Natural History Of Enthusiasm
Isaac Taylor
13 chapters
6 hour read
Selected Chapters
13 chapters
NATURAL HISTORY OF ENTHUSIASM.
NATURAL HISTORY OF ENTHUSIASM.
BY ISAAC TAYLOR …  δύο ἐστὶ, τὸ μὲν ἀρετὴ φυσικὴ, τὸ δ' ἡ κυρία. FROM THE NINTH LONDON EDITION. NEW YORK: ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS No. 530 BROADWAY 1859....
13 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
ADVERTISEMENT.
ADVERTISEMENT.
The belief that a bright era of renovation, union, and extension, presently awaits the Christian Church, seems to be very generally entertained. The writer of this volume participates in the cheering hope; and it has impelled him to undertake the difficult task of describing, under its various forms, that FICTITIOUS PIETY which hitherto has never failed to appear in times of unusual religious excitement, and which may be anticipated as the probable attendant of a new development of the powers of
1 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION I. ENTHUSIASM, SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS.
SECTION I. ENTHUSIASM, SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS.
Some form of beauty, engendered by the imagination, or some semblance of dignity or grace, invests almost every object that excites desire. These illusions, if indeed they ought so to be called, serve the purpose of blending the incongruous materials of human nature, and by mediating between body and spirit, reconcile the animal and intellectual propensities, and give dignity and harmony to the character of man. By these unsubstantial impressions it is that the social affections are enriched and
21 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION II. ENTHUSIASM IN DEVOTION.
SECTION II. ENTHUSIASM IN DEVOTION.
The most formal and lifeless devotions, not less than the most fervent, are mere enthusiasm, unless it can be ascertained, on satisfactory grounds, that such exercises are indeed efficient means for promoting our welfare. Prayer is impiety, and praise a folly, if the one be not a real instrument of obtaining important benefits, and the other an authorized and acceptable offering to the Giver of all good. But when once these points are determined, and they are necessarily involved in the truth of
41 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION III. ENTHUSIASTIC PERVERSIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE INFLUENCE.
SECTION III. ENTHUSIASTIC PERVERSIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE INFLUENCE.
A sentiment natural to the human mind, leads it to entertain and to dwell with pleasure upon the belief of the stability and permanence of the material world. Whether we view the multiform ranks of organized and animated beings which cover the earth, or examine the occult processes of nature, or look upwards, and contemplate distant worlds, the regularity with which the great machine of the visible creation effects its revolutions inspires a deep emotion of delight. This feeling brings with it i
18 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION IV. ENTHUSIASM THE SOURCE OF HERESY.
SECTION IV. ENTHUSIASM THE SOURCE OF HERESY.
The creed of the Christian is the fruit of exposition; no part of it is elaborated by processes of abstract reasoning; no part is furnished by the inventive faculties. To ascertain the true meaning of the words and phrases used by those who "spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost," is the single aim of the studies of the theologian. Interpretation is his function. But the work of interpretation, considered as an intellectual employment, differs essentially from that of the student of physica
19 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION V. THE ENTHUSIASM OF PROPHETIC INTERPRETATION.
SECTION V. THE ENTHUSIASM OF PROPHETIC INTERPRETATION.
Disappointment is perhaps the most frequent of all the occasional causes of insanity; but the sudden kindling of hope sometimes produces the same lamentable effect. Yet before this emotion, congenial as it is to the human mind, can exert so fatal an influence, the expected good must be of immeasurable magnitude, and must appear in the light of the strongest probability; nor must even the vagueness of a distant futurity intervene; otherwise, tho swellings of desire and joy would be quelled, and r
27 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION VI. ENTHUSIASTIC PERVERSIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF A PARTICULAR PROVIDENCE.
SECTION VI. ENTHUSIASTIC PERVERSIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF A PARTICULAR PROVIDENCE.
No species of enthusiasm, perhaps, is more extensively prevalent, and certainly none clings more tenaciously to the mind that has once entertained it, and none produces more practical mischief, than that which is founded on an abuse of the doctrine of a particular Providence. It is by the fortuities of life that the religious enthusiast is deluded. Chance, under a guise stolen from piety, is his divinity. He believes, and he believes justly, that every seeming fortuity is under the absolute cont
38 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION VII. ENTHUSIASM OF BENEFICENCE.
SECTION VII. ENTHUSIASM OF BENEFICENCE.
To say that the principle of disinterested benevolence had never been known among men before the publication of Christianity would be an exaggeration;—an exaggeration very similar to that of affirming that the doctrine of immortality was new to mankind when taught by our Lord. In truth, the one had, in every age, been imperfectly practised, and the other dimly supposed; yet neither the one principle nor the other existed in sufficient strength to be the source of any very substantial benefit to
26 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION VIII. SKETCH OF THE ENTHUSIASM OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH.
SECTION VIII. SKETCH OF THE ENTHUSIASM OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH.
An intelligent Christian, fraught with scriptural principles in their simplicity and purity, but hitherto uninformed of Church history, who should peruse discursively the ecclesiastical writers of the age of Jerom, Ambrose, and Basil, would presently recoil with an emotion of disappointment, perplexity, and alarm. That within a period which does not exceed the reach of oral tradition, the religion of the apostles should have so much changed its character, and so much have lost its beauty, he cou
27 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION IX. THE SAME SUBJECT.—INGREDIENTS OF THE ANCIENT MONACHISM.
SECTION IX. THE SAME SUBJECT.—INGREDIENTS OF THE ANCIENT MONACHISM.
Among the principal elements of the ancient Monachism, it is natural to name, first— Its contempt of the divine constitution of human nature, and the outrage it offered to the most salutary instincts. It may be difficult to determine which is the greater folly and impiety, that of the Atheist, who can contemplate the admirable mechanism of the body, and not see there the proofs of divine wisdom and benevolence; or that of the Enthusiast, who, seeing and acknowledging the hand of God in the mecha
42 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION X. CONSIDERATIONS ON THE PROBABLE TRIUMPH OF CHRISTIANITY, SUBMITTED TO THOSE WHO MISUSE THE TERM ENTHUSIASM.
SECTION X. CONSIDERATIONS ON THE PROBABLE TRIUMPH OF CHRISTIANITY, SUBMITTED TO THOSE WHO MISUSE THE TERM ENTHUSIASM.
To waive the exercise of discrimination, can, under no imaginable circumstances, be advantageous to any man; nor is it ever otherwise than absurd to persist in an error which might be corrected by a moment's attention to obvious facts. But assuredly some such suspension of good sense has taken place with those who accustom themselves to designate, in a mass, as Enthusiasts, the many thousands of their countrymen, of all communions, who, at the present time, make profession of the doctrines of th
2 hour read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
SECTION VIII.
SECTION VIII.
The following anecdote is reported by Sulpitius, concerning St. Martin of Tours. The Emperor Maximus, a man of a haughty temper, and elated by victories over his rivals, had received the unworthy adulation of a crowd of fawning bishops; while Martin alone maintained the apostolic authority. For when suits were to be urged, he rather commanded than entreated the royal compliance, and refused many solicitations to take a place with others of his order at the imperial table, saying, that he would n
4 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter