Cowper and the Geologists. — Geology in the Poet’s Days in a
State of great Immaturity. — Case different now. — Folly of committing the
Bible to a False Science. — Galileo. — Geologists at one in all their more
important Deductions ; vast Antiquity of the Earth one of these. — State of
the Question.—Illustration. — Presumed Thickness of the Fossiliferous
Strata.—Peculiar Order of their Organic Contents; of their Fossil Fish in
particular, as ascertained by Agassiz. — The Geologic Races of Animals
entirely different from those which sheltered with Noah in the Ark.—Alleged
Discrepancy between Geologic Fact and the Mosaic Record not real. —
Inference based on the opening Verses of the Book of Genesis.—Parallel
Passage adduced to prove the Inference unsound. — The Supposition that
Fossils may have been created such examined: unworthy of the Divine Wisdom ;
contrary to the Principles which regulate Human Belief; subversive of the
grand Argument founded on Design. — The profounder Theologians of the Day
not Anti-Geologists. —Geologic Fact in reality of a kind fitted to perform
important Work in the two Theologies, Natural and Revealed ; subversive of
the “ Infinite-Series ” Argument of the Atheist; subversive, too, of the
Objection drawn by Infidelity from an Astronomical Analogy. —
Counter-objection. — Illustration.
It may have been merely the effect of an engrossing study
long prosecuted, but so it was, that of all I had witnessed amid the scenes
rendered classic by the muse of Cowper, nothing more permanently impressed
me than a few broken fossils of the Oolite which I had picked up immediately
opposite the poet’s windows. There had they lain, as carelessly indifferent
to the strictures in “The Task,” as the sun in the central heavens, two
centuries before, to the denunciations of the Inquisition. Geology, however,
in the days of Cowper, had not attained to the dignity of a science. It
lacked solid footing as it journeyed amid the wastes of Chaos; and now
tipped, as with its toe-points, a “crude consistence” of ill-understood
facts, and now rose aloft into an atmosphere of obscure conjecture, on a
“tumultuous cloud” of ill-digested theory. In a science in this unformed,
rudimental stage, whether it deal with the stars of heaven or the strata of
the earth, the old anarch of Infidelity is sure always to effect a
transitory lodgment ; and beside him stand his auxiliaries,
“Rumor, and Chance,
And Tumult, and Confusion, all embroiled,
And Discord with a thousand various mouths.”
And so it is in no degree derogatory to the excellent sense
of Cowper, that he should have striven to bring Revelation in direct
antithetical collision with the inferences of the geologists.
There exists, however, no such apology for the Dean
Cock-burns and London “Records” of the present day. Geology, though still a
youthful science, is no longer an immature one : it has got firm footing on
a continent of fact; and the man who labors to set the doctrines of
Revelation in array against its legitimate deductions, is employed, whatever
may be his own estimate of his vocation, not on the side of religious truth,
but of scepticism and infidelity. His actual work, however excellent his
proposed object, is identically that of all the shrewder infidels, — the
Humes, Volneys, Yoltaires, and Bolingbrokes, — who have compassed sea and
land, and pressed every element into their service, in attempting to show
that the facts and doctrines of the Bible traverse those great fixed laws
which regulate human belief. No scientific question was ever yet settled
dogmatically, or ever will. If the question be one in the science of
numbers, it must be settled arithmetically; if in the science of geometry,
it must be settled mathematically; if in the science of chemistry, it must
be settled experimentally. The Church of Rome strove hard, in the days of
Galileo, to settle an astronomical question theologically; and did its
utmost to commit the Bible to the belief that the earth occupies a central
position in the system, and that the sun performs a daily revolution around
it: but the astronomical question, maugre the Inquisition, refused to be
settled other than astronomically. And all now believe that the central
position is occupied, not by the earth, but by the sun; and that it is the
lesser body that moves round the larger, — not the larger that moves round
the lesser. What would have been the result, had Rome, backed by the
Franciscan, succeeded in pledging the verity of Scripture to a false
astronomy? The astronomical facts of the case would have, of course,
remained unchanged. The severe truth of geometry would have lent its
demonstrative aid to establish their real character. All the higher minds
would have become convinced for themselves, and the great bulk of the lower,
at second hand, that the Scripture pledge had been given, not to scientific
truth, but to scientific error; and the Bible, the extent to which it stood
committed, would be justly regarded as occupying no higher a level than the
Shaster or Koran. Infidelity never yet succeeded in placing Revelation in a
position so essentially false as that in which it was placed by Rome, to the
extent of Rome’s ability, in the case of Galileo.
Now, ultimately at least, as men have yielded to astronomy
the right of decision in all astronomical questions, must they resign to
geology the settlement of all geological ones. I do not merely speak of
what ought, but of what assuredly must and will be. The successive geologic
systems and formations, with all their organic contents, are as real
existences as the sun itself; and it is quite as possible to demonstrate
their true place and position, relative and absolute. And so long as certain
fixed laws control and regulate human belief, certain inevitable 29
deductions must and will continue to be based on the fact* which these
systems and formations furnish. Geologists of the higher order differ among
themselves, on certain minutiae of their science, to nearly as great an
extent as the Episcopalian differs in matters ecclesiastical from the
Presbyterian, or the Baptist or Independent from both. But their differences
militate no more against the great conclusions in which they all agree, than
the theological differences of the Protestant churches against the
credibility of those leading truths of Christianity on which all true
churches are united. And one of these great conclusions respects the
incalculably vast antiquity of the earth on which we dwell. It seems scarce
possible to over-estimate the force and weight of the evidence already
expiscated on this point; and almost every new discovery adds to its cogency
and amount. That sectional thickness of the earth’s crust in which, mile
beneath mile, the sedimentary strata are divided into many-colored and
variously-composed systems and formations, and which abounds from top to
bottom in organic remains, forms but the mere pages of the register. And it
is rather the nature and order of the entries with which these pages are
crowded, than the amazing greatness of their number, or the enormous extent
of the space which they occupy (rather more than five miles), — though both
have, of course, their weight, — that compel belief in the remoteness of the
period to which the record extends. Let me attempt elucidating the point by
a simple illustration.
