[Seraphita by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
Seraphita

CHAPTER IV
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Seek Him in facts, and He is not; spiritually and materially, you have made God impossible.

Listen to the Word of human Reason forced to its ultimate conclusions.
"In bringing God face to face with the Great Whole, we see that only two states are possible between them,--either God and Matter are contemporaneous, or God existed alone before Matter.

Were Reason--the light that has guided the human race from the dawn of its existence--accumulated in one brain, even that mighty brain could not invent a third mode of being without suppressing both Matter and God.
Let human philosophies pile mountain upon mountain of words and of ideas, let religions accumulate images and beliefs, revelations and mysteries, you must face at last this terrible dilemma and choose between the two propositions which compose it; you have no option, and one as much as the other leads human reason to Doubt.
"The problem thus established, what signifies Spirit or Matter?
Why trouble about the march of the worlds in one direction or in another, since the Being who guides them is shown to be an absurdity?
Why continue to ask whether man is approaching heaven or receding from it, whether creation is rising towards Spirit or descending towards Matter, if the questioned universe gives no reply?
What signifies theogonies and their armies, theologies and their dogmas, since whichever side of the problem is man's choice, his God exists not?
Let us for a moment take up the first proposition, and suppose God contemporaneous with Matter.
Is subjection to the action or the co-existence of an alien substance consistent with being God at all?
In such a system, would not God become a secondary agent compelled to organize Matter?
If so, who compelled Him?
Between His material gross companion and Himself, who was the arbiter?
Who paid the wages of the six days' labor imputed to the great Designer?
Has any determining force been found which was neither God nor Matter?
God being regarded as the manufacturer of the machinery of the worlds, is it not as ridiculous to call Him God as to call the slave who turns the grindstone a Roman citizen?
Besides, another difficulty, as insoluble to this supreme human reason as it is to God, presents itself.
"If we carry the problem higher, shall we not be like the Hindus, who put the world upon a tortoise, the tortoise on an elephant, and do not know on what the feet of their elephant may rest?
This supreme will, issuing from the contest between God and Matter, this God, this more than God, can He have existed throughout eternity without willing what He afterwards willed,--admitting that Eternity can be divided into two eras.

No matter where God is, what becomes of His intuitive intelligence if He did not know His ultimate thought?
Which, then, is the true Eternity,--the created Eternity or the uncreated?
But if God throughout all time did will the world such as it is, this new necessity, which harmonizes with the idea of sovereign intelligence, implies the co-eternity of Matter.

Whether Matter be co-eternal by a divine will necessarily accordant with itself from the beginning, or whether Matter be co-eternal of its own being, the power of God, which must be absolute, perishes if His will is circumscribed; for in that case God would find within Him a determining force which would control Him.


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