Page:The kernel and the husk (Abbott, 1886).djvu/336

320 XXIX

——,

I have been thinking over your objection that my notions are "vague;" feeling that there is some truth in it, but that your words do not quite express your probable meaning. I think you mean, not that the "notions" are vague, but that the proofs are vague. The "notions" are in the Creeds, if you interpret the Creeds spiritually: and I do not think that the Creeds are more "vague" when interpreted spiritually than when interpreted literally. The spiritual Resurrection of Christ, for example—is it more vague than the material Resurrection? If you admit that there is a spirit in man, and that this spirit is made apparently powerless by death, is it "vague" to say that the spirit of Jesus, after passing through this state of death, manifested itself to the disciples in greater power than ever? Even those who maintain the material Resurrection admit that it would be a mere mockery without the spiritual Resurrection, and that the latter is the essence of the act: so that to declare the statement of the spiritual Resurrection of Jesus to be "vague," appears to be equivalent to declaring that any statement of the essential Resurrection of Jesus is "vague." Again, redemption from sin is a spiritual notion, redemption from the flames of a material hell is a material notion; but is the former more "vague" than the latter? If so, then we are led to this conclusion, that all spiritual notions are more vague than material notions; and the vagueness which