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truth-that the Divine Providence follows | tion is declared, in its own record, to be of each one of us from day to day, from infan- much wider bearing than the human family; cy to age-saving, providing for, and com--how wide, who shall say? and until its forting even the least and the lowest of us. width be known, and until its enduring conBut here this course of reasoning reaches sequences be understood, none here on its close, although it might well have been earth can reasonably reject it as an interpopursued some steps further. The difficulty sition unworthy of the Infinite wisdom and which the preacher has to do with, and benevolence. which he is labouring to dismiss, has in fact, On the whole, the Astronomical Discourbeen logically disarmed by the arguments ses are such as that they must recommend he so powerfully urges; nevertheless it themselves to the perusal of the thoughtful will, after a time, recover its footing, and it and intelligent through years long to come. will continue to disturb thoughtful minds They will delight and edify many, and they until it has met that true counteractive force will satisfy (rightly not delusively) some. which the mediations of an enlightened con- They will convince few among those science will supply; and yet this is a treat- against whose cavils they are immediately ment which it would be a hopeless endea-directed. At this time what we need for vour to bring to bear upon that class of per- the confirmation of our faith in the Gospel sons toward whom, principally, Chalmers must carry a more severe aspect in its logicturns his eye; we mean, professed unbe- al processes-it must be exempt from comlievers. Those who might properly be the bativeness, wrath, scorn-it must shew, in object of a Christian preacher's hot rebuke, the writer or preacher, good evidence of his men whose language and behaviour own susceptibility toward subjects of painful show them to be wholly destitute of the and perplexing meditation; and it must moral consciousness and the religious senti- prove that he himself has trod paths where ments to which the appeal, in such a case, the feet bleed at every step, and where the must be made. pulse falters, and the head fails. Moreover, the Christian reasoner must prove himself to possess a keen and fearless critical faculty. It is the want of this one qualification which renders Chalmers' writings generally less applicable to these times than they might otherwise have been.

The question is of this sort-may human redemption be thought of as a worthy object of a special interposition on the part of the Infinite Being? But we must not carry such a question into the halls of colleges:-let us carry it rather into the depths of the soul that has been taught to meditate upon its The seven Discourses that are appended own immortality, and has thought of its in the Collected Works to the Astronomiterrible prerogative of boundless suffering, cal, as being of kindred character, are, some and of its yearnings and aspirations toward of them, we think, of still higher value; goodness and happiness: then carry the ques- they are less declamatory; and their effect tion into yet deeper depth-even into that is less damaged by that polemic tone which recess wherein an awakened conscience holds too much rings in our ears throughout the its throne-the representative, as it is, of others. Chalmers is listened to with most Inexorable Justice: it is in that court that advantage when his eye does not glance at man finds himself standing in the presence an opponent who must be crushed:-not of his Omnipotent Judge; and it is there, that his temper was soured, or that he harand it is while he is alive to the fearful real-boured ill-will against men of any sort, but ities which attach to the future life-it is the robust orator was apt to take a too anithere that those vague surmises, out of mated impulse from the idea of a sophistwhich the difficulty in question has framed ical antagonism, which it was his duty to itself, melt away, or are so lost to the sight rend into shreds. The sermon on the Conas that they do not return until some season when, the moral and spiritual life having fallen into decay, Redemption has come to be thought of with indifference.

stancy of Nature is at once true and sound in its reasoning, and deeply impressive in inferential passages. With one fact or one principle fully or clearly before him, or The fourth and the following Discourses of held in hand, he turns it on all sides, lavishthis series, although highly declamatory, are es upon it his illustrative comparisons, and, yet substantially good in argument, for, as in the tone of a faithful messenger from related to Infidel Objection, they rest either God, presses the genuine consequence upon upon principles of Natural Theology, which the consciences of men; a single volume of the Deist is supposed to allow, or upon selected sermons, of this order, could not fail facts embraced in the Christian scheme, to take its place among the most useful of which, if duly regarded, weaken, or wholly standard religious publications.

