Lancashire Idylls (1898) by Marshall Mather
page 112 of 236 (47%)
page 112 of 236 (47%)
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It bases will on organization, and traces conduct to material
sources. Huxley tells us the salvation of a child is to be born with a sound digestion, and Calvinism says the salvation of a child is to be born under the election of grace. Logically, the basis of both systems is the same; the sources of life differ, that is all. One traces from matter, the other from mind--from the mind and will of the Eternal.' 'But science fixes it for earth only--you fix it for eternity,' suggestively hinted the younger man. 'Yes, you are right, Mr. Penrose; we do.' 'Then a man is lost because he cannot be saved, and punished for things over which he had no control?' 'Ask science,' was the curt reply. 'Well, Mr. Morell, I will ask science, and science will yield hope. Science says, take a hundred men and a hundred women, and let them live on a fruitful island and multiply, and in four generations you will have an improved stock--a stock freer from atavism, hysteria, anomalies, and insanities. Science holds out hope; you don't. You say God's will and decrees are eternal, and what they were a thousand ages since they will be a thousand ages to come. Science does eventually point to a new heaven and new earth, but Calvinism throws no light across the gloom.' The old man quietly shifted his ground by asking his opponent if he ever asked himself why he did, and why he did not, do certain |
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