Category: Science - Biology

Creation and Its Records A Brief Statement of Christian Belief with Reference to Modern Facts and Ancient Scripture

Among the recollections that are lifelong, I have one as vivid as ever after more than twenty-five years have elapsed; it is of an evening lecture--the first of a series--given at South Kensington to working men. The lecturer was Professor Huxley; his subject, the Common Lobst...

Chapters

20. CHAPTER XVI.

It remains only now to go over the narrative, the _general_ bearing of which I have thus endeavoured to vindicate, so that minor matters of detail, in which it is supposed (1) t...

11. CHAPTER VII.

We now approach a special objection which always, has been (and I shall be pardoned, perhaps, for saying _always will be_) the _crux_ of the theory of unaided, uncreated evoluti...

10. CHAPTER VI.

The heading of this chapter does not mark a new departure, for we have been tracing existing forms of matter from the first, and have already seen the necessity of believing in...

17. CHAPTER XIII.

Taking the narrative as it stands, we find it to consist of two parts. First, a general statement, of which no division of time is predicated, and which is unaccompanied by any...

21. ii. 3-14 is meant for allegory, or geographical fact: this question must

first be settled; and if the latter is agreed to, then it is quite inconceivable that the words should imply any very extensive region, or any fancied realm extending over a lar...

9. CHAPTER V.

We now come to _Living_ Matter; directing attention, first, to that elementary form of life as exhibited in simple protoplasm and in the lower forms of organism, and then to the...

12. CHAPTER VIII.

There are, however, some other matters connected with the history of man on the globe, unconnected with psychological development, but which demand notice, as making the argumen...

5. CHAPTER I.

Among the recollections that are lifelong, I have one as vivid as ever after more than twenty-five years have elapsed; it is of an evening lecture--the first of a series--given...

8. CHAPTER IV.

I take as self-evident the enormous difficulty of self-caused, self-existent matter. And when we see that matter _acting_, not irregularly or by caprice, but _by law_ (as every...

14. CHAPTER X.

We have now completed the first portion of our inquiry: there remains the second, which, to a large class, at any rate, will appear of not less importance. For the Scriptures, w...

7. CHAPTER III.

It will strike some readers with a sense of hopelessness, this demand for a reason in our faith. A special and very extensive knowledge is required, it seems, to test the very p...

15. CHAPTER XI.

Passing, then, to a consideration of the explanations of the narrative that may be or have been given at various times, I would first call attention to the fact, that it seems i...

19. CHAPTER XV.

But a step further is necessary: if the conclusion that I have come to, by accepting "day" in its ordinary and natural sense, and by giving a hitherto overlooked (and so far a n...

18. CHAPTER XIV.

In interpreting the narrative before us, we have an important aid which has hardly received the attention it deserves. I allude to the other passages of Scripture which were wri...

6. CHAPTER II.

In the extract placed on the title-page, the author of the Epistle clearly places our conclusion that God "established the order of creation"--the lines, plans, developmental-se...

13. CHAPTER IX.

It will naturally be asked, "If there is all this objection to some parts of the theory of Evolution, or to that theory in an extreme or absolute form, how is it that it has bee...

16. CHAPTER XII.

Returning, then, to the narrative in the Book of Genesis, I think we may take it as clear that the passage stands in such a concise and condensed form, that it is obviously open...

3. CHAPTER XIII.

4. CHAPTER XVI.

1. CHAPTER VI.

2. CHAPTER XII.