turn aside the objection. Human redemp-I In the sermon on the Consistency be

tween the Efficacy of Prayer and the Uni- can follow up the catenation of sequences; formity of Nature, Chalmers grapples with and as far, moreover, as it will ever succeed a problem which demands a higher meta-in laying bare the inner mysteries of nature; physic range of thought, and a more exact but then he thinks-if we understand himanalytic power than. nature had given him. that, above, and far beyond the border of This problem we hold to be open to a strict the known, and the scrutable-of which huand proper solution, when taken on to the man science is, or may hereafter be, cogniground of purely abstract reasoning, and re-zant, there is a vast unknown-a region of moved from the ground of religious feeling; unfixed, adjustable causation, upon which the often-stated difficulty in reconciling the the Divine Hand may, without rendering constancy of Nature with the doctrine of the this interference visible, convert to its speefficacy of prayer and the reality of a special cial purposes, those remoter forces which, as Providence is, as we think, a popular diffi- they descend toward the known and visible culty, the weight of which the great mass of world, become invariable and uniform. We pious and praying folks are happily uncon- must ask, whether physical science, in its scious of; or which they quickly dismiss future accelerated progress-for recent dissomehow, if perchance it presents itself be- coveries seem to promise a series of fore them; but it is a difficulty which must, triumphs, more and more signal-shall not, as we believe, continue to trouble a class of at length, approximate to the boundary intelligent and religious persons, whose con- where the fixedness of causation shall be stitution of mind, and whose educational seen to be giving way, and where a few habits, are not favourable to the contin- steps farther would bring the human mind uous retention of the higher class of abstract within reach-or prospect of the unfixed notions:—such persons, and in these times and the supernatural? A theory this most they are more than a few, might be advised perilous, and as we think, unphilosophical; to repose themselves, first, upon those irre- and in fact, if nothing better than this could sistible impulses and instincts which pro- be done to meet the abstract difficulty, we claim the truth that God ruleth in all things, should turn away abashed and perplexed and that He is indeed the hearer of prayer; from all speculation on subjects of this -and then upon that clear testimony of class. (See Nat. Theology, vol. ii. p. 320, Scripture to the same effect, so amply given, et seq.) and so solemnly affirmed. If it be otherwise, how can we accept the Holy Scriptures as from God?

DAILY SCRIPTURE READINGS. Those-and they must be many-who have given these volumes a place on their shelves-a place As to the discourse to which we now re- the nearest at hand where they spend the fer, let it be read by any to whom it may devotional hour, will have read and considadminister relief: its reasonings are validered the Editor's very appropriate prefatory as related to the practical conclusions to which they lead; and whatever is manifestly of a religious tendency in the argument, as therein conducted, may safely be listened to, and may be accepted as lawfully available for its intended purpose, albeit it falls far short of philosophic coherence. If we were to assume the theory which Chalmers, in this discourse, propounds, for the purpose of shewing that the constancy of nature does not forbid our faith in the efficacy of prayer, we should, in doing so, furnish Auguste Comte, or his disciples, with an illustration which he and they might triumphantly employ in support of his favourite dogma, that constantly pressed upon as it is by the advances of the modern philosophy, the Theological Element is passing through a process of elimination, and that it must, at length, wholly and finally lose its hold of the human mind. On the threshold of his argument Chalmers fully admits all that can be said of the constancy of physical causation; and he also admits that this invariableness extends as far as philosophy

pages. Dr. Hanna tells the reader, as well
what to look for in them as what he is not
to look for; there
there can therefore be
no disappointment; and the reader, thus
candidly dealt with, will derive an unabated
pleasure, and a larger benefit from the pe-
rusal of them, in the way that is pointed
out by the Editor The privileged visitor
in Chalmers' home would (so we venture
to suppose) have heard from him, at the
season of family morning prayers, similar
spontaneous expositions of Scripture. A
powerful mind-powerful, and sustained in
its strength, and competently versed in bi-
blical learning, and guided always by a fer-
vently devout temper, and a strong sense of
whatever is most fit and useful, whatever
is true, real, beautiful, gives forth, at the mo-
ment, such a commentary upon the chapter
which has come in turn to be read, as one
should think it a high privilege to listen to
daily. And now, what better could an intel-
ligent master of a household do, than avail
himself of this same commentary, so far as
it goes; and having previously looked into,

