Modern Substitutes for Christianity

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Modern Substitutes for Christianity by Pearson McAdam Muir, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Pearson McAdam Muir ISBN: 9781465562623
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: July 29, 2009
Imprint: Library of Alexandria Language: English
Author: Pearson McAdam Muir
ISBN: 9781465562623
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: July 29, 2009
Imprint: Library of Alexandria
Language: English
POPULAR IMPEACHMENTS OF CHRISTIANITY That there is at present a widespread alienation from the Christian Faith can hardly be denied. Sometimes by violent invective, sometimes by quiet assumption, the conclusion is conveyed that Christianity is obsolete. Whatever benefits it may have conferred in rude, unenlightened ages, it is now outgrown, it is not in keeping with the science and discovery of modern times. 'The good Lord Jesus has had His day,'[1] is murmured in pitying condescension towards those who still suffer themselves to be deceived by the antiquated superstition. The statements in which our forefathers embodied the relations between God and man are no longer, except by a very few, considered adequate; and there is everywhere a demand that those statements should be recast. Is not all this an irresistible proof that the beliefs of the Church have been abandoned, that the old notions of the Divine care, the spiritual world, the everlasting life, cannot be maintained, must be relegated to the realm of imagination? The blessings with which Christianity is commonly credited spring from other sources: the evils with which society is infected are its result, direct or indirect. Such accusations, it may occur to us, cannot be made seriously: they bear their refutation in the very making; they cannot be propounded with any expectation of being accepted. This may seem self-evident to us: it is not self-evident to multitudes of eager, earnest men. The accusations are persistently made by vigorous writers and impassioned speakers, and are received as incontrovertible propositions. However astonishing, however painful, it may be for us to hear, it is well that we should know, what, in largely circulated books and periodicals, and in mass meetings of the people, is said about the Faith which we profess, and about us who profess it. Listen to some of the terms in which Christianity is impeached. 'I undertake,' says Mr. Winwood Reade, 'I undertake to show that the destruction of Christianity is essential to the interests of civilisation; and also that man will never attain his full powers as a moral being, until he has ceased to believe in a personal God, and in the immortality of the soul. Christianity must be destroyed.'[2
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
POPULAR IMPEACHMENTS OF CHRISTIANITY That there is at present a widespread alienation from the Christian Faith can hardly be denied. Sometimes by violent invective, sometimes by quiet assumption, the conclusion is conveyed that Christianity is obsolete. Whatever benefits it may have conferred in rude, unenlightened ages, it is now outgrown, it is not in keeping with the science and discovery of modern times. 'The good Lord Jesus has had His day,'[1] is murmured in pitying condescension towards those who still suffer themselves to be deceived by the antiquated superstition. The statements in which our forefathers embodied the relations between God and man are no longer, except by a very few, considered adequate; and there is everywhere a demand that those statements should be recast. Is not all this an irresistible proof that the beliefs of the Church have been abandoned, that the old notions of the Divine care, the spiritual world, the everlasting life, cannot be maintained, must be relegated to the realm of imagination? The blessings with which Christianity is commonly credited spring from other sources: the evils with which society is infected are its result, direct or indirect. Such accusations, it may occur to us, cannot be made seriously: they bear their refutation in the very making; they cannot be propounded with any expectation of being accepted. This may seem self-evident to us: it is not self-evident to multitudes of eager, earnest men. The accusations are persistently made by vigorous writers and impassioned speakers, and are received as incontrovertible propositions. However astonishing, however painful, it may be for us to hear, it is well that we should know, what, in largely circulated books and periodicals, and in mass meetings of the people, is said about the Faith which we profess, and about us who profess it. Listen to some of the terms in which Christianity is impeached. 'I undertake,' says Mr. Winwood Reade, 'I undertake to show that the destruction of Christianity is essential to the interests of civilisation; and also that man will never attain his full powers as a moral being, until he has ceased to believe in a personal God, and in the immortality of the soul. Christianity must be destroyed.'[2

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Narrative of Services in the Liberation of Chili, Peru and Brazil from Spanish and Portuguese Domination (Complete) by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book The Tale of the Armament of Igor by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book The Life and Times of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham: From Original and Authentic Sources (Complete) by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Folk-lore and legends: English by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book The Gallery of Portraits with Memoirs (Complete) by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Barbara Blomberg - Complete by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book How John Norton the Trapper Kept His Christmas by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book The Arabian Nights Entertainments - Volume 01 by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Dry-Farming: A System of Agriculture for Countries under a Low Rainfall by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Basic English Bible by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Two Orations of the Emperor Julian: One to the Sovereign Sun and the other to the Mother of the Gods by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Problems in American Democracy by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Women of Mediæval France by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book The Vicar of Morwenstow: Being a Life of Robert Stephen Hawker, M.A. by Pearson McAdam Muir
Cover of the book Father Brighthopes: An Old Clergyman's Vacation by Pearson McAdam Muir
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy