FOREWORD.
AFTERWORD.
FOREWORD.
Pantheism
not Sectarian or even Racial.
Pantheism
differs from the systems of belief constituting the main religions
of
the world in being comparatively free from any limits of period,
climate, or race. For while what we roughly call the Egyptian
Religion, the Vedic Religion, the Greek Religion, Buddhism, and
others of similar fame have been necessarily local and temporary,
Pantheism has been, for the most part, a dimly discerned
background,
an esoteric significance of many or all religions, rather than a
"denomination" by itself. The best illustration of this
characteristic of Pantheism is the catholicity of its great prophet
Spinoza. For he felt so little antagonism to any Christian sect,
that
he never urged any member of a church to leave it, but rather
encouraged his humbler friends, who sought his advice, to make full
use of such spiritual privileges as they appreciated most. He could
not, indeed, content himself with the fragmentary forms of any
sectarian creed. But in the few writings which he made some effort
to
adapt to the popular understanding, he seems to think it possible
that the faith of Pantheism might some day leaven all religions
alike. I shall endeavour briefly to sketch the story of that faith,
and to suggest its significance for the future. But first we must
know what it means.
Meaning
of Pantheism.
Pantheism,
then, being a term derived from two Greek words signifying "all"
and "God," suggests to a certain extent its own meaning.
Thus, if Atheism be taken to mean a denial of the being of God,
Pantheism is its extreme opposite; because Pantheism declares that
there is nothing but God. This, however, needs explanation. For no
Pantheist has ever held God is All. that
everything is God,
any more than a teacher of physiology, in enforcing on his students
the unity of the human organism, would insist that every toe and
finger is the man. But such a teacher, at least in But not
Everything
Is God. these days, would almost certainly warn his pupils against
the notion that the man can be really divided into limbs, or
organs,
or faculties, or even into soul and body. Indeed, he might without
affectation adopt the language of a much controverted creed, so far
as to pronounce that Analogy of the Human Organism. "the
reasonable soul and flesh is one man"—"one altogether."
In this view, the man is the unity of all organs and faculties. But
it does not in the least follow that any of these organs or
faculties, or even a selection of them, is the man.
The
Analogy Imperfect but Useful.
If
I apply this analogy to an explanation of the above definition of
Pantheism as the theory that there is nothing but God, it must not
be
supposed that I regard the parallelism as perfect. In fact, one
purpose of the following exposition will be to show why and where
all
such analogies fail. For Pantheism does not regard man, or any
organism, as a true unity. In the view of Pantheism the only real
unity is God. But without any inconsistency I may avail myself of
common impressions to correct a common mis-impression. Thus, those
who hold that the reasonable soul and flesh is one man—one
altogether—but at the same time deny that the toe or the finger, or
the stomach or the heart, is the man, are bound in consistency to
recognise that if Pantheism affirms God to be All in All, it does
not
follow that Pantheism must hold a man, or a tree, or a tiger to be
God.Excluding,
then, such an apparently plausible, but really fallacious inversion
of the Pantheistic view of the Universe, I repeat that the Farther
Definition. latter is the precise opposite of Atheism. So far from
tolerating any doubt as to the being of God, it denies that there
is
anything else. For all objects of sense and thought, including
individual consciousness, whether directly observed in ourselves,
or
inferred as existing in others, are, according to Pantheism, only
facets of an infinite Unity, which is "altogether one" in a
sense inapplicable to anything else. Because that Unity is not
merely
the aggregate of all the finite objects which we observe or infer,
but is a living whole, expressing itself in infinite variety. Of
that
infinite variety our gleams of consciousness are infinitesimal
parts,
but not parts in a sense involving any real division. The questions
raised by such a view of the Universe, many of them unanswerable—as
is also the case with questions raised by every other view of the
Universe—will be considered further on. All that I am trying to
secure in these preliminary observations is a general idea of the
Pantheistic view of the Universe as distinguished from that of
Polytheism, Monotheism, or Atheism.
Various
Forms of Pantheism.
Of
course, there have been different forms of Pantheism, as there have
been also various phases of Monotheism; and in the brief historical
review which will follow this introductory explanation of the name,
I
shall note at least the most important of those forms. But any
which
fail to conform, to the general definition here given, will not be
recognised as Pantheism at all, though they may be worth some
attention Spurious Forms. as approximations thereto. For any view
of
the Universe, allowing the existence of anything outside the divine
Unity, denies that God is All in All, and, therefore, is obviously
not Pantheism. Whether we should recognise as true Pantheism any
theory involving the evolution of a finite world or worlds out of
the
divine substance at some definite epoch or epochs, may be a
debatable
question, provided that the eternity and inviolability of the
divine
oneness is absolutely guarded in thought. Yet I will anticipate so
far as to say that, in my view, the question must be negatived. At
any rate, we must exclude all creeds Exclusion of Creation. which
tolerate the idea of a creation in the popular sense of the word,
or
of a final catastrophe. True, the individual objects, great or
small,
from a galaxy to a moth, which have to us apparently a separate
existence, have all been evolved out of preceding modes of being,
by
a process which seems to us to involve a beginning, and to ensure
an
end. But in the view of Pantheism, properly so-called, the
transference of such a process to the whole Universe is the result
of
an illusion suggested by false analogy. For the processes called
evolution, though everywhere operative, affect, each of them, only
parts of the infinite Evolution and Decay applicable only to Parts,
not to the Whole. whole of things; and experience cannot possibly
afford any justification for supposing that they affect the
Universe
itself. Thus, the matter or energy of which we think we consist,
was
in existence, every atom of it, and every element of force, before
we
were born, and will survive our apparent death. And the same thing,
at least on the Pantheistic view, is true of every other mode of
apparently separate or finite existence. Therefore no birth of a
new
nebula ever added a grain of matter or an impulse of new energy to
the Universe. And the final decease of our solar system, if such an
event be in prospect, cannot make any difference whatever to the
infinite balance of forces, of which, speaking in anthropomorphic
and
inadequate language, we suppose the Eternal All to consist.
Limitation
of Scope.
These
observations are not intended to be controversial, but only to make
clear the general sense in which the term Pantheism is here used.
Not
that it would be possible at the outset to indicate all that is
implicit in the definition. I only wish to premise plainly that I
am
not concerned with any view of the world such as implies or admits
that, whether by process of creation, or emanation, or
self-division,
or evolution, the oneness of the Eternal has ever been marred, or
anything other than the being of God has been or can be
produced.But
before passing on to the promised historical review, it is,
perhaps,
Pantheism either Philosophical or Religious or both. necessary to
refer again to a remark previously made, that Pantheism may be
considered either from the point of view of philosophy, or from
that
of religion. Not that the two points of view are mutually
exclusive.
But, as a matter of fact, Pantheism as a religion is, with certain
exceptions among Indian saints and later Neoplatonists, almost
entirely a modern development, of which Spinoza was the first
distinct and devout teacher. For this statement justification will
be
given hereafter. Meantime, to deprecate adverse prejudice, I may
suggest that a careful study of the most ancient forms of Pantheism
seems to show that they were purely philosophical; an endeavour to
reach in thought the ultimate Pantheism as a Religion almost
Entirely
Modern. reality which polytheism travestied, and which the senses
disguised. But little or no attempt was made to substitute the
contemplation of the Eternal for the worship of mediator
divinities.
Thus, in the same spirit in which Socrates ordered the sacrifice of
a
cock to Aesculapius for his recovery from the disease of mortal
life,
philosophical Pantheists, whether Egyptian or Greek, or even
Indian,[1]