God, the Invisible King
A REMARKABLE book with this title by
the well-known writer -and thinker, Mr. H. G. Wells, has recently appeared, of
which only a few extracts are before us, but these are sufficient to reveal its
character and thought. It is on the part of the writer, speaking not for
himself personally alone but as scribe to the spirit of his generation, a
definite renunciation of the gospel of an all-sufficient rationalism, a
discovery of God, a profession of faith in spirituality as the one lever by
which mankind can rise out of the darkness and confusion of its present state
into a more perfect living. He professes his faith in the God within, the
invisible King, who is the immortal part of us, in a coming kingdom of God upon
earth which shall not only be a spiritual state in the individual, but the open
brotherhood of a divine rule among men, and in self-identification with God,
service of him, absolute surrender to him as the whole rule of life for the
enlightened modern man. This is, indeed, a remarkable change of spirit and
change of mental outlook and, if Mr. Wells' claim is just that he is writing as
a scribe to the spirit of his generation, it means a revolution in Europe far
more important than the Russian with all its idealism and its hopes for a new
and beneficent change in politics and society. It means the union of Eastern
spiritual knowledge and religious faith with Western pragmatic idealism and
their fusion into the basis of a new culture and, we will not say a new
universal religion, - for religion must vary with the variations of human
nature,- but a new practical spirituality in which all mankind can become one.
There is much in Mr. Wells'
statement of his new-born belief that is imperfect, limited and a little crude,
much that is grasped with an overhasty zeal, as was inevitable in the first
light of an unripe awakening. Some of the old limitations of the rationalistic
Western mind with its too external outlook upon things still cling about his new
spiritual discovery. He tells us
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that the kingdom of God on earth is "not a metaphor, not a mere spiritual
state, not a dream, not an uncertain project, ..it is the close and inevitable
destiny of mankind". This classing of the inner spiritual state, the
kingdom of God within us, with a metaphor, a dream, an uncertain project
reveals the lingering taint of an excessive pragmatism. The spiritual state is
the one thing indispensable; until the mass of mankind can awaken into it, the
dream of a perfect society, an open brotherhood of God's rule, must end in
failure and disappointment. The kingdom of God within is the sole possible
foundation for the kingdom of God without; for it is the spirit by which man
lives that conditions the outer forms of his life.
Misled by this external view of
things Mr. Wells, evidently, still believes that a political and social action
is sufficient to bring about the millennium. He has discovered that this action
must be driven by a spiritual motive, pursued in the passion of a true
religious fervour, consecrated to the indwelling God, effective only by an
absolute self-surrender to the Divine. But he has a limited vision of his God
and brings to it all the aggressiveness and something of the fanaticism of all
such limited religious conceptions. "The new conceptions," he writes,
"do not tolerate either kings or aristocracies or democracies. Its
implicit command to all its adherents is to make plain the way to the world
theocracy. Its rule of life is the discovery and service of the will of God
which dwells in the hearts of men and the performance of that will" in the
life of the believer, the individual, and of the nation of which he is a part.
"I give myself to God not only because I am so and so, but because I am
mankind...I become a knight in God's service… I become a responsible minister
of my king. I take sides against injustice, disorder, and against all those temporal
kings, emperors, princes, landlords and owners. who set themselves against
God's rule and worship. Kings, owners and all who claim rule and decision in
the world's affairs, must either show themselves clearly the fellow-servants of
the believer or become the object of his steadfast antagonism."