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will be the reader's wisdom to derive from them the instruction with which they are so richly fraught. Dr. Hanna, in the Preface to the Posthumous Works, frankly states the serious difficulty which had presented itself in the way of the publication of what the writer had so scrupulously "hidden from every eye:" he sets forth also the reasons which have overcome these scruples; assuredly we have no inclination to adjust the balance.

or studied the pages he intended to use, that honesty is the best policy. But we must give the domestic congregation the benefit stop; these Daily Readings, put forth, as of so safe a guidance in the reading of their doubtless they will be, in a form (and price) Bibles? A criticism of these uncritical ex- adapted to the most extensive circulation, positions would, on every account, be out will secure for Chalmers the best sort of liteof place in this instance. Nor does the rary immortality - that of feeding souls, reader need any caution in employing them wherever the Anglo-Saxon race is, or shall for the purposes either of private and do- be diffused, for many generations onward. mestic edification, or of public instruction. What more would a Christian writer wish In these pages there lurks none of the poi- for than to have left the world enriched in son of a disguised scepticism; and if he does this manner? not find in them all the aid which at this SABBATH SCRIPTURE READINGS.-There is time we are in the mood to look for, it is no need that we should trouble ourselves certain that he will find very much more aid, with the difficult and delicate question which and aid of the most substantial kind, than the Editor had to do with, when he was conin some books of elaborate commentary, sidering whether he should give these perwhich, with their endless argumentations-sonal meditations, and these peculiar exertheir interminable pros and cons, leave us, cises of the soul, to the world. Here are when we have waded through a score of the two volumes in our hands; and now it pages, in more perplexity as to the sense of a passage than we were when we began. But there is a charm about these biblical exercises which is of a very rare kind, and which, in our esteem, is beyond all price: there shines throughout them a perfect candour, a simple-minded ingenuousness: as often as this Expositor encounters a difficulty -a something which he knows not how to bring into accordance, perhaps, with other passages of Scripture, or more often with our modern notions of what is good, and Christ- In these volumes, as will be readily unian-like, he states the case just as it is, with- derstood from the Editor's account of them out disguise without abatement, and in do- there is much less of what is usually meant ing so he betrays no anxiety-he uses no subterfuges; he scorns glozings; he does not attempt far-fetched exculpatory hypotheses. He gives you such help as he is able to offer honestly; and then, if that is not enough, he leaves you to look for more where you can find it. In this respect, as we think, these Daily Readings possess a value which, although it be of an indirect kind, we should estimate very highly. They are patterns, surpassing any other writings which we know, of the way in which the Scriptures (of from page to page, in his treatment of the Old Testament, especially) should be himself. Few, we think, are the readers of expounded in a family; we should say they these Sabbath Exercises, who will not often exemplify in the very best manner the spirit stand abashed and rebuked as they go on in and style of a family commentary upon the the perusal of them. But then-and let it Jewish history, upon the Mosaic institutions, be noted-in all this Christian integrity, and and upon the moralities of the precursive among these confessions, and in these opendispensation. If our space permitted our ings of the depths of the heart, we find no doing so, we could say much on this subject; taint of that overdone humility, or of that but we are constrained to stop short in this factitious penitence or of that morbid gloatpointed reference to it. Well would it be ing upon what is revolting, which so much disin those family circles where disingenuous figures some posthumous diaries that have ay, and dishonest dealings with biblical diffi- been given to the world by injudicious culties are at work to train the sons of the friends: on this ground, also, all is as healthfamily for their college atheism, if the mis- ful as it is honest. A mind of extraordinary taken--the miscalculating expositor, could power, and an accomplished and instructed learn from Chalmers this one lesson, appli-mind-a strong temper-a robust human cable as it is to sacred as to secular occasions, nature, exhibits itself in these pages, contend

by exposition; and much more of what is devotional, along with many of those individual experiences which devout persons are wont to make a record of in their diaries.

We have just now spoken of the fearless honesty and the noble candour which are Chalmers' conspicuous excellencies, as an expositor of Scripture. What we have now before us is the very same bright simplicity of heart, the same ingenuous greatness-the same noble and lofty truthfulness, displayed

ing with itself, and striving for the mastery | energy, the reality, and the healthfulness over whatever in itself is felt to be out of which shines and glows in every paragraph. harmony with the harmony of heaven. But The three volumes of the POSTHUMOUS on what ground is this conflict carried for- WORKS-namely-the seventh, eighth, and ward, and what are the principles whence ninth,-containing the "INSTITUTES OF THEOthis course of healthful self-discipline draws LOGY" and the "PRELECTIONS" on Butler's its motives and its energy? the ground of Analogy, Paley's Evidences, and Hill's Lecthis industrious schooling in virtue and true tures in Divinity, are likely to be regarded wisdom is an unexceptive Christian belief as those of his works in which the most ma-drawn from Holy Scripture taken as the tured views and opinions of Chalmers are to only and the sufficient source of doctrine, be found. It is with these three volumes and as the authoritative rule of life. The before us that, if at all, we should incline to principles-the working of which upon a offer any suggestions of a general kind upon mind such as was that of Chalmers, is spread that form of Christian doctrine which this out before us in these pages, are those which eminent man left as his legacy to the Church rise up, as if spontaneously within the heart of Scotland, and to English religious literaof every simple-minded and devout reader ture. It was as Theological Professor, first of the Bible. When, with a childlike ingenu- in the University of Edinburgh, and then in ousness, this lofty spirit-this bright intelli- the New College of the Free Church, that gence this giant-like reason, submitted it these prelections and these lectures were deself to the guidance of Holy Scripture-did livered. Of the most general kind must be it debase itself in so doing? did it show any remarks we should venture to make symptoms of moral feebleness or of over- upon a theologic system, such as that which weening self-delusion in this course? Show is embodied in these Institutes. Theology is us, in a single instance, the evidence that it not our province; but the volumes now in was so. This Bible-discipline, in the instance view suggest an inquiry, incidental indeed, of a mind which nature had enriched in the which may thus be put into words :--What rarest manner, had been going on, through a is the bearing of this body of Divinity upon long course of years, at the time when these those Three Forms of Christian opinion Sabbath Scripture Readings were commen- which, for some time past, have been, and ced. Why then may we not appeal to them are now at this time competing among us as an evidence, peculiarly significant, of what for the uppermost position? or, to be more Bible-discipline is, and of its applicability to correct, we should say-one of them, for conhuman nature, when, as in this case, it is sub- tinued existence, and the other two for su mitted to, and is carried out with entire in- premacy. genuousness, and with an unquestioning and devout simplicity of intention?

Towards himself severely honest and truthful as a child, Chalmers used his Bible just as the most ordinary Christian man uses it; he took it up and he studied it as God's message to himself, a message which he was bound to bring home to himself strictly, whatever might be the consequence of his doing so as to his self-love and self-compla. cency. But we are now told that the Bible is an old book, with which cultured minds, at this time, can have little to do; abounding, indeed, in fine passages, but altogether tending to produce an order of feeling which must be rejected as obsolete, impracticable, and undesirable. Let those who thus talk and write let them, if it be but for a season, surrender themselves to the perusal of these SABBATH READINGS. If at this moment we were entering into controversy with the silken, christianized philosophers of the time, we should incline to take these Sabbath Readings as our text-book, and to collate, page by page, the unmeaning sentimentalism of these writers and preachers, with the manliness, and the moral tone, and the

The three are these-first, and it is the elder of the three-Logical Theology, or Christianity drawn forth into propositions, and into inferences, thence deduced by methods of formal reasoning. The second, to which we have already made allusion, is Philosophical Theology, or Christianity fashioned into conformity, as far as possible, with the notions and the tastes which distinguish Modern Thought. The third is, or more properly it is coming to be-Christianity derived ingenuously and fearlessly from the Bible-Holy Scripture, regarded as the source of belief, and as the rule of life.

