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<h2> OUR FATHER. </h2>
<p>God's in his heaven,<br/>
All's right with the world.<br/>
—R. Browning, Pippa Passes.<br/></p>
<p>The Apostles' Creed, with which the Apostles never had anything to do,
begins with the words "I believe in God the Father Almighty." The last
word, "Almighty," is an adjective which we owe to the metaphysical genius
of Christian theologians; and the first words, "I believe," are the
customary shibboleth of the priests of every religion. For the rest, this
extract from the Creed is taken from the Lord's Prayer, which itself is a
brief selection from common Jewish prayers before the days of Jesus.
According to the evangelists—whoever <i>they</i> were—Jesus
taught his disciples to pray to "Our Father which art in Heaven for a
number of things which no one ever obtained by that process. Nevertheless
the petition is offered up, generation after generation, by millions of
Christians, whose hands are first folded in the gesture of prayer on their
mothers' knees, and whose lips are taught at the same time a form of words
that clings to them for life.</p>
<p>"Our Father!" The words are pretty and touching. When the child hears them
he thinks of some one like his own father, but immensely bigger and more
powerful; and as the child is taught that all the necessaries and comforts
of life he enjoys, at the expense of his parents' labor and loving care,
are really gifts from the Father behind the scenes, it is no wonder that
this mysterious being becomes the object of gratitude and affection.</p>
<p><i>Which art in Heaven!</i> Up there in the region of dreams, beyond the
sailing clouds, far away through the deep blue, where imagination builds
its fairy palace of delight, and God sits on his golden throne, and swift,
bright angels speed forth to execute his commands. Tell a child anything
you please about that land of fancy and you will be believed, especially
if the tale comes from beloved lips, or from lips that bear the glamor of
authority. And what the child is to the adult, early or savage man is to
the civilisee. To the African negroes the highest god is the Sky; the
great deity <i>Dyu</i> of our Aryan ancestors was the Sky; the Greek <i>Zeue</i>
and the Latin <i>Jupiter</i> were both the Heaven-Father; and we still say
"Heaven forgive me!" or "Fear the vengeance of Heaven!"</p>
<p>This Heaven, however, is no longer credible to any one with a tincture of
science. Hard as the truth to a child or a savage, the sky is not a
reality, but an optical illusion. For forty or forty-five miles from the
earth's surface there is a belt of atmosphere, growing rarer and rarer as
it approaches the infinite ocean of æther. Gone for ever is the old
delusion of a solid Heaven overhead, with windows in it, through which God
and the angels looked down upon the earth and its inhabitants. And what
site is there for Heaven out in the cold blackness of space?</p>
<p>That Heaven is gone, and where is Our Father? Science shows us a world of
absolute order, in which what we call the laws of nature—the
observed sequence and recurrence of phenomena—are never broken. The
world was not fashioned for man's dwelling, nor is it maintained for his
benefit. Towards the poles he freezes, towards the equator he burns. The
rain nourishes his crops or rots them, without asking his pleasure; the
sea bears him or drowns him, with equal unconcern; the lightning slays him
or spares him, whether good, bad or indifferent, as he happens to be in or
out of the line of its dazzling flight; famine pinches his! cheeks if he
cannot procure food; the pestilence seizes upon his nerves and blood
unless he learns the antidote to its ravages. He stands amidst the play of
terrific forces, and only preserves himself by vigilance, patience,
courage and industry. If he falls the enemy is upon him, and the doom of
the vanquished is death. Nature shows him no mercy. His mistakes are as
fatal as his crimes.</p>
<p>"God" has been in his "Heaven" for eternity, but all is <i>not</i> right
with the world. Man is always endeavoring to improve it, but what
assistance comes from above? A Father in Heaven would be a glorious fact.
But who can believe it? "Our Father" is utterly careless of his children.
The celestial Rousseau sends all his offspring to the Foundling.</p>
<p>The late hard weather has thrown thousands of honest men out of
employment, and increased the death-rate alarmingly. Where is the wisdom
of this? Where is the goodness? The worst of men would alter it if they
could. But God, they say, can do it, and he does not. Yet they still look
up and say "Our Father." And the Father looks down with a face as
blenchless as the Sphinx's, gazing forthright across the desert sands.</p>
<p>What father would permit in his family the gross disparities we see in
human life? One gorges and another starves; one is bloated and another is
death's counterfeit; one is dressed in three-piled velvet and another goes
in looped and windowed rags; one is idle and another slaves; one is sated
with pleasure and another is numbed with pain; one lolls in a palace and
another shivers in a hovel. What human father would not be ashamed to
treat his children with such infamous partiality?</p>
<p>Look at the physical and moral filth, and the mental abasement, in our
great Christian cities, where new churches are constantly built for the
worship of God, where Bibles are circulated by the million, and where
hundreds of sleek gentlemen flourish on the spoils of philanthropy. Read
Mr. Rudyard Kipling's story of East-end life; read the lucubrations of
General Booth; listen to the ever-swelling wail over the poverty, misery,
and degradation of hosts of our people; and then say if it is not high
time to cease all this cant about Our Father which art in Heaven.</p>
<p>Man has always been his own Savior. His instrument is science, his wisdom
is self-help. His redemption begins when he turns his eyes from the
delusive Heaven and plucks up his heart from the fear of Hell. Despair
vanishes before the steady gaze of instructed courage. Hope springs as a
flower in the path of endeavor.</p>
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