All this is very forcibly said,
but it shows that the writer has not grasped the whole spiritual truth; he has
not gone deep enough inward. As once he dreamed of a class of scientific and
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rational superman establishing a perfect social rule upon earth, so now he
thinks that by the action of his banded servants of the invisible King
declaring political and social war upon godless Czars, Kaisers, rulers and
capitalists the same end can be achieved. With them is God; in them God dwells,
in the others, presumably, he does not dwell; those who have surrendered
absolutely to him are the citizens of the kingdom and on them shall be peace;
those who do not surrender or even fall short in their surrender, are
interlopers, against them the sword. A very old kind of militant religionism in
a very modem form. It ignores two ancient, two eternal spiritual truths; first,
that God dwells in all and, secondly, that only by becoming conscious of the
God within from within can humanity be saved. God dwells in all and not only in
the believer who is conscious of him;- dwells disguised and veiled, and it is
by helping others to awaken to the veiled Divine within them that we go to the
straight way to the founding of his kingdom on earth. True, an outward battle
also has to be fought, but against institutions which stand in the way of the
spreading of the light and the reign of brotherhood, not against men as
unbelievers, - in a spirit of understanding, of knowledge, of firm will, but
also of charity for ignorance and of love for the misled. God, says Mr. Wells,
is boundless love, but this boundless love, it seems, is not infinite enough to
embrace those who do not believe with you; it rejects them with a steadfast
antagonism, it banishes them as "interlopers". God's work least of
all should be pursued in a spirit of partisan and sectarian antagonism, but
rather with a remembrance that the battle is only a way to peace and the peace
must come by the inner submission of the opponent through his recognition of
the Divine, through his awakening. It is not enough that the believer should
perform God's will and fight for the performance of that will "in the acts
and order of the state and nation of which he is a part". The nation also
must be brought not only to believe, but to know, to see, to live in God,
otherwise the national performance of God's will, even if momentarily secured,
will soon degenerate into a form. It is possible that what the old religions
called "the rule of the saints" may be a preliminary step to the
establishment of the full kingdom of God, but that rule
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can only become secure by the
light and fire which is in them kindling itself in the hearts of all mankind.
These defects of
outlook come from a defect in the conception of the Divine. It consists of
"complete Agnosticism in the matter of God the Creator and entire faith in
the matter of God the Redeemer". A distinction is made between the Veiled
Being behind the universe and the living reality in our lives; the latter alone
is the true God. He is a personal and intimate God. He is finite. He is a
spirit, a single spirit and a single person. He has come, we know not whence,
into the conflict of life. He bas begun and will never end. And yet he is the
immortal part and leader of mankind, our friend and brother and light of the
world. And from these first principles is drawn a description of God as certain
qualities, boundless love, boundless courage, boundless generosity, thought and
steadfast will, and as having motives, characteristics, an aim. "This is the
belief of the modem mind", read, the modern Western mind, "with
regard to God". -
We can see .whence the
crudities of this belief arise. The Western mind is still burdened with its
scientific vision of the universe as a play of brute force, of life as a
struggle, the world a material entity, and therefore of the Spirit of the
world, if any there be, conceived agnostically or with a sort of materialistic
Pantheism standing for these things only, the Breath of a physical universe, a
sort of mechanical, inconscient Soul of things. Out of this pure materiality
mind and soul inexplicably evolve. God appears only in man and his aspiration,
his longings for a higher order of things, for love, universal sympathy,
immortality. This God and the mechanical inconscient Spirit of the World the
Western mind finds it difficult - and no. wonder - to bring under the same
term. The simple harmonious truth that God is veiled in the material universe
which is only the lowest term, the first appearance of the cosmic Reality, that
he unveils himself partially and progressively in man and to man, and that man
by growth into self-knowledge and God-knowledge can grow into the whole truth
of God and existence, which is one truth, - this seems still to be hidden from
these wise men of the West. His partial unveiling in man seems to them a birth
of the once non- existent Divine, a coming of God into the world, one knows not
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whence; and because man appears to
be finite, God whom they conceive of as the sum of human aspiration to good,
truth, beauty, immortality, is also conceived of as finite. But how is that
which has begun in Time secure against ending in Time? and how can a finite God
be infinite love, courage, strength? Only that which was from ever, can be for
ever, and only that which is infinite in being, can be infinite in force and
quality. We have here an echo of the inconsequent Christian paradox of a soul
born by the birth of the body, yet immortal to all eternity, combined with the
metaphysical dogma of a God existent, not in being, but in becoming. There is
an element of truth and value in this' belief, but it brings disabling
limitations into our inner realisation of God and the practice of a divine life
to which it gives a foundation.
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