will' not have been uselesly written, and my labor shall not have been vain. For who can fail in the choice so presented by this issue to enroll himself* among the followers of the Cross? Who would leave the Ugh! and peace of that religion, which has advanced, and is still ad- \Mi -ing our race; which makes free society possible; which, shield- ing virtue, stays the arm of vice ; which sanctifies every relation in life, with the solemn sense of religious obligation ; which prescribes Peace as the rule, and prescribes War as the bane of humanity; 31- which would fill the world with Chanty and Love, antf banish from it unkindness and Hate ; which lifts man to higher aspirations to nobler hopes than earth can furnish ; which assuages .the floods ^f grief, staunches the wounds of sorrow, and pours in the oil of a serene and even sublime joy — spanning the weeping firmament of a beclouded Home, with the Heaven coloured bow of promise ? Oh who would quit the calm sunshine of that hope, in which, when gazing on the tomb, hiding from our sight the crumbling objects of our buried love, we delight to lift our tearful eyes in humble trust, that there is a better world beyond— a«iew Heaven and a new Earth, where Death shall no more be. and where ' ; God shall wipe away all tears from off all our faces ?" Who would give up all this — and for what ? For that faith which believes nothing? For that heart, which adores nothing? For that hope which expects nothing? For that life, which lives for nothing? For that death, which is eternal ? For that grave. whose portals never open, sealed by annihilation ? For thaf joy, which is cheerless and fitful ? For that grief, which is hop comfortless, despair ? Young men, I invoke your decision ! If the Lord be God, serve him; but if Baal, then serve him ! Jehovah or the u No God!" The cheering radiance of Christianity, shining brighter and brighter perfect day, or the dreary gloom of Atheism, in its si midnight ! Soldier? of the South! In your devoted fidelity to your coui remember to be faithful to your God! Enlisted under the flag of the Confederacy. le,t me pray you to enlist under the banner of the crossi The Nation or People that will not serve God. shall perish : Bat ■ God is the Lord! % / / *s .. . ■ w ■ V t> '/>