XXXII. THIS revelation was actually
vouchsafed. It pleased the supreme Being, through
His infinite mercy, to manifest His will, and make
known some great and precious truths, which men would
have vainly attempted to discover with the unaided
operation of their reason; He chose to undertake,
to a certain extent, the education of mankind.
From the beginning of the world God revealed Himself
to the first man; and He continued afterwards for
many ages, as His eternal wisdom deemed proper, to
communicate to such individuals as were the worthiest
among mortals the instructions which were afterwards
to work the salvation of all mankind. Those instructions,
which contain truths by far more comforting and sublime
than any results which man could have arrived at through
his own faculties alone, constitute the substance
of Revelation; and he who acknowledges their divine
origin, and conforms to them the actions of his life,
is called a professor of the revealed religion.
XXXIII. That God has really revealed
Himself to some individuals of the human species is
an historical fact, the truth of which is proved, like
all truths of a similar order, by testimony and documents.
But independently of the existing evidence, the possibility
of such an act can be easily conceived by the human
understanding, when we consider that everything is
feasible to the omnipotence of the Creator; and nothing
is more consentaneous to His infinite goodness and
wisdom, than the blessed purpose of granting to human
frailty an assistance calculated to lead the noblest
of creatures to the attainment of the exalted end
for which he was created. To conceive, also, the
precise modes and forms in which such a revelation
is effected or conveyed, it was given only to those
elect who were themselves the recipients, and who
are called Prophets. But we can arrive at the
knowledge of the principal characteristics which constitute
prophecy, after we shall have placed in a clear light
the essence and the final object of revelation.
XXXIV. All the revealed doctrines
may be reduced to one fundamental principle, from
which they originate, and on which rests the whole
edifice of revelation. This principle may be expressed
as follows: Besides the general relation
of dependence existing indistinctly between all creatures
and their Creator, there is a relation more intimate
and special between God and man a relation
of a spiritual and sentimental nature, arising from
the circumstance of the latter being created in the
image of God, by virtue of which man is not subject
exclusively to the blind government of the physical
laws of nature, but, almost independent of them, he
walks under the immediate influence of his celestial
Father; this independence, however, cannot be accomplished
before he has succeeded in subduing his sensual appetites,
and has bent them to follow the divine direction.
Thus acting, he will not remain a passive spectator
of the vicissitudes which accelerate or retard the
fulfilment of that which the Divine wisdom purposed
as the final aim of the creation, but, through the
immortal spirit transfused in him, he will feel impelled
to take some active part in the great work of the
ultimate universal perfection, and to associate his
own will to the will of the Creator.
XXXV. The relation between God
and man is a tie of love. God being goodness
itself, this finds a more extensive field for its manifestation
in the rational creature than in any other. On
the other hand, man, possessed of a spiritual soul,
is superior to matter, and is capable, more than the
other terrestrial beings, of receiving within himself
an abundance of the Divine benevolence, which diffuses
itself throughout the universe in exact proportion
to the various aptitudes of the recipients.
It is precisely in consequence of the understanding
with which man is endowed, and of his aptitude to
nourish love for the supreme Being, that he has been
elected, from among all terrestrial creatures, to
enter into a more intimate relation with God, and to
co-operate, in as much as lies in his power, to the
accomplishment of the divine plan.
XXXVI. The plan of the Creator
is immeasurably profound, and therefore inscrutable.
Nevertheless, in so far as it is permitted to the human
mind to penetrate it, and as it has pleased the Divine
mercy to reveal it, we know with certainty that it
is all directed to diffuse happiness and beatitude
over all creatures, in proportion to their respective
capabilities of participating in them, and to guide
all beings towards that end, which, in the scheme
of the universe, was pre-ordained by the Infinite
Wisdom as the best. Now, the inanimate
portion of the creation progresses unconsciously in
the way ordained by Providence, obeys physical immutable
laws, and is, therefore, only a means to a more exalted
end. But the moral being, who has self-consciousness,
resolves on action after deliberating upon what he
thinks best, and carries out his resolve with free
will; he is, then, himself the aim of his life.
Therefore, to lead this being towards his own destination,
it was proper not to subject him to restraint under
laws of necessity, otherwise the freedom of his will
would have been destroyed; it was only necessary to
enlighten him, to place before him some fundamental
truths, capable of dispelling all doubts from his
mind, and detaching him from errors and superstitions,
and thus to offer him means and inducements sufficient
to direct his attention and will towards the end designed
by the Divine wisdom.
XXXVII. It is these truths, offered
as means and inducements, that constitute the essence
of revelation. Through revelation, man was made
acquainted that God created the universe out of nought,
that He governs it with His wisdom, and can work every
change which He deems suitable; that He created man
in the Divine image, that is, with an immortal soul,
capable of receiving within itself the Divine idea,
of conceiving its sublimity, and carrying it into
effect. Through revelation, man learnt that God
is One, omnipotent, holy, of infinite forbearance and
mercy, and an inexhaustible source of pure love; that
He created as a stock of all the human family a single
individual (to proclaim thereby the principle of universal
brotherhood and mutual love between all the members
of that family); that He desires to be loved, worshipped,
and served by it, with purity of heart, with elevation
of spirit, and with unflinching constancy. Through
revelation, we are taught to use wisely the earthly
gifts, and to turn their material enjoyment into a
subject for edification and the glorification of God;
to exercise right, justice, rectitude, charity, piety,
and humility; we are also taught that God judges the
human actions, punishes those who contravene His will,
and is disposed to pardon the sins of those who feel
a true repentance. And, lastly, through revelation,
an invitation is tendered to man to elevate his mind
to the Creator, to imitate Him, to approach Him through
self-sanctification; and a perspective is opened before
his mind’s eye of an interminable future of
beatitude beyond the grave, as the ultimate goal of
his longings, and a just reward to his virtuous conduct.
XXXVIII. When an individual,
after long and serious meditations, and through a
concourse of favourable circumstances, acquires a
comprehension of this divine plan, and conceives it
in its fullest extent and excellence, he will feel
an irresistible attraction towards such a contemplation,
and an ineffable admiration will seize all his mind;
an internal intense desire will spring up in his heart
to see it carried out, nay, to contribute himself
to its accomplishment, since the first tendency is
already engrafted on his very nature. In proportion
as this desire extends its roots in the heart of that
individual, so will he make it his exclusive pre-occupation,
voluntarily sacrifice to it every worldly consideration,
and so will he feel impelled to devote himself to
promote, promulgate, and bring to universal knowledge
those truths which, as stated, form the essence of
revelation; his soul will become the receptacle of
the Divine idea, his tongue and all his body the organs
of its fulfilment; his whole life will be an expression
of the idea which pervades him; he will feel within
himself an irresistible call to constitute himself,
of his own authority, and without any regard to worldly
powers, a preceptor to mankind, an adviser and censor
of all, a supporter of right and virtue, a herald
of truth, and a defender of the cause of God; he will
defy every obstacle with unbending spirit, will employ
all his powers, physical and moral, to the attainment
of his aim; and sometimes he will end by becoming
a martyr to his holy project. In short, his will
becomes identical with the will of God.
XXXIX. Such a man is a prophet.
His mind elevated to the highest degree of intelligence,
his heart bent constantly to love what is good, he
has almost assumed a second nature, and he lives upon
earth a purely spiritual life. Of all that surrounds
him, nothing is of any value in his eyes but that
which may contribute to the accomplishment of the
Divine design; in all passing events he sees but as
many dispositions of Providence calculated to direct
men to the path in which they are called to walk;
the very thoughts which cross his mind, and the wishes
which form themselves in his heart, he regards them
not as the productions of his own soul, but as emanations
from the Spirit of God which dwells in him, and pervades
all his being. Such a mode of viewing things is,
after all, not a mere effect of his imagination, but
a true reflex of the influence that actuates this
man, an influence springing from the fact already
stated, that his will has identified itself with the
will of God. Hence the prophet is called a man
inspired by God, for it is the Divine Spirit that
pervades, agitates, and directs him; it is the Divine
Spirit that found in him an instrument for its operation,
an organ for its manifestation, a medium to carry
out its high designs, a representative of God on earth,
who shall recall men to their Divine origin, and lead
them on to their ultimate destination.
XL. From the foregoing exposition
of the characters of prophecy it will appear obvious,
that those are greatly mistaken, who think that the
exclusive or even the principal ministry of the prophet
consists in foreseeing and foretelling future events.
The prophet may occasionally find it necessary to
his ends to predict some events, which he does by
virtue of the Divine spirit infused in him; but this
is for him only an accessory means to the chief object,
which is to propagate and promote among men divine
knowledge and religious life. With an all-wise
provision, God disposed that, as a rule, the future
shall remain hidden from mortals, that they may exert
themselves to render it propitious by their good actions;
and if He sometimes permitted, as an exception, that
it should be revealed to them through the dispensers
of His word, it was not to gratify an idle curiosity,
but to excite men to worthily conform their works
to coming events.