Page:Studies in the Scriptures - Series I - The Plan of the Ages (1909).djvu/176

 170 The Plan of the Ages.

it will be permitted in great measure to work out in a manner very much to the disappointment, no doubt, of these wise philosophers. It is the very increase of these blessings that is already beginning to bring upon the world the time of trouble, which will be such as never has been since there was a nation.

The prophet Daniel, as quoted above, links together the increase of knowledge and the time of trouble. The knowledge causes the trouble, because of the depravity of the race. The increase of knowledge has not only given the world wonderful labor-saving machinery and conveniences, but it has also led to an increase of medical skill whereby thou- sands of lives are prolonged, and it has so enlightened man- kind that human butchery, war, is becoming less popular, and thus, too, other thousands are spared to multiply still further the race, which is increasing more rapidly to-day, perhaps, than at any other period of history. Thus, while mankind is multiplying rapidly, the necessity for his labor is decreasing correspondingly; and the "Brain Age 71 phi- losophers have a problem before them to provide for the employment and sustenance of this large and rapidly in- creasing class whose services, for the most part supplanted by machinery, can be dispensed with, but whose necessities and wants know no bounds. The solution of this problem, these philosophers must ultimately admit, is beyond their brain capacity.

Selfishness will continue to control the wealthy, who hold the power and advantage, and will blind them to common sense as well as to justice; while a similar selfishness, com- bined with the instin<5l of self-preservation and an increased knowledge of their rights, will nerve some and inflame oth- ers of the poorer classes, and the result of these blessings will, for a time, prove terrible a time of trouble, truly, such as was not since there was a nation and this, because

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