[Dawn of All by Robert Hugh Benson]@TWC D-Link bookDawn of All CHAPTER II 10/45
It is extremely difficult for us now, even in imagination, to sympathize with such a mentality as this; but it must be remembered that the science was very youthful, and had all the inexperience and the arrogance of youth.
As time went on, however, this argument began to disappear, except in very elementary rationalistic manuals, as the fact became evident that while this or that particular religion had one or more identities with Christian doctrines, Christianity possessed them all; that Christianity, in short, had all the principal doctrines of all religions--or at least all doctrines that were of any strength to other religions, as well as several others necessary to weld these detached dogmas into a coherent whole; that, to use a simple metaphor, Christianity stood in the world like a light upon a hill, and that partial and imperfect reflections of this light were thrown back, with more or less clearness, from the various human systems of belief that surrounded it.
And at last it became evident, even to the most unintelligent, that the only scientific explanation of this phenomenon lay in the theory that Christianity was indeed unique, and, at the very least, was the most perfect human system of faith--perfectly human, I mean, in that it embodied and answered adequately all the religious aspirations of the human race--the most perfect system of faith the world had ever seen. "A third cause was to be found in the new philosophy of evidence that began to prevail soon after the dawn of the century. "Up to that period, so-called Physical Science had so far tyrannized over men's minds as to persuade them to accept her claim that evidence that could not be reduced to her terms was not, properly speaking, evidence at all.
Men demanded that purely spiritual matters should be, as they said, 'proved,' by which they meant should be reduced to physical terms.
Little by little, however, the preposterous nature of this claim was understood. People began to perceive that each order of life had evidence proper to itself--that there were such things, for instance, as moral proofs, artistic proofs, and philosophical proofs; and that these proofs were not interchangeable.
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