The Things Which Remain - An Address To Young Ministers by Daniel A. Goodsell
page 18 of 37 (48%)
page 18 of 37 (48%)
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supernatural, here is the place to begin.
[Sidenote: Dignity of the Story.] [Sidenote: A Greater Puzzle.] But who will not feel the force of the position that, granted God was to be incarnate, the story of Christ's incarnation is the noblest and most probable? He is not born of a man's lust nor of a woman's desire--but of the submission of untainted womanhood to the direct creative power of God. The alternative to this is the Divinest man in all the world born of sinning and not yet married parents. If the new doctrine of heredity be true that men may inherit good as well as evil, we still have an astounding fact to account for; namely, the birth of such a child from such conditions, that is, with all the good kept in and all the bad left out. [Sidenote: Parthenogenesis a Fact.] When men speak of a virgin birth as incredible and impossible and as the weakest of all Christian doctrine, do they know or have they forgotten that parthenogenesis (virgin birth) is a fact in nature; existing, for example, in as highly organized insects as the honey bee? There are other insects which are parthenogenetic at one time and sexually productive at another. There are also hints of it in human life known to anatomists which can not be fully discussed here. [Sidenote: Among the Bees.] [Sidenote: A Small Departure from Nature.] |
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