登陆注册
15489900000064

第64章 CHAPTER XXVI(1)

OUR experiences are little worth unless they teach us to reflect. Let us then pause to consider this hourly experience of human beings - this remarkable efficacy of prayer. There can hardly be a contemplative mind to which, with all its difficulties, the inquiry is not familiar.

To begin with, 'To pray is to expect a miracle.' 'Prayer in its very essence,' says a thoughtful writer, 'implies a belief in the possible intervention of a power which is above nature.' How was it in my case? What was the essence of my belief? Nothing less than this: that God would have permitted the laws of nature, ordained by His infinite wisdom to fulfil His omniscient designs and pursue their natural course in accordance with His will, had not my request persuaded Him to suspend those laws in my favour.

The very belief in His omniscience and omnipotence subverts the spirit of such a prayer. It is on the perfection of God that Malebranche bases his argument that 'Dieu n'agit pas par des volontes particulieres.' Yet every prayer affects to interfere with the divine purposes.

It may here be urged that the divine purposes are beyond our comprehension. God's purposes may, in spite of the inconceivability, admit the efficacy of prayer as a link in the chain of causation; or, as Dr. Mozely holds, it may be that 'a miracle is not an anomaly or irregularity, but part of the system of the universe.' We will not entangle ourselves in the abstruse metaphysical problem which such hypotheses involve, but turn for our answer to what we do know - to the history of this world, to the daily life of man. If the sun rises on the evil as well as on the good, if the wicked 'become old, yea, are mighty in power,' still, the lightning, the plague, the falling chimney-pot, smite the good as well as the evil. Even the dumb animal is not spared. 'If,' says Huxley, 'our ears were sharp enough to hear all the cries of pain that are uttered in the earth by man and beasts we should be deafened by one continuous scream.' 'If there are any marks at all of special design in creation,' writes John Stuart Mill, 'one of the things most evidently designed is that a large proportion of all animals should pass their existence in tormenting and devouring other animals. They have been lavishly fitted out with the instruments for that purpose.' Is it credible, then, that the Almighty Being who, as we assume, hears this continuous scream - animal-prayer, as we may call it - and not only pays no heed to it, but lavishly fits out animals with instruments for tormenting and devouring one another, that such a Being should suspend the laws of gravitation and physiology, should perform a miracle equal to that of arresting the sun - for all miracles are equipollent - simply to prolong the brief and useless existence of such a thing as man, of one man out of the myriads who shriek, and - shriek in vain?

To pray is to expect a miracle. Then comes the further question: Is this not to expect what never yet has happened?

The only proof of any miracle is the interpretation the witness or witnesses put upon what they have seen.

(Traditional miracles - miracles that others have been told, that others have seen - we need not trouble our heads about.)

What that proof has been worth hitherto has been commented upon too often to need attention here. Nor does the weakness of the evidence for miracles depend solely on the fact that it rests, in the first instance, on the senses, which may be deceived; or upon inference, which may be erroneous. It is not merely that the infallibility of human testimony discredits the miracles of the past. The impossibility that human knowledge, that science, can ever exhaust the possibilities of Nature, precludes the immediate reference to the Supernatural for all time. It is pure sophistry to argue, as do Canon Row and other defenders of miracles, that 'the laws of Nature are no more violated by the performance of a miracle than they are by the activities of a man.' If these arguments of the special pleaders had any force at all, it would simply amount to this: 'The activities of man' being a part of nature, we have no evidence of a supernatural being, which is the sole RAISON D'ETRE of miracle.

Yet thousands of men in these days who admit the force of these objections continue, in spite of them, to pray.

Huxley, the foremost of 'agnostics,' speaks with the utmost respect of his friend Charles Kingsley's conviction from experience of the efficacy of prayer. And Huxley himself repeatedly assures us, in some form or other, that 'the possibilities of "may be" are to me infinite.' The puzzle is, in truth, on a par with that most insolvable of all puzzles - Free Will or Determinism. Reason and the instinct of conscience are in both cases irreconcilable. We are conscious that we are always free to choose, though not to act; but reason will have it that this is a delusion. There is no logical clue to the IMPASSE. Still, reason notwithstanding, we take our freedom (within limits) for granted, and with like inconsequence we pray.

It must, I think, be admitted that the belief, delusive or warranted, is efficacious in itself. Whether generated in the brain by the nerve centres, or whatever may be its origin, a force coincident with it is diffused throughout the nervous system, which converts the subject of it, just paralysed by despair, into a vigorous agent, or, if you will, automaton.

同类推荐
  • 喻老

    喻老

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 浔阳秋怀,赠许明府

    浔阳秋怀,赠许明府

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 钱塘遗事

    钱塘遗事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上老君说长生益算妙经

    太上老君说长生益算妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 释氏蒙求

    释氏蒙求

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 蜃楼志

    蜃楼志

    全书以广东洋行经纪苏万魁之子苏吉士(乳名笑官)的活动为线索,描写了他周围形形色色的人,曲尽人情世态。《蜃楼志》一方面将目光投向了清朝中后期中国南部沿海开放口岸,着眼点较为独特。另一方面充分暴露了官场的黑暗腐朽。
  • 洋湖商战

    洋湖商战

    《洋湖商战》作品简介改革初始,人心浮动,贾一铭抢占先机搞承包,然后筑巢引凤、游说广州,谈笑间招得客商北上,坐收租金数百万……贾一铭招贤纳士,从善如流;吴长久一个主意值千金,贾一铭化腐朽为神奇。人弃我囤,逆时而动,千吨猪肉,半年时间,一项买卖赚千万。贾一铭用事实告诉你,日进斗金不是梦。智者借力,愚者斗气,贾一铭空手再建海鲜市场,牛力倚势使阴招,贾一铭釜底抽薪,白老五狼狈脱逃。供销联社暗流涌动,梁永丰煽风点火,刘光稳坐看大戏。高手出招,举重若轻,梁永丰聪明反被聪明误,自酿苦酒自己喝。商战中硝烟弥漫;官场上暗藏玄机。光明?阴暗?高尚?卑劣?端看您如何评说……
  • 魅世皇妃之情殇

    魅世皇妃之情殇

    是守护的明珠是浮生的梦影是难离的依恋还是精心的计划是否不能行差踏错一步?风雨过后她还能否期待艳阳天?四份感情究竟该如何取舍?灵魂的爱是否能承载欺骗与背叛?
  • 载物记

    载物记

    超脱之地更名为悬剑大陆,历史的真相被五千年的时间冲刷。武者在没落,见神者在崛起。被天魔气息侵染的怪物时刻提醒着修行者们——危机依然存在。杨义在十六岁这一年终于踏上了修行者的道路,向着更广阔与光明的世界前行。
  • 我有多爱你(番外停更慎入)

    我有多爱你(番外停更慎入)

    年少的一场相识。天真的一场私奔。命中注定的重逢。他和她,兜转一生,只为那一句,我有多爱你。
  • 萌动小心肝

    萌动小心肝

    种个草莓,萌动萌动~~哎呀!我的小心肝!
  • TFBOYS半岛荼靡

    TFBOYS半岛荼靡

    爱上你是我一辈子都无法预料到的惊喜很高兴你命中有我我此生有你于是有了这份不言而喻的默契我和你就像是命中注定的搭档就连上天也无法阻止我爱你----王俊凯我们青梅竹马,对你而言我只是朋友对我而言你却是我的整个世界-----王源你一点一滴走进我的内心,牵引着我从冰冷的都市走进温暖的港湾我们注定相遇-----易烊千玺
  • 第一霸主

    第一霸主

    这是一个星际时代,修炼与科技并存。人类向宇宙深处进军。陈烨本是一个孤儿,遭人冷眼,生活拮据。有一次,他被人踢进了一个密洞,得到《万物同源》,还亲眼目睹了芙蓉出水……从此之后,天才失色,神鬼让道,唯有他一路高歌,荣登王座!太阳系的资源将要枯竭;银河系将要毁坏;大宇宙将要进入轮回;万物皆为梦幻泡影!这一切,都因为陈烨而改变!(老书被屏..蔽了,老作者信誉有保证,求收藏,求推荐票,各种求……)
  • 戏妃诱情

    戏妃诱情

    她是二十一世纪的著名演员,一朝不慎身穿异国他乡。他是东陵的无所不能的神话王爷,冷面冷情让人望而却步。弱与强的碰撞,她识时务的笑脸相迎;追与逐的较量,他不自拔的深陷其中。她本想就此平淡的度过一生,奈何某人--------片段一:君郴寒抬头看着眼前一脸柔弱的人“既然你有病,那王府有药”,“呃--呵呵,王爷公务繁忙就不用麻烦了,我自己---”没等说完某人就不耐烦的打断了“不用客气,省的别人说我小气”片段二:“可累?”梓雨咬了咬牙,你跑一个试试不就知道了,面上仍一脸和气“不累不累,能跟着王爷是小的福气”“嗯,那就去干活吧”干活?梓雨任命的去了,不看还好,一看整个人都要气爆了,那个没品的王爷竟然让她刷夜壶----哼哼,既然如此,那她就用整片湖水还他一个夜壶香。
  • 死寻

    死寻

    在我眼中浑噩度日的四叔莫名死亡,他那个让人发寒的朋友带我离开了村子,我却因此掀开了世界诡秘的一角。到底是活人追随着死人,还是死人在寻找活人,我甚至分不清自己到底是死是活。