In a well-kept English register, continuous from a distant
antiquity to the present time, there are many marks demonstrative of the
remoteness of the era to which it reaches, besides the bulk and number of
the volumes which compose it, and the multitude of the entries which they
contain. In an earlier volume we find the ancient Saxon character united to
that somewhat meagre yet not inexpressive language in which Alfred wrote and
conversed. In a succeeding volume, the Saxon, both in word and letter, gives
place to Norman French. The Norman French yields, in turn, in a yet
succeeding one, to a massive black-letter character, and an antique
combination of both tongues, which we term the genuine old English. And
then, in after volumes, the old English gradually modernizes and improves,
till we recognize it as no longer old : we see, too, the heavy black-letter
succeeded by the lighter Italian hand, at first doggedly stiff and upright,
but anon bent elegantly forward along the line. And in these various
successions of character and language we recognize the marks of a genuine
antiquity. Nor, in passing from these, — the mere externals of the register,
— to the register itself, are the evidences less conclusive. In reading
upwards, we find the existing families of the district preceded by families
now extinct, and these, in turn, by families which had become extinct at
earlier and still earlier periods. Names disappear, — titles alter, — the
boundaries of lands vary as the proprietors change, — smaller estates are
now absorbed by larger, and now larger divide into smaller. There are traces
not a few of customs long abrogated and manners become obsolete; and we see
paroxysms of local revolution indicated by a marked grouping of events of
corresponding character, that assume peculiar force and significancy when we
collate the record with the general history of the kingdom. Could it be
possible, I ask, to believe, regarding such a many-volumed register, — with
all its various styles, characters, and languages, — its histories of the
rise and fall of families, and its records of conquests, settlements,
and revolutions, — that it had been all hastily written at a heat on a
Saturday night, some three or four weeks ago, without any intention to
deceive on the part of the writer, — nay, without any intention even of
making a register at all ? The mere bulk and number of the volumes would
militate sadly against any such supposition; but the peculiar character and
order of their contents would militate against it more powerfully still.
Now, the geologic register far excels any human record, in
the number and significancy of the marks of a strictly analogous cast which
demonstrate its vast antiquity. As we ascend higher, and yet higher, the
characters of the document strangely alter. In the Tertiary ages we find an
evident approximation to the existing style. An entire change takes place as
we enter the Secondary period. A change equally marked characterizes the
Palaeozoic eras. Up till the commencement of the Cretaceous system, two
great orders of fish, — the Ctenoid and Cycloid, — fish furnished with horny
scales and bony skeletons, — comprise, as they now do, the great bulk of the
finny inhabitants of the waters. But immediately beyond the Cretaceous group
these two orders wholly disappear, and the Ganoid and Placoid orders — fish
that wear an armature of bone outside, and whose skeletons are chiefly
cartilaginous — take their places. Up till the period of the Magnesian
Limestone, the homocercal or two-lobed type of fish-tail greatly
preponderates, as at the present time; but in all the older formations, —
those of the immensely extended Palaeozoic period, — not a single tail of
this comparatively modern type is to be found, and the heterocercal or
one-sided tail obtains exclusively. Down till the deposition of the Chalk
has taken place, all the true woods are coniferae of the Pine or Araucarian
families. After the Chalk has been deposited, hard-wood trees, of the
dicotyledonous order, are largely introduced. Down till the times of the
Magnesian Limestone, plants of an inferior order — ferns, stigmaria,
club-mosses, and calamites — attain to a size so gigantic that they rival
the true denizens of the forest; whereas with the dawn of the Secondary
period we find the immaturities of the vegetable kingdom reduced to a bulk
and. size that consort better with the palpable inferiority of their rank in
creation. And not only are the styles and characters of the several periods
of the geologic register thus various, but, as in the English register of my
illustration, the record of the rise and fall of septs and families is
singularly distinct. The dynasties of the crustacean, the fish, the reptile,
and the mam-miferous quadruped, succeed each other in an order as definite
as the four great empires in the “ Ancient History ” of Rollin. Nor are the
periods when single families arose and sank less carefully noted. The
trilobite family came into existence with the first beginnings of the
Palaeozoic division, and ceased at its close. The belemnite family began and
became extinct with the Secondary formations. The ammonite and gryphite, in
all their many species, did not outlive the deposition of the Chalk. There
is one definite period, — the close of the Palaeozoic era, — at which the
Brachiopoda, singularly numerous throughout many previous formations, and
consisting of many great families, suddenly, with the exception of a single
genus, drop off and disappear. There is another definite period, — the close
of the Secondary era, — at which the Cephalopoda, with nearly as few
exceptions, disappear as suddenly. At this latter period, too, the
Enaliosaurians, so long the monster tyrants of the ocean, cease forever, and
the Cetacea take their places: the be-paddled reptiles go off the stage, and
the be-paddled mammalia come on. But perhaps the most striking series of
facts of this nature in the whole range of geological literature, is that
embodied in the table affixed by Agassiz to his great work on fossil fish.
This singularly interesting document — which, like the annual
balance-sheet of a great mercantile house or banking company, that comprises
in its comparatively few lines of figures the result of every arithmetical
calculation made by the firm during the twelvemonth — condenses, in a single
page, the results of the naturalist’s observations in his own peculiar
department for many years. It marks at what periods the great families of
the extinct fishes began, and when they ceased, and at what periods those
great families arose which continue to exist in the present state of things.
The facts are exceedingly curious. Some of the families are, we find, of
comparatively brief standing, and occupy but small space in the record, —
others sweep across well-nigh the whole geological scale. Some come into
existence with the beginning of a system, and cease at its close, — others
continue to exist throughout almost all the systems together. The salmon and
herring families, though the species were different, lived in the ages of
the Chalk, and ever since, throughout the periods of the Tertiary; while the
cod and haddock family pertains, on the contrary, to but the existing scene
of things. The laspides — that family to which the Pterichthys and Coccosteus belong
— were restricted to a single system, the Old Red Sandstone; nor had its
contemporaries the J — that family to which the Osteolepis and Diplopterus belong
— a longer term ; whereas the Cosla, — the family of the Holoptychius, Glyptolepis, and Asterolepis, —
while it began as early, passed down to the times of the Chalk, — and the Ces-tracions—even
a more ancient family still—continue to have their living representatives.
