Bellefonte, Pa., May 27, 1927. Dr. Colfelt on Theology. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D. There is no Eden into which some Serpent does not intrude. Most men of active mind about the age of 45 ar- rive at a period of disillusion and Cataclysm. Mine took the intellectual and theological form. The new Sci- ence whose marvels Darwin’s re- searches revealed, and Herbert Spen- cer reduced to philosophic deduction .and system intoxicated. dizzied, and .shook the whole structure of inherit- ed beliefs to their foundation. The Scholastic system of Augustinian The- ology tumbled down into Catholic ruin. The Evolutionary hypothesis, even after one clung with desperation to the first words of Genesis “In the ‘beginning God” left little beside abol- ishing utterly Archbishop Usher’s chronology of 6000 years and carry- ing back man’s existence to the Glac- ial Epoch, enlarging the longevity of the race by more than two hundred ‘thousand years. In establishing the descent of man from superior animal forms his special creation was con- signed to limbo. The Federal headship and the fall of man from a sudden de- scent, to a long, steady ascent, from inorganic to organic, animal to men- tal, mental to moral, moral to spirit- al. The cosmogony of Moses and the Garden of Eden was changed into a jungle filled with ape-like creatures, the Deluge into a local cloud burst, -and in fine the whole Bible story of origins was reduced to a beautiful Mythus with no scientific basis. Science revealed that the world has “been fortuitously compressed, con- creted and rounded out of impalpable Star dust and is destined after an un- “known number of revolutions to be redissolved into the aboriginal lumini- ferious ether, and that after the same ‘manner the whole universe passes ‘through this same process of Evolu- ‘tion and Involution endlessly. Ter- restrial phenomena repeat the same circular performance. The vegetable consumes the earth, the ox and the sheep graze upon vegetation, we eat the ox and sheep, invisible agents we call death consume us, in the scale of creation some creatures serve only ‘to destroy other creatures, and the universe is like an enormous Cata- falque upon which burns a funeral torch lighting up the Statue of Eter- ‘nal Fatality. Some are patient be- cause they have been born lymphatic, many are heroes because they have much blood, others are thinkers be- cause they are bilious, more are mu- sicians and poets, their nerves are ex- citable, but all die of their own char- acteristics and all live while their stomachs endure; while their hearts, ‘their brains, their spines are sound. What we call virtues or vices are ‘tendencies of organism, what we call faith is but a few drops of blood less ‘in the veins or some atoms of phos- phorous in the bones, and what we call ‘immortality is an illusion. Death only is real and certain, and human “history is but a procession of shadows passing like bats between the day and the night and dropping one af- ter the other into an obscure unfath- omable abyss called nothingness. As for religious beliefs, they are mere phantasies of imagination. The In- carnations of ‘Gods, the Deifications of men, the miraculous conceptions, ‘the material Miracles, the Heavens -and Hells, Angels and Demons, all the spiritual paraphernalia are but beau- ‘tiful poetic fancies, products of the childish imagination of the race, ac- cumulations of Folk Lore, mythology -aggrandized into Theology, Credulity dignified by the name of faith and quite incapable of rational verifica- ‘tion by practical experimentation. Thus the race has passed through successive cycles of Evolution begin- ning with theological superstition, ris- “ing into the rational and metaphysi- cal and culminating in the positively scientific age into which it is our priv- ‘ilege to be born and to enjoy its certainty. The problem of the exact sciences is the succession of cause and effect. The experimental method gives positive results concerning the “laws of light, chemical affinities, the development of organisms, the laws that govern different bodies and even the laws of human mind. It will fur- nish exact answers to questions about the chemical élements of the stars and planets, about the movements of the sun with its constellations, about the origin of species and of man, about the infinitély small and weight- less particles of ether. The agglom- eration of these particles has produc- ed that lump we cdll the body and the mutual action and reaction of these particles upon each other has produced what we call life. In fine, all is development, and differentia- tion tending by the operation of in- exorable laws to complication and perfection, and the province of human investigation is to discover and sys- tematize the laws that govern the pro- cess. Here alone are we on the solid ground of verifiable knowledge. All scientific allusions and data, there- fore, found in so called inspired and Sacred Books of all ages and races that are pronounced irrational and untenable by Exact Science must be eliminated as impossible of rational belief however it may jar man made doctrines of Inspiration and Inerran- cy. Truth is mighty and must prevail and no error can be made immune by calling it inspired. All that is finite is within the pro- vince of experimental and exact science. All that is beyond is the In- finite and may be apprehended theo- retically and imaginatively but not comprehended. But it must be con- fessed that the apprehensions of in- finite things by finite 'béings are not verifiable and one man’s guess is as good as another’s where nothing can be exactly or exhaustively known. It is this incomprehensible realm beyond the finite which has given rise to so many systems of theoretical science, the most important branch of which is Metaphysics or Philosophy. Multi- ‘tudes of men in all ages and races have devoted themselves to this Her- culean task of unraveling the Infin- ite, only to the contradiction of each other, only to describe a perpetual oscillation between Materialism and Spiritualism, Epicureanism and Stoi- cism, Nominalism and Realmism, the futile quest ending in the hopeless conclusion that we are all and each but an inconceivable part of an incon- ceivable whole. These intellectual Samsons have circled round creