第 20 节
作者:点绛唇      更新:2024-04-07 11:54      字数:9322
  in the fireless room and thought of the still moist clay; thought
  how the water would freeze in the pores and destroy in an hour the
  dream of his life。  So the old man rose from his couch and heaped
  the bed…clothes reverently round his work。  In the morning when the
  neighbors entered the room the sculptor was dead; but the statue
  was saved!
  The Image of Christ that is forming within usthat is life's one
  charge。  Let every project stand aside for that。  The spirit of
  God who brooded upon the waters thousands of years ago; is busy
  now creating men; within these commonplace lives of ours; in the
  image of God。  〃Till Christ be formed;〃 no man's work is finished;
  no religion crowned; no life has fulfilled its end。  Is the infinite
  task begun?  When; how; are we to be different?  Time cannot
  change men。  Death cannot change men。  Christ can。  Wherefore PUT
  ON CHRIST。
  Dealing With Doubt。
  There is a subject which I think workers amongst young men cannot
  afford to keep out of sightI mean the subject of 〃Doubt。〃  We are
  forced to face that subject。  We have no choice。  I would rather
  let it alone; but every day of my life I meet men who doubt; and I
  am quite sure that most Christian workers among men have innumerable
  interviews every year with men who raise skeptical difficulties
  about religion。
  Now it becomes a matter of great practical importance that we should
  know how to deal wisely with these。  Upon the whole; I think these
  are the best men in the country。  I speak of my own country。  I speak
  of the universities with which I am familiar; and I say that they
  men who are perplexed;the men who come to you with serious and
  honest difficulties;are the best men。  They are men of intellectual
  honesty; and cannot allow themselves to be put to rest by words;
  or phrases; or traditions; or theologies; but who must get to the
  bottom of things for themselves。  And if I am not mistaken;
  Christ was very fond
  of these men。  The outsiders always interested Him; and touched Him。
  The orthodox peoplethe PhariseesHe was much less interested
  in。  He went with publicans and sinnerswith people who were in
  revolt against the respectability; intellectual and religious; of
  the day。  And following Him; we are entitled to give sympathetic
  consideration to those whom He loved and took trouble with。
  First; let me speak for a moment or two about
  The origin of doubt。
  In the first place; WE ARE BORN QUESTIONERS。  Look at the wonderment
  of a little child in its eyes before it can speak。  The child's
  great word when it begins to speak is; 〃Why?〃  Every child is full
  of every kind of question; about every kind of thing; that moves;
  and shines and changes; in the little world in which it lives。
  That is the incipient doubt in the nature of man。  Respect doubt
  for its origin。  It is an inevitable thing。  It is not a thing to
  be crushed。  It is a part of man as God made him。  Heresy is truth
  in the making; and doubt is the prelude of knowledge。
  Secondly:  THE WORLD IS A SPHINX。  It is a vast riddlean unfathomable
  mystery; and on every side there is temptation to questioning。
  In every leaf; in every cell of every leaf; there are a hundred
  problems。  There are ten good years of a man's life in investigating
  what is in a leaf。  God has planned the world to incite men to
  intellectual activity。
  Thirdly:  THE INSTRUMENT WITH WHCIH WE ATTEMPT TO INVESTIGATE TRUTH
  IS IMPAIRED。  Some say it fell; and the glass is broken。  Some
  say prejudice; heredity; or sin; have spoiled its sight; and have
  blinded our eyes and deadened our ears。  In any case the instruments
  with which we work upon truth; even in the strongest men; are feeble
  and inadequate to their tremendous task。
  And in the fourth place; ALL RELIGIOUS TRUTHS ARE DOUBTABLE。  There
  is no absolute truth for any one of them。  Even that fundamental
  truththe existence of a Godno man can prove by reason。  The
  ordinary proof for the existence of a God involves either an
  assumption; argument in a circle; or a contradiction。  The impression
  of God is kept up by experience; not by logic。  And hence; when
  the experimental religion of a man; of a community; or of a nation
  wanes; religion wanestheir idea of God grows indistinct; and that
  man; community or nation becomes infidel。
  Bear in mind; then; that all religious truths are doubtableeven
  those which we hold most strongly。
  What does this brief account of the origin of doubt teach us?  It
  teaches us
  Great intellectual humility。
  It teaches us sympathy and toleration with all men who venture upon
  the ocean of truth to find out a path through it for themselves。
  Do you sometimes feel yourself thinking unkind things about your
  fellow…students who have intellectual difficulty?  I know how hard
  it is always to feel sympathy and toleration for them; but we must
  address ourselves to that most carefully and most religiously。  If
  my brother is short…sighted I must not abuse him or speak against
  him; I must pity him; and if possible try to improve his sight; or
  to make things that he is to look at so bright that he cannot help
  seeing。  But never let us think evil of men who do not see as we
  do。  From the bottom of our hearts let us pity them; and let us take
  them by the hand and spend time and thought over them; and try to
  lead them to the true light。
  What has been
  The church's treatment of doubt
  in the past?  It has been very simple。  〃There is a heretic。  Burn
  him!〃  That is all。  〃There is a man who has gone off the road。
  Bring him back and torture him!〃
  We have got past that physically; have we got past it morally?  What
  does the modern Church say to a man who is skeptical?  Not 〃Burn
  him!〃 but 〃Brand him!〃 〃Brand him!〃call him a bad name。  And
  in many countries at the present time; a man who is branded as a
  heretic is despised; tabooed and put out of religious society; much
  more than if he had gone wrong in morals。  I think I am speaking
  within the facts when I say that a man who is unsound is looked
  upon in many communities with more suspicion and with more pious
  horror than a man who now and then gets drunk。  〃Burn him!〃  〃Brand
  him!〃  〃Excommunicate him!〃  That has been the Church's treatment
  of doubt; and that is perhaps to some extent the treatment which
  we ourselves are inclined to give to the men who cannot see the
  truths of Christianity as we see them。
  Contrast
  Christ's treatment
  of doubt。  I have spoken already of His strange partiality for the
  outsidersfor the scattered heretics up and down the country; of
  the care with which He loved to deal with them; and of the respect
  in which He held their intellectual difficulties。  Christ never
  failed to distinguish between doubt and unbelief。  Doubt is 〃CAN'T
  BELIEVE〃; unbelief is 〃WON'T BELIEVE。〃  Doubt is honesty; unbelief
  is obstinacy。  Doubt is looking for light; unbelief is content with
  darkness。  Loving darkness rather than lightthat is what Christ
  attacked; and attacked unsparingly。  But for the intellectual
  questioning of Thomas; and Philip; and Nicodemus; and the many
  others who came to Him to have their great problems solved; He was
  respectful and generous and tolerant。
  And how did He meet their doubts?  The Church; as I have said;
  says; 〃Brand him!〃  Christ said; 〃Teach him。〃  He destroyed by
  fulfilling。  When Thomas came to Him and denied His very resurrection;
  and stood before Him waiting for the scathing words and lashing
  for his unbelief; they never came。  They never came!  Christ gave
  him factsfacts!  No men can go around facts。  Christ said; 〃Behold
  My hands and My feet。〃  The great god of science at the present
  time is a fact。  It words with facts。  Its cry is; 〃Give me facts。
  Found anything you like upon facts and we will believe it。〃  The
  spirit of Christ was the scientific spirit。  He founded His religion
  upon facts; and He asked all men to found their religion upon facts。
  Now; get up the facts of Christianity; and take men to the facts。
  Theologiesand I am not speaking disrespectfully of theology;
  theology is as scientific a thing as any other science of factsbut
  theologies are
  Human versions
  of Divine truths; and hence the varieties of the versions and the
  inconsistencies of them。  I would allow a man to select whichever
  version of this truth he liked AFTERWARDS; but I would ask him
  to begin with no version; but go back to the facts and base his
  Christian life upon these。
  That is the great lesson of the New Testament way of looking at
  doubtof Christ's treatment of doubt。  It is not 〃Brand him!〃but
  lovingly; wisely and tenderly to teach him。  Faith is never opposed
  to reason in the New Testament; it is opposed to sight。  You will
  find that a principle worth thinking over。  FAITH IS NEVER OPPOSED
  TO REASON IN THE NEW TESTAMENT; BUT TO SIGHT。
  With these p