The Fundamentals - 1910: Vol.3

64

The Fundamentals His own life, and He conceived this to be a great practical moral truth, that was to save men from those errors of judg­ ment, of act and of character about which a man has no sure guarantee under a mere monotheistic faith.

IN RELATION TO OUR REL IG ldUS FA ITH

1. I t h i n k w e m i g h t j u s t a s w e l l n o w g o r i g h t t o t h e h e a r t o f t h e t h i n g b y c o n s i d e r i n g , f i r s t o f a l l , t h e r e l a t i o n s h i p o f T H IS REVELATION THAT JE SU S CHR IST MADE OF T H E FATHER - CHARACTER OF GOD IN H IM SE L F TO OUR OWN RELIGIOUS FA ITH . We begin our Christian creed with the declaration, “I believe in God the Father Almighty.” I believe that no man can say those words sincerely and honestly, with an intellectual under­ standing of what he is saying, who is not saying them with his feet solidly resting on the evangelical conviction; for we know practically nothing about God as Father except what we learn from the revelation of God as Father in Jesus Christ. Men say sometimes that the idea of God as Father was in the Old Testament, and there is a sense doubtless in which we can find it there: a patriotic sense for one thing, a poetic sense for another thing. The Hebrews thought of God as the Father, the national Father of Israel. Now and then there is some splendid burst in the prophets that contains that idea, as when Jeremiah, crying out for God, says, “I am a Father to Israel, and Ephraim is my first­ born.” Or when Israel is itself crying out through Isaiah, “Jehovah is our Father. He is the potter and we are the clay.” But in each sense it is a sort of nationalistic concep­ tion of God as the Father of the whole people Israel. And even when the note comes out poetically, it is patriotic still. Turn some time to the 103rd Psalm, where there is the best expression of it, “Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him,” and even there it is the national cry. Or turn to the 89th Psalm, and there, too, it is national and patriotic: “And he shall cry unto me, Jehovah,

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