The utmost that we propose to do at present is this--to look into these three volumes, and to direct the attention of the studious reader to such passages as indicate, if they do not plainly declare Chalmers' views, and his inclinations and feelings, in relation to the rival Christianities which we have here specified. But in attempting, within the compass of a page or two, a reference of this kind, we must not lose sight of the fact, that Chalmers, as a theologian, was a clergyman of the Scottish Church:-his training had been national, and when he woke up to a

we should be called to consider those permanent characteristics of the national mind which are the main ground and the reason of the contrast between England and Scotland — a contrast as strongly marked, perhaps, as any which could be brought forward from among the national varieties of the European races.

consciousness of Christian doctrine, it was to this doctrine as he found it embodied in the "Confession," and in the "Catechism," and in the polemical literature of Scotland. It does not appear that the idea had ever presented itself to him in a distinct form, that an entire Christianity, religiously drawn from the Canonical Scriptures, differs from that logical theology under the shadow of which Leaving alone subjects so extensive and he had been nurtured. Whenever, therefore, | so arduous as these, we must stop short in passages occur in his writings which seem to the mere fact that whereas Christianity in have been prompted by an uneasy and al- England consists with, and embraces, a very most unconscious sense of a dissonance between the two-a jar which had given him a pain of which he does not understand the cause such utterances of his spontaneous feelings have the more meaning, and they should command the more attention; and let us say it, they should command peculiar attention in Scotland.

great breadth of opinion on questions of theology proper- of religious sentiment and usage, and of ecclesiastical organization, and whereas these breadths - these free spaces are found as well within the Estabblished Church, as among the dissident bodies in Scotland a far nearer approach to theological and ecclesiastical uniformity The reader will have seen that several has been attained, and has fastened itself times in the course of this Article we have upon the Christianity of the nation. So. spoken of Chalmers under a limitation, as he much is this the case, that although a religious stands related to the religious history of man, crossing the Tweed northward, finds Scotland. But it will be thought by some himself surrounded, as in England, with among his ardent admirers, that a man who divisions and subdivisions, it is long before had won for himself a European reputation, he can come to understand the ground of and who, throughout his course as a preacher and writer, commanded so many readers and hearers in England, ought now to be thought of as one whose nationality has become mer ged in a far wider celebrity :-Chalmers, it may be said, belongs, not so much to his native land as to the Anglo-Saxon race, all the world over. This is quite true, and we fully allow it; nevertheless, we must ask leave to take him aback for a while; and now that his systematic writings are before us, must crave to think of him, definitely, as the Theologian of his country. While so thinking of him, the question presents itself: -In taking up the religious notions, the theology and the usages of Scotland, and in passing them, as he did, through his own powerful mind, and in issuing, as one might say he did, his own recension of them, what has he done as a preacher, a writer, and especially as a professional teacher, to amend or to modify what is characteristic of Scot-guishing the Christianity of his country. land in its religious element?

them; for, as to what he sees and hears
in churches and by firesides, everything
seems to bespeak an extraordinary sameness
of persuasion and of worship, and of disci-
pline and usage; and this in things of
moment, as well as in things of no
moment. What one finds in England is
Christianity freely developed freely spo-
ken of and discoursed about, and sincerely
adhered to, under forms and in modes the
most diverse that may at all consist with an
honest retention of the name.
What one
finds in Scotland is either-Christianity
very nearly after one fashion; or else, no
religion at all.

Passages not infrequent in Chalmers' writings, and to some of which we shall make a reference, may be cited in proof of the fact that he had become dimly conscious of this characteristic fixedness; or, we must ask leave to call it, this rigidity, as distin

Conscious of it, in some degree, he was; and We can only offer a hint or two, and we in some degree, also, impatient of it. His do it with all humility, as 'mere sugges- own religious convictions were so thorough, tions for giving a reply to this question. his professions of whatever he believed were Yet this would seem to involve another, so honest, and, at the same time, his undernamely, What is Christianity according to standing was so grasping, and his temperaScotland? but this is a subject manifestly too ment so robust, and his movements so large to be brought within limits on the autocratic, that trammels and swaddlings of present occasion; for a proper reply to it whatever kind could not fail to fret and gall would carry us back among the events of him. That lifeless formalism which is the sixteenth century; it would, moreover, always the result, in any community, of imembrace much that concerns the individual posing frivolous restraints upon it, and of temper of the Scotch reformers; and then abridging the liberty of thought and action,

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