It is held by the Dean of York that the fact of the Noachian Deluge may be
made satisfactorily to account for all the geologic phenomena. Alas! No
cataclysm, however great or general, could have produced diversities of
style, each restricted to a determinate period, and which become more
broadly apparent the more carefully we collate the geologic register as it
exists in one country with the same register as it exists in another. No
cataclysm could have arranged an infinitude of entries in exact
chronological order, or assigned to the tribes and families which it
destroyed and interred distinct consecutive periods and formations. It is
but common sense to hold that the Deluge could not have produced an ancient
church-yard, — such as the Grayfriars of Edinburgh, — with its series of
tombstones in all their successive styles, — Gothic, Elizabethan, Roman, and
Grecian, — complete for many centuries. It could not have been the author of
the old English register of my illustration. Geologists affirm regarding the
Flood, merely to the effect that it could not have written Hume’s History of
England, nor even composed and set into type Mr. Burke’s British Peerage.
Such are a few of the difficulties with which the
anti-geologist has to contend. That leading fact of the Deluge, — the ark, —
taken in connection with the leading geologic fact that the organic remains
of the various systems, from the Lower Silurian to the Chalk inclusive, are
the remains of extinct races and tribes, forms a difficulty of another kind.
The fact of the ark satisfactorily shows that man in his present state has
been contemporary with but one creation. The preservation by sevens and by
pairs of the identical races amid which he first started into existence
superseded the necessity of a creation after the Flood; and so it is the
same tribes of animals, wild and domestic, which share with him in his place
of habitation now, that surrounded him in Paradise. But the Palaeozoic,
Secondary, and older Tertiary animals, are of races and tribes altogether
diverse. We find among them not even a single species which sheltered in the
ark. The races contemporary with man were preserved to bear him company in
his pilgrimage, and to minister to his necessities; but those strange races,
buried, in many instances, whole miles beneath the surface, and never seen
save imbedded in rock and transformed into stone, could not have been his
contemporaries. They belong, as their place and appearance demonstrate, to
periods long anterior. Nor can it be rationally held, that of those anterior
periods revelation should have given us any history. They lie palpably
beyond the scope of the sacred record. On what principle, seeing it is
silent on the contemporary creations of Mars, Venus, and Jupiter, ought it
to have spoken on the consecutive creations of the Silurian, Carboniferous,
and Oolitic periods? Why should it promulgate the truths of Geology, seeing
that those of Astronomy it has withheld? Man everywhere has entertained the
expectation of a book, Heaven-inspired, that should teach him what God is,
and what God demands of him. The sacred books of all the false religions,
from those of Zoroaster and the Brahmins to those of Mahomet and the
Mormons, are just so many evidences that the expectation exists. And the
Bible is its fulfilment. But man has entertained no such expectation of a
revelation from God of the truths of science; nor is it according to the
economy of Providence,— the economy manifested in the slow and gradual
development of the species,—that any such expectation should be realized.
The “Principia” of Newton is an uninspired volume; and only the natural
faculties were engaged in the discovery of James Watt.
But it is not urged, it may be said, that the Scriptures
reveal geologic truth as such; it is merely urged that geologists must not
traverse Scripture statements respecting the age of the earth, as revealed
for purely religious purposes by God to Moses. But did God reveal the
earth’s age to Moses ? Not directly, surely, or else men equally sound in
the faith would not be found lengthening or shortening the brief period
which intervenes between Adam and Abraham, just as they adopt the Hebrew or
Septuagint chronology, by nearly a thousand years. Here, however, it may be
said that we are in doubt regarding the real chronology, not because God has
not indirectlyrevealed it, but because man, in either the Hebrew or
Samaritan record, has vitiated the revelation. Most true : still, however,
the doubt is doubt. But did God reveal the earth’s age,either directly or
otherwise? Let us examine the narrative. “In the beginning God created the
heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form and void; and darkness
was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of
the waters. And God said, Let there be light, and there was light.” Now, let
it be admitted, for the argument’s sake, that the earth existed in the dark
and void state described here only six days, of twenty four hours each,
before the creation of man ; and that the going forth of the Spirit and the
breaking out of the light, on this occasion, were events immediately
introductory to the creation to which we ourselves belong. And what then? It
is evident, from the continuity of the narrative in the passage, say the
anti-geologists, that there could have been no creations on this earth prior
to the present one. Nay, not so : for aught that appears in the narrative,
there might have been many. Between the creation of the matter of which the
earth is composed, as enunciated in the first verse, and the earth’s void
and chaotic state, as described in the second, a thousand creations might
have intervened. As may be demonstrated from even the writings of Moses
himself, the continuity of a narrative furnishes no evidence whatever that
the facts which it records were continuous.
Take, for instance, the following passage. “There went out a
man of the house of Levi, and took to wife a daughter of Levi. And the woman
conceived and bare a son; and when she saw him that he was a goodly child,
she hid him three months. And when she could not longer hide him, she took
for him an ark of bulrushes, and daubed it with slime and with pitch, and
put the child therein; and she laid it in the flags by the river’s brink.”
[I owe this passage, in its hearing on the opening narrative in Genesis, to
the Rev. Alexander Stewart, of Cromarty, — for fifteen years my parish
minister, and one of decidedly the most original-minded men and most
accomplished theologians his country has ever produced. And he, I may add,
like all careful students of Scripture of the higher calibre, can see no
irreconcilable difference between Bible truth and the great facts of the
geologist.] The narrative here is quite as continuous as in the first three
verses of Genesis. In the order of the relation, the marriage of the parents
is as directly followed in the one case by the birth of a son, as the
creation of matter is followed in the other by the first beginnings of the
existing state of things. The reader has as slight grounds to infer, in the
one case, that between the marriage of the parents and the birth of the
child the births of several other children of the family had taken place, as
to infer, in the other, that between the creation of matter and the
subsisting creation there had taken place several other creations. And if
the continuity of the narrative would not justify the inference in the one
case, just as little can it justify it in the other. We know, however, from
succeeding portions of Scripture, that the father and mother of this
child had several other children born to them in the period that intervened
between their marriage and his birth. They had a son named Aaron, who had
been born at least two years previous ; and a daughter, Miriam, who was old
enough at the time to keep sedulous watch over the little ark of bulrushes,
and to suggest to Pharaoh’s daughter that it might be well for her to go and
call one of the Hebrew women to be nurse to the child. It was essential, in
the course of Scripture narrative, that we should be introduced to
personages so famous as Aaron and Miriam, and who were destined to enact
parts so important in the history of the Church ; and so we have been
introduced to them. And had it been as necessary for the pu ’poses of
revelation that reference should have been made to tne intervening creations
in the one case, as to the intervening births in the other, we would
doubtless have heard of them too. But, as has been already said, it was not
so necessary; it was not necessary at all. The ferns and lepidodendra of the
Coal Measures are as little connected with the truths which influence our
spiritual state, as the vegetable productions of Mercury or of Pallas; the
birds and^reptiles of the Oolite, as the unknown animals that inhabit the
plains or disport in the rivers of Saturn or Uranus. And so revelation is as
silent on the geological phenomena as on the contemporary creations, — on
the periods and order of systems and formations, as on the relative
positions of the earth and sun, or the places and magnitudes of the planets.
