You are here
قراءة كتاب Mystic Immanence, the Indwelling Spirit
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
MYSTIC IMMANENCE
MYSTIC IMMANENCE
THE INDWELLING SPIRIT
BY THE VENERABLE BASIL WILBERFORCE, D.D.
LONDON : ELLIOT STOCK
7, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
1914
WORKS BY ARCHDEACON WILBERFORCE
SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS, 3s. net.
STEPS IN SPIRITUAL GROWTH. 3s. net.
THE SECRET OF THE QUIET MIND. 3s. net.
THE POWER THAT WORKETH IN US. With Portrait of the Author. 3s. net.
POWER WITH GOD. 3s. net.
THE HOPE THAT IS IN ME. 5s.
SERMONS PREACHED IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. First Series. 5s.
SERMONS PREACHED IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. Second Series. 5s.
SANCTIFICATION BY THE TRUTH. 5s.
NEW (?) THEOLOGY. THOUGHTS ON THE UNIVERSALITY AND CONTINUITY OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE IMMANENCE OF GOD. 5s.
THERE IS NO DEATH, 1s. 6d. net; bound in White Parchment, 2s. 6d. net.
MYSTIC IMMANENCE. THE INDWELLING SPIRIT, 1s. 6d. net; bound in White Parchment, 2s. 6d. net.
THE HOPE OF GLORY, 1s. net.
LIGHT ON THE PROBLEMS OP LIFE. 2s. net.
THE AWAKENING, 1s. net.
ELLIOT STOCK, 7, PATERNOSTER Row, E.C.
All rights reserved
FOREWORD
[Transcriber's Note: Foreword missing from source book]
CONTENTS
FOREWORD (missing from source book)
INFINITE IMMANENT MIND
SPIRIT, SOUL, BODY
"OUT OF THE EVERYWHERE INTO HERE"
LAST WORDS
MYSTIC IMMANENCE
Infinite Immanent Mind
"Whose is this image and superscription?"—ST. MATT. xxii. 20.
The question, "Whose is this image and superscription?" is suggestive, first, of the deeper meaning of a harvest festival, and that is the recognition in public worship that the material universe is the visible thought of God. What is the principle by which everything came into being? Physical science has now reduced all material things to a primary ether, universally distributed, whose innumerable particles are in absolute equilibrium.[#] The initial movement, then, which began to concentrate material substances out of the ether could not have originated with the particles themselves, and we are logically compelled to acknowledge the presence of a Creative Intelligence exercising volition. That Creative Intelligence exercising volition, that Parent Mind, has impressed His image and superscription upon all that is—upon the life and beauty of the animal world, upon the marvels of the vegetable world, the prolific fruits of the earth, the gorgeous flowers with which church and altar are decorated to-day. Whose is their image and superscription? Whom do they manifest? Whence come their life and their beauty? To understand the deeper meaning of a church decorated with fruits and flowers we must have risen to some conception of the Invisible Intelligence that is realizing itself in concrete phenomena. Everything in the physical world is what it is by reason of a spirit-organism or mind-form which relates it to the Universal Mind, and the Universal Mind is that Divine activity which St. John calls the Word, the Logos, the Originator in creative activity. "Through every grass-blade," says Carlyle, "the glory of the present God still beams." It does, and therefore a harvest festival suggests, not only the obvious duty of profound thanksgiving to a bounteous Father—that goes without saying—but also a reverent mental recognition of the intense nearness of God, that "Earth's crammed with Heaven and every common bush afire with God."
[#] Cf. Troward's Edinburgh Lectures.
So the first thought of to-day is that the world is ruled by Mind and not by Matter, that "there is a soul in all things, and that soul is God," that in the true philosophy of Creation every atom, every germ, has within it a principle, a life, a purpose, a degree of consciousness appropriate to its position in the scheme of things. That consciousness, that mind, differs in magnitude in its different manifestations; higher in the insect than in the vegetable, higher in the animal than in the insect, and occasionally there is evidenced in the animal a shrewdness which implies observation and close reasoning. For example, recently I was at Christchurch, in Hampshire, and was conducted by Mr. Hart over his unique museum of birds, representing the life-work of an expert and enthusiast. He told me many most interesting things, and amongst them the following:
It is well known that the cuckoo makes no nest of its own, but places its eggs in the nest of one of the