Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
- BOOK FIRST GENERAL VIEW OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT AS FITTED TO THROW LIGHT ON THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- BOOK SECOND PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE METHOD OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT IN THE PHYSICAL WORLD
- CHAPTER I GENERAL LAWS; OR THE PRINCIPLE OF ORDER
- CHAPTER II PROVIDENCE; OR THE PRINCIPLE OF SPECIAL ADAPTATION
- CHAPTER III RELATION OF THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD TO THE CHARACTER OF MAN
- BOOK THIRD PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLES OF THE HUMAN MIND THROUGH WHICH GOD GOVERNS MANKIND
- BOOK FOURTH RESULTS—THE RECONCILIATION OF GOD AND MAN
- APPENDIX ON FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- REFERENCES TO AUTHORS AND SYSTEMS
CHAPTER III - RELATION OF THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD TO THE CHARACTER OF MAN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
- BOOK FIRST GENERAL VIEW OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT AS FITTED TO THROW LIGHT ON THE CHARACTER OF GOD
- BOOK SECOND PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE METHOD OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT IN THE PHYSICAL WORLD
- CHAPTER I GENERAL LAWS; OR THE PRINCIPLE OF ORDER
- CHAPTER II PROVIDENCE; OR THE PRINCIPLE OF SPECIAL ADAPTATION
- CHAPTER III RELATION OF THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD TO THE CHARACTER OF MAN
- BOOK THIRD PARTICULAR INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLES OF THE HUMAN MIND THROUGH WHICH GOD GOVERNS MANKIND
- BOOK FOURTH RESULTS—THE RECONCILIATION OF GOD AND MAN
- APPENDIX ON FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- REFERENCES TO AUTHORS AND SYSTEMS
Summary
SECT. I.—GENERAL REMARKS ON THE RELATION OF THE PHYSICAL TO THE MORAL PROVIDENCE OF GOD.
Two truths, regarding man's moral nature, stand out as among the most certain of all that are revealed by the consciousness— the one, that there is an essential distinction between good and evil; and the other, that the moral is higher in its very nature than the physical. Place before the mind two actions—the one morally good, and the other morally evil; the one, let us suppose, a truthful declaration, uttered by a person tempted to equivocate; and the other, a falsehood deliberately uttered: the mind in judging of them at once and authoritatively proclaims that there is a difference. Again, place before the mind a moral good and a physical good—say, the furtherance of a nation's virtue on the one hand, and the production of some beautiful piece of art on the other, and the mind is prepared to decide that the former is immeasurably the higher.
Assuming, then, that there is a moral good, and that the moral is higher than the physical, let us now look at the connexion between them. That there is such a connexion, we hold to be one of the most firmly established of the truths which relate to the government of God. The God who hath established both, hath established a relation between them.
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- The Method of the Divine GovernmentPhysical and Moral, pp. 233 - 268Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1850