But organic remains may, it is urged, have been created such;
and the special miracle through which the gourd of Jonah, though it must
have seemed months old, sprung up in a single night, and the general miracle
through which the trees of Paradise must have appeared, even on the first
evening of their creation, half a century old, have been adduced to show
that the globe, notwithstanding its marks of extreme antiquity, may have
been produced with all these marks stamped upon it, as if in the mint. “ The
very day when the ocean dashed its first waves on the shore,” says
Chateaubriand, “it bathed, let us not doubt, rocks already worn by the
breakers, and beaches strewn with the wrecks of shells.” — “For aught that
appears in the bowels of the earth,” said the “Record” newspaper, some two
years ago, in adopting this peculiar view, as expressed by a worthy
Presbyterian minister, “the world might have been called into existence
yesterday.” Let us just try whether, as creatures to whom God has given
reason, and who cannot acquire facts without drawing inferences, we can
believe the assertion; and ascertain how much this curious principle of
explaining geologic fact actually involves.
“The earth, for anything that appears to the contrary, may
have been made yesterday!” We stand in the middle of an ancient
burying-ground in a northern district. The monuments of the dead, lichened
and gray, rise thick around us; and there are fragments of mouldering bones
lying scattered amid the loose dust that rests under them, in dark recesses
impervious to the rain and the sunshine. We dig into the soil below: here is
a human skull, and there numerous other well-known bones of the human
skeleton, — vertebrae, ribs, arm and leg bones, with the bones of the breast
and pelvis. Still, as we dig, the bony mass accumulates; —we disinter
portions, not of one, but of many skeletons, some comparatively fresh, some
in a state of great decay; and with the bones there mingle fragments of
coffins, with the wasted tinsel-mounting in some instances still attached,
and the rusted nails still sticking in the joints. We continue to dig, and,
at a depth to which the sexton almost never penetrates, find a stratum of
pure sea-sand, and then a stratum of the sea-shells common on the
neighboring coast, — in especial, oyster, muscle, and cockle shells. It may
be mentioned, in the passing, that the churchyard to which I refer, though
at some little distance from the sea, is situated on one of the raised
beaches of the north of Scotland; and hence the shells. We dig a little
further, and reach a thick bed of sandstone, which we penetrate, and beneath
which we find a bed of impure lime, richly charged with the remains of fish
of strangely antique forms. “The earth, for anything that appears to the
contrary, might have been made yesterday!” Do appearances such as these
warrant the inference? Do these human skeletons, in all their various stages
of decay, appear as if they had been made yesterday? Was that bit of coffin,
with the soiled tinsel on the one side, and the corroded nail sticking out
of the other, made yesterday? Was yonder skull, instead of having ever
formed part of a human head, created yesterday, exactly the
repulsive-looking sort of thing we see it? Indisputably not. Such is the
nature of the human mind, — such the laws that regulate and control human
belief, — that in the very existence of that churchyard we do and must
recognize positive proof that the world was not made yesterday.
But can we stop in our process of inference at the mouldering
remains of the churchyard? Can we hold that the skull was not created a mere
skull, and yet hold that the oyster, muscle, and cockle shells beneath are
not the remains of molluscous animals, but things originally created in
exactly their present state, as empty shells? The supposition is altogether
absurd. Such is the constitution of our minds, that we must as certainly
hold yonder oyster-shell to have once formed part of a mollusc, as we hold
yonder skull to have once formed part of a man. And if we cannot stop at the
skeleton, how stop at the shells? Why not pass on to the fish? The evidence
of design is quite as irresistible in them as in the human or the molluscous
remains above. We can still see the scales which covered them occupying
their proper places, with all their nicely-designed bars, hooks, and nails
of attachment: the fins which propelled them through the water, with the
multitudinous pseudo-joints, formed to impart to the rays the proper
elasticity, lie widely spread on the stone; the sharp-pointed teeth,
constructed like those of fish generally, rather for the purpose of holding
fast slippery substances than of mastication, still bristle in their jaws;
nay, the very plates, spines, and scales of the fish on which they had fed,
still lie undigested in their abdomens. We cannot stop short at the shells :
if the human skull was not created a mere skull, nor the shell a mere dead
shell, then the fossil fish could not have been created a mere fossil. There
is no broken link in the chain at which to take our stand; and yet, having
once recognized the fishes as such. — having recognized them as the remains
of animals, and not as stones that exist in their original state, — we stand
committed to all the organisms of the geological scale.
But we limit the Divine power, it may be said: could not the
Omnipotent First Cause have created all the fossils of the earth, vegetable
and animal, in their fossil state ? Yes, certainly; the act of their
creation, regarded simply as an act of power, does not and cannot transcend
his infinite ability. He could have created all the burying-grounds of the
earth, with all their broken and wasted contents, brute and human. He could
have created all the mummies of Mexico and of Egypt as such, and all the
skeletons of the catacombs of Paris. It would manifest, however, but1 little
reverence for his character to compliment his infinite power at the expense
of his infinite wisdom. It would be doing no honor to his name to regard him
as a creator of dead skeletons, mummies, and churchyards. Nay, we could not
recognize him as such, without giving to the winds all those principles of
common reason which in his goodness he has imparted to us for our guidance
in the ordinary affairs of life. In this, as in that higher sense adduced by
our Saviour, “ God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.” In the
celebrated case of Eugene Aram, the skeleton of his victim, the murdered
Clark, was found in a cave; but how, asked the criminal, in his singularly
ingenious and eloquent defence, could that skeleton be known to be Clark’s ?
