Sometimes the masses have been driven
to Atheism by science. There are some geometers
great in paradox, men who, of all the senses that the
Creator has given to his creatures, have cultivated
only one, the sense of touch, leaving out
entirely that chief sense, which connects and confirms
all others, the sense of the invisible,
the moral sense. These savans,
geometers, physicians, arithmeticians, mathematicians,
chemists, astronomers, measurers of distances, calculators
of numbers, have early acquired the habit of believing
only in the tangible. These are the beings
who, so to speak, live and think in the dark; all,
which is not palpable, does not exist for them.
They measure the earth, and say, “We have not
met God in any league of its surface!” They
heat the alembic, and say, “We have not perceived
God in the smoke of any of our experiments!”
They dissect dead bodies, and say, “We have
not found God, or thought, in any bundle of muscles
or nerves in our dissection!” They calculate
columns of figures, long as the firmament, and say,
“We have not seen God in the sum of any of our
additions!” They pierce, with eye and glass,
into the dazzling mysteries of night, to discover,
across thousands and thousands of leagues, the groups
and the evolutions of the celestial worlds, and say,
“We have not discovered God at the end of our
telescopes! The existence of God does not concern
us; it is no affair of ours!” Madmen!
They do not suspect that the knowledge and adoration
of God are, at bottom, the only business of the creature;
and that all these distances, these globes, these numbers,
these mysteries of the living being, this dissected
mechanism of the dead, these compositions and decompositions
of combined elements, these hosts of stars, and these
eternal evolutions of suns around the divine hand
which guides them, have no other reason for existence,
for movement, and for duration, than to compel the
acknowledgment, fear, admiration, and adoration of
God, by that supreme sense, that sense superior to
all other senses, that sense imponderable and impalpable,
invisible yet beholding all things, that
sense which we call intelligence!
Alas! it is not that God has denied
this sense to these men of figures, of science, and
calculation; but they have blinded themselves, they
have cultivated the other senses so much, that they
have weakened this. They have believed too much
in matter, and so they have lost the eye of the spirit.
These men, we are told, have made great progress in
experimental science, but they have made good, evil,
to the People, by saying to them, “We, who are
so high, we cannot see God! blind men!
what do you see, then?”