The Deity of Christ. 27 “chance to be on the point of shipwreck on some unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that the lesson of the mis sionary may have reached thus far. The lesson of the mis sionary is the enchanter’s wand.” Could this transforming in fluence, undiminished after two millenniums, have proceeded from a mere man? It is historically impossible that the great movement which we call Christianity, which remains unspent after all these years, could have originated in a merely human impulse; or could represent today the working of a merely human force. THE PROOF WITHIN. • Or take it subjectively. Every Christian has within him self the proof of the transforming power of Christ, and can repeat the blind man’s syllogism: Why herein is the marvel that ye know not whence He is, and yet He opened my eyes. “Spirits are not touched to fine issues who are not finely touched.” “Shall we trust,” demands an eloquent reasoner, “the touch of our fingers, the sight of our eyes, the hearing of our ears, and not trust our deepest consciousness of our higher nature—the answer of conscience, the flower of spirit ual gladness, the glow of spiritual love? To deny that spiritual experience is as real as physical experience is to slander the noblest faculties of our nature. I t is to say that one half of our nature tells the truth, and the other half utters lies. The proposition that facts in the spiritual region are less real than facts in the physical realm contradicts all philosophy.” The transformed hearts of Christians, registering themselves “in gentle tempers, in noble motives, in lives visibly lived under the empire of great aspirations”—these are the ever-present proofs of the divinity of the Person from whom their inspira tion is drawn. ffhe supreme proof to every Christian of the deity of his Lord is Vthen his own inner experience of the transforming power of his Lord upon the heart and life.3 Not more surely
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