The cave, he argued, had once been a hermitage; and in times past hermitages
had been places not only of religious retirement, but of burial also. “ And
it has scarce or ever been heard of,” he continued, “but that every cell now
known contains or contained those relics of humanity, — some mutilated, some
entire. Give me leave to remind the Court that here sat solitary sanctity,
and here the hermit and the anchorite hoped that repose for their bones when
dead, they here enjoyed when living. Every place conceals such remains. In
fields, on hills, on highway sides, on wastes, on commons, lie frequent and
unsuspected bones. But must some of the living be made answerable for all
the bones that earth has concealed and chance exposed?” Such were the
reasonings, on this count, of Eugene Aram; and it behooved the jury that sat
upon him in judgment to bestow upon them their careful consideration. But
how very different might not his line of argument have been, had the
conclusions of the anti-geologist squared with the principles of human
belief! If the fossil exuviae of a fish, or the fossil skeleton of a
reptile, may have never belonged to either a reptile or a fish, then the
skeleton of a man may have never belonged to a man. No more could be argued,
Aram might have said, from the finding of a human skeleton in the floor of a
cave, than from the finding of a pebble or a piece of rock in the floor of a
cave. So far from being justified in inferring from it that a murder had
been perpetrated, a jury could not have so much as inferred from it that a
human creature had existed.
Is the anti-geologist, I would fain ask, prepared to give up
the great argument founded on design, as asserted and illustrated by all the
master-minds who have written on the Evidences. Is he resolved, in the vain
hope of bearing down the geologist, to make a full surrender to the infidel
? Let us mark how Paley’s well-known illustration of the watch found on the
moor would apply in this controversy. Fronrthe design exhibited in the
construction of the watch, the existence of a designer is inferred; whereas,
from a stone found on the same moor, in which no such marks of design are
apparent, the Archdeacon urges that no such inference regarding the
existence of a designer could be drawn. But what would be thought of the man
who could assert that the watch, with all its seeming design, was not a
watch, but a stone; and that, notwithstanding its spring, its wheels, and
its index, it had never been intended to measure time? What could be said of
a sturdily avowed belief in a design not designed, and not the work of
a designer, — in a watch furnished with all the parts of a watch, that is,
notwithstanding, a mere stone, and occupies just its proper place when lying
among the other stones of a moor ? What could be said of such a belief,
paraded not simply as a belief, but actually as of the nature of
reasoning, and fitted to bear weight in controversy ? And yet, such is the
position of the anti-geologist, who sees in the earth, with all its fossils,
no evidence that it might not have been created yesterday. For obvious it
is, that in whatever has been designed, fitness of parts bears reference to
the purposed object which the design subserves; and that if there be no
purposed object, there can exist no fitness of parts in relation to it, and,
in reality, no design. The analogy drawn in the case from the miracle of
creation is no analogy at all. It is not contrary to the laws which control
human belief, that the first races of every succeeding creation should have
been called into existence in a state of full development; nay, it is in
palpable and harmonious accordance with these laws. It is necessary that the
animal which had no parents to care or provide for it should come into
existence in a state of maturity sufficient to enable it to care and provide
for itself; it is equally necessary that the contemporary vegetable, its
food, should be created in a condition that fitted it for being food. Had
the first man and first woman been created mere infants, they would, humanly
speaking, have shared the fate of the “babes in the wood.” Had the
productions of the vegetable kingdom been created in an analogous state of
immaturity, “the horse,” to borrow from an old proverb, “would have died
when the grass was growing.” But it is contrary to the laws which control
human belief, that the allwise Creator should be a maker of churchyards full
of the broken debris of carcasses,—of skeletons never purposed to compose
the framework of animals, — of watches never intended to do aught than
perform the part of stones.*
In the pages of no writer is the argument drawn from the
miracle of creation — if argument it may be termed — at once so ingeniously
asserted and so exquisitely adorned, as in the pages of Chateaubriand. The
passage is comparatively little known in this country, and so I quote it
entire from the translation of a friend.
“We approach the last objection concerning the modern origin
of the globe. *The earth,’ it is said, *is an old nurse, whose decrepitude
everything announces. Examine its fossils, its marbles, its granites, and
you will decipher its innumerable years, marked by circle, by stratum, or by
branch, like those of the serpent by his rattles, the horse by his teeth, or
the stag by his horns. ’
“This difficulty has been a hundred times solved by this
answer,— * God should have created, and without question has created, the
world, with all the marks of antiquity and completeness which we now see.’
“Indeed, it is probable that the Author of nature at first
planted old forests and young shoots, — that animals were produced, some
full of days, others adorned with all the graces of infancy. Oaks, as they
pierced the fruitful soil, would bear at once the forsaken nest of the crow
and the young posterity of the dove; the caterpillar was chrysalis and
butterfly; the insect, fed on the herb, suspended its golden egg amid the
forests, or trembled in the wavy air; the bee which had lived but a single
morning I confess it grieves me more than if Puseyism were the offender, to
see a paper such as the London “Record,” — reckoned its ambrosia by
generations of flowers. We must believe that the sheep was not without its
young, the fawn without its little ones,— that the thickets hid
nightingales, astonished with their own first music, in warming the fleeting
hopes of their first loves. If the world had not been at once young and old,
the grand, the serious, the moral, would disappear from nature ; for these
sentiments belong essentially to the antique. Every scene would have lost
its wonders. The ruined rock could not have hung over the abyss ; the woods,
despoiled of every chance appearance, would not have displayed that touching
disorder of trees bending over their roots, and of trunks leaning over the
courses of the rivers. Inspired thoughts, venerable sounds, magic voices,
the sacred gloom of forests, would vanish with the vaults which served them
for retreats ; and the solitudes of heaven and earth would remain naked and
disenchanted, in losing those columns of oak which unite them. The very day
when the ocean dashed its first waves on the shores, it bathed — let us not
doubt — rocks already worn by the breakers, beaches strewn with the wrecks
of shells, and headlands which sustained against the assaults of the waters
the crumbling shores of earth. Without this inherent old age, there would
have been neither pomp nor majesty in the work of the Eternal; and, what
could not possibly be, nature in its innocence would have been less
beautiful than it is to-day amid its corruption. An insipid infancy of
plants, animals, and elements, would have crowned a world without poetry.
But God was not so tasteless a designer of the bowers of Eden as infidels
pretend. The man king was himself born thirty years old, in order to accord
in his majesty with the ancient grandeur of his new kingdom ; and his
companion reckoned sixteen springs which she had not lived, that she might
harmonize with flowers, birds, innocence, love, and all the youthful part of
the creation.”
This is unquestionably fine writing, and it contains a
considerable amount of general truth. But not a particle of the true does it
contain in connection with the one point which the writer sets himself to
establish. There exists, as has been shown, a reason, palpable in the nature
of things, why creation, in even its earliest dawn, should not have
exhibited an insipid infancy of plants and animals ; the animals, otherwise,
could not have survived, and thus the great end of creation would have been
defeated. But though there exists an obvious reason for the creation of pacy
of England, — committing itself to the anti-geologists on this question. At
the meeting of the British Association which the full-grown and the mature,
there exists no reason whatever for the creation of the ruined and the
broken. It is a very indifferent argument to allege that the poetic
sentiment demanded the production of fractured shells on the shores, or of
deserted crows’ nests in the trees. If sentiment demanded the creation of
broken shells that had never belonged to molluscous animals, how much more
imperatively must it have demanded the creation of broken human skeletons
that had never belonged to men ! or, if it rendered necessary the creation
of deserted crows’ nests, how much more urgent the necessity for the
creation of deserted palaces and temples, sublime in their solitude, or of
desolate cities partially buried in the sands of the desert! There is a vast
deal more of poetry in the ancient sepulchres of Thebes and of Luxor, with
their silent millions of the embalmed dead, than in the comminuted shells of
sea-beaches ; and in Palmyra and the pyramids, than in deserted crows’
nests. Nor would the creation of the one class of productions be in any
degree less probable, or less according to the principles of human belief,
than the other. And mark the inevitable effects on human conduct! The man
who honestly held with Chateaubriand in this passage, and was consistent in
following out to their legitimate consequences the tenets which it embodies,
could not sit as a juryman in either a coroner’s inquest or a trial for
murder, conducted on circumstantial evidence. If he held that an old crow’s
nest might have been called into existence as such, how could he avoid
holding that an ancient human dwelling might not have been called into
existence as such ? If he held that a broken patella or whelk-shell might
have been created a broken shell, how could he avoid holding that a human
skull, fractured like that of the murdered Clark, might not have been
created a broken skull ? To him Paley’s watch, picked up on a moor, could
not appear as other than merely a curious stone, charged with no evidence,
in the peculiarity of its construction, that it had been intended to measure
time. The entire passage is eminently characteristic of that magnificent
work of imagination, “The Genius of Christianity,” in which Chateaubriand
sets himself to reconvert to Romanism the infidelity of France. He ever
attempts dealing by the reasoning faculty in his countrymen, as the
Philistines of old dealt by the Jewish champion: instead of meeting it in
the open field, and with the legitimate weapons, he sends forth the
exquisitely beautiful Delilah of his fancy to cajole and set it asleep, and
then bind it as with green withes held at York in 1844, the puerilities of
Dean Cockburn were happily met with and exposed by the Rev. Mr. Sedgwick;
and it was on that occasion that the “ Record,” after pronouncing it no
slight satire on this accomplished man of science, that one of the members
present should have eulogized his “ boldness as a clergyman,” adopted the
assertion, — can it be called belief? — that for aught which appears to the
contrary, “the world might have been made yesterday.” Attempts to support
the true in religion by the untrue in science, manifest, I am afraid,
exceedingly little wisdom. False witnesses, when engaged in just causes,
serve but to injure them; and certainly neither by anti-geologists nor at
the Old Bailey should “ kissing the book” be made a preliminary to
supporting the untrue. I do not find that the truly great theologians of the
day manifest any uneasy jealousy of geological discovery. Geologists,
expatiating in their proper province, have found nothing antagonistic in the
massive intellect and iron logic of Dr. Cunningham, of Edinburgh, nor in the
quick comprehensiveness and elastic vigor of Dr. Candlish. Chalmers has
already given his deliverance on this science, — need it be said after what
manner? — and in a recent number of the “ North British Review ” may be
found the decision regarding it of a kindred spirit, the author of the
“Natural History of Enthusiasm.” “The reader,” says this distinguished man,
in adverting to certain influential causes that in the present day widely
affect theologic opinion and the devotional feeling, “will know that we here
refer to that indirect modification of religious notions and sentiments,
that results insensibly from the spread and consolidation of the modern
sister sciences, Astronomy and Geology, which, immeasurably enlarging, as
they do, our conceptions of the universe in its two elements of space and
time, expel a congeries of narrow errors, heretofore regarded as
unquestionable truths, and open before us at once a Chart and a History of
the Dominions of Infinite Power and Wisdom. We shall hasten to exclude the
supposition,” he continues, “that, in thus mentioning- the relation of the
modern sciences to Christianity we are thinking of anything so small and
incidental as are the alleged discrepancies between the terms of Biblical
history, in certain instances, and the positive evidence of science. All
such discordances, whether real or apparent, will find the proper means of
adjustment readily and finally in due time. We have no anxieties on the
subject. Men ‘easily shaken in mind’ will rid themselves of the atoms of
faith which perhaps they once possessed, by the means of ‘difficulties’ such
as these. But it is not from causes so superficial that serious danger to
the faith of a people is to be apprehended.” The passages which follow this
very significant one are eminently beautiful and instructive; but enough is
here given to indicate the judgment of the writer on the point at issue.
There is, I doubt not, a day coming, when writers on the
evidences of the two Theologies, Natural and Revealed, will be content to
borrow largely from the facts of the geologist. Who among living men may
anticipate the thinking of future generations, or indicate in what direction
new avenues into the regions of thought shape yet be opened up by the key of
unborn genius? The births of the human intellect, like those which take
place in the human family, await their predestined time. There are, however,
two distinct theologic vistas on the geologic field, that seem to open up of
themselves. Infidelity has toiled hard to obviate the necessity of a First
Gjeat Cause, by the fiction of an Infinite Series; and Metaphysic Theology
has labored hard, in turn, to prove the fiction untenable and absurd. But
metaphysicians, though specially assisted in the work by such men as Bentley
and Robert Hall, have not been successful. They have, indeed, shown that an
infinite series is, from many points of view, wholly inc, but they have not
shown that it is impossible ;and its inconceivability merely attaches to it
in its character as an infinity contemplated entire. Exactly the same degree
of inconceivability attaches to “the years of the Eternal,” if we attempt
comprehending the eternity of Deity otherwise than in the progressive mode
which Locke so surely demonstrates to be the only possible one: we can but
take our stand at some definite period, and realize the possibility of
measuring backwards, along the course of His existence for ever and ever,
and have at every succeeding stage an undiminished infinitude of work before
us. Metaphysic Theology furnishes no real argument against the “Infinite
Series” of the atheist. But Geology supplies the wanting link, and laughs at
the idle fiction of a race of men without beginning. Infinite series of
human creatures! Why, man is but of yesterday. The fish enjoyed life during
many creations, — the bird and reptile during not a few, — the marsupial
quadruped ever since the times of the Oolite, — the sagacious elephant in at
least the latter ages of the Tertiary. But man belongs to the present
creation, and to it exclusively. He came into being late on the Saturday
evening. He has come, as the great moral instincts of his nature so surely
demonstrate, to prepare for the sacred to-morrow. In the chariot of God’s
providence, as seen by the prophet in vision, there are wheels within
wheels, — a complex duality of type and symbol: and there may possibly exist
a similar complexity of arrangement, — a similar duality of typical plan, —
in the Divine institution of the Sabbath. Its place, as the seventh day, may
bear reference, not only to that special subordinate week in which the
existing scene of things was called into being, but also to that great
geologic week, within which is comprised the entire scheme of creation.
The second theological vista into the geologic field opens up
a still more striking prospect. There is a sad oppressiveness in that sense
of human littleness which the great truths of astronomy have so direct a
tendency to inspire. Man feels himself lost amid the sublime magnitudes of
creation, — a mere atom in the midst of infinity; and trembles lest the
scheme of revelation should be found too large a manifestation of the Divine
care for so tiny an ephemera. Now, I am much mistaken if the truths of
Geology have not a direct tendency to restore him to his true place. When
engaged some time since in perusing one of the sublimest philosophic poems
of modern times, — the “Astronomical Discourses” of Dr. Chalmers, — there
occurred to me a new argument that might be employed against the infidel
objection which the work was expressly written to remove. The infidel points
to the planets ; and, reasoning from an analogy which, on other than
geologic data, the Christian cannot challenge, asks whether it be not more
than probable that each of these is, like our own earth, not only a scene of
creation, but also a home of rational, accountable creatures. And then
follows the objection, as fully stated by Dr. Chalmers: — “Does not the
largeness of that field which astronomy lays open to the view of modern
science throw a suspicion over the truth of the Gospel history? and how
shall we reconcile the greatness of that wonderful movement which was made
in heaven for the redemption of fallen man, with the comparative meanness
and obscurity of our species? Geology, when the doctor wrote, was in a state
of comparative infancy. It has since been largely developed, and we have
been introduced, in consequence, to the knowledge of some five or six
different creations, of which this globe was the successive scene ere the
present creation was called into being. At the time the “Astronomical
Discourses ” were published, the infidel could base his analogy on his
knowledge of but one creation, — that to which we ourselves belong; whereas
we can now base our analogy on the knowledge of at least six creations, the
various productions of which we can handle, examine, and compare. And how,
it may be asked, does this immense extent of basis affect the objection with
which Dr. Chalmers has grappled so vigorously? It annihilates it completely.
You argue — may not the geologist say to the infidel — that yonder planet,
because apparently a scene of creation like our own, is also a home of
accountable creatures like ourselves ? But the extended analogy furnished by
geologic science is full against you. Exactly so might it have been argued
regarding our own earth during the early creation represented by the Lower
Silurian system, and yet the master-existence of that extended period was a
crustacean. Exactly so might it have been argued regarding the earth during
the term of the creation represented by the Old Red Sandstone, and yet the
master-existence of that not less extended period" was a fish. During the
creation represented by the Carboniferous period, with all its rank
vegetation and green reflected light, the master-existence was a fish still.
During the creation of the Oolite, the master-existence was a reptile, a
bird, or a marsupial animal. During the creation of the Cretaceous period,
there was no further advance. During the creation of the Tertiary
formations, the master-existence was a mammiferous quadruped. It was not
until the creation to which we ourselves belong was called into existence,
that a rational being, born to anticipate a hereafter, was ushered upon the
scene. Suppositions such as yours would have been false in at least five out
of six instances; and if in five out of six comecutive creations there
existed no accountable agent, what shadow of reason can there be for holding
that a different arrangement obtains in five out of six porary creations?
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus, may have all their plants
and animals; and yet they may be as devoid of rational, accountable
creatures, as were the creations of the Silurian, Old Red Sandstone,
Carboniferous, Oolitic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary periods. They may be merely
some of the “many mansions” prepared in the “Father’s house ” for the
immortal creature of kingly destiny, made in the Father’s own image, to whom
this little world forms but the cradle and the nursery.
But the effect of this extended geologic basis may be
neutralized, — the infidel may urge, — by extending it yet a little further.
Why, he may ask, since we draw our analogies regarding what obtains in the
other planets from what obtains in our own, — why not conclude that each one
of them has also had its geologic eras and revolutions, — its Silurian, Old
Red Sandstone, Carboniferous, Oolitic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary periods; and
that now, contemporary with the creation of which man constitutes the
master-existence, they have all their fully matured creations headed by
rationality? Why not carry the analogy thus far? Simply, it may be
unhesitatingly urged in reply, because to carry it so far would be to carry
it beyond the legitimate bounds of analogy; and because analogy pursued but
a single step beyond the limits of its proper province, is sure always to
land the pursuer in error. Analogy is not identity. It is safe when it deals
with generals; very unsafe when it grapples with particulars.
Analogy, I repeat, is not identity. Let me attempt
illustrating the fact in its bearing on this question. We find reason to
conclude, as Isaac Taylor well expresses it, that “the planetary stuff is
all one and the same.” And we know to a certainty, that human nature,
wherever it exists in the present state of things, “ is all one and the same
” also. But when reasoning analogically regarding either, we can but
calculate on generals, not particulars. Man being all over the world a
constructive, house-making animal, and, withal, fond of ornament, one would
be quite safe in arguing analogically, from an acquaintance with Europe
alone, that wherever there is a civilized nation, architecture must exist as
an art. But analogy is not identity; and he would be egregiously in error
who would conclude that nations, civilized or semi-civilized, such as the
Chinese, Hindoos, or ancient Mexicans, possess not only an ornate
architecture, but an architecture divided into two great schools; and that
the one school has its Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian orders, and the other
school its Saxon, Norman, and Florid styles. In like manner, man’s nature
being everywhere the same, it may be safely inferred that man will
everywhere be an admirer of female beauty. But analogy is not identity; and
it would be a sad mistake to argue, just as one chanced to be resident in
Africa or England, that man everywhere admired black skins and fla|*noses,
or a fair complexion and features approximating to the Grecian type. And
instances of a resembling character may be multiplied without end. Analogy,
so sagacious a guide in its own legitimate field, is utterly blind and
senseless in the precincts that lie beyond it: it is nicely correct in its
generals, — perversely erroneous in its particulars; and no sooner does it
quit its proper province, the general, for the particular, than there start
up around it a multitude of solid objections, sternly to challenge it as a
trespasser on grounds not its own. How infer, we may well ask the infidel,
—admitting, for the argument’s sake, that all the planets come under the law
of geologic revolution, — how infer that they have all, or any of them save
our own earth, arrived at the stage of stability and ripeness essential to a
fully-developed creation, with a reasoning creature as its master-existence?
Look at the immense mass of Jupiter, and at that mysterious mantle of cloud,
barred and streaked in the direction of his trade winds, that forever
conceals his face. May not that dense robe of cloud be the ever-ascending
steam of a globe that, in consequence of its vast bulk, has not sufficiently
cooled down to be a scene of life at all ? Even the analogue of our Silurian
creation may not yet have begun in Jupiter. Look, again, at Mercury, where
it bathes in a flood of light, — enveloped within the sun’s halo, like some
forlorn smelter sweltering beside his furnace-mouth. A similar state of
things may obtain on the surface of that planet, from a different, though
not less adequate cause. But it is unnecessary to deal further with an
analogy so palpably overstrained, and whose aggressive place and position in
a province not its own so many unanswerable objections start up to elucidate
and fix.
The subject, however, is one which it would be difficult to
exhaust. The Christian has nothing to fear, the infidel nothing to hope,
from the great truths of geology. It is assuredly not through any
enlargement of man’s little apprehension of the Infinite and the Eternal
that man’s faith in the scheme of salvation by a Redeemer need be shaken. We
are incalculably more in danger from one unsubdued passion of our lower
nature, even the weakest and the least, than from all that the astronomer
has yet discovered in the depths of heaven, or the geologist in the bowels
of the earth. If one’s heart be right, it is surely a good, not an evil,
that one’s view should be expanded ; and geology is simply an expansion of
view in the direction of the eternity that hath gone by.
It is not less, but more sublime, to take one’s stand on the
summit of a lofty mountain, and thence survey the great ocean over many
broad regions, — over plains, and forests, and undulating tracts of hills,
and blue remote promontories, and far-seen islands, — than to look forth on
the same vast expanse from the level champaign, a single field’s breadth
from the shore. It can indeed be in part conceived from either point how
truly sublime an object that ocean is, — how the voyager may sail over it
day after day, and yet see no land rise on the dim horizon, — how its
numberless waves roll, and its great currents ceaselessly flow, and its
restless tides ever rise and fall, — how the lights of heaven are mirrored
on its solitary surface, solitary, though the navies of a world be there, —
and how, where plummet-line never sounded, and where life and light alike
cease, it reposes with marble-like density, and more than Egyptian
blackness, on the regions of a night on which there dawns no morning. But
the larger view inspires the profounder feeling. The emotion is less
overpowering, the conception less vivid, when from the humble flat we see
but a band of water rising to where the sky rests, over a narrow selvage of
land, than when, far beyond an ample breadth of foreground, and along an
extended line of coast, and streaked with promontories and mottled with
islands, and then spreading on and away in an ample plain of diluted blue,
to the far horizon, we see the great ocean in its true character, wide and
vast as human ken can descry. And such is the sublime prospect presented to
the geologist, as he turns him towards the shoreless ocean of the upper
eternity. The mere theologian views that boundless expanse from a flat, and
there lies in front of him but the narrow strip of the existing creation, —
a green selvage of a field’s breadth, fretted thick by the tombs of dead
men; while to the eye purged and strengthened by the euphrasy of science,
the many vast regions of other creations, — promontory beyond promontory, —
island beyond island, — stretch out in sublime succession into that
boundless ocean of eternity, whose sumless, irreducible area their vast
extent fails to lessen by a single handbreadth, — that awful, inconceivable
eternity, — God's past lifetime in its relation to God’s finite creatures, —
with relation to the infinite I AM himself, the indivisible element of the
eternal now. And there are thoughts which arise in connection with the
ampler prospect, and analogies, its legitimate produce, that have assuredly
no tendency to confine man’s aspirations, or cramp his cogitative energies,
within the narrow precincts of mediocre unbelief.- What mean the peculiar
place and standing of our species in the great geologic week ? There are
tombs everywhere : each succeeding region, as the eye glances upwards
towards the infinite abyss, is roughened with graves; the pages on which the
history of the past is written are all tombstones; the inscriptions,
epitaphs : we read the characters of the departed inhabitants in their
sepulchral remains. And all these unreasoning creatures of the bygone
periods —- these humbler pieces of workmanship produced early in the week —
died, as became their natures, without intelligence or hope. They perished
ignorant of the past, and unanticipative of the future, — knowing not of the
days that had gone before, nor recking of the days that were to come after.
But not such the character of the last born of God’s creatures, — the babe
that came into being late on the Saturday evening, and that now whines and
murmurs away its time of extreme infancy during the sober hours of
preparation for the morrow. Already have the quick eyes of the child looked
abroad upon all the past, and already has it noted why the passing time
should be a time of sedulous diligence and expectancy. The work-day week
draws fast to its close, and to-morrow is the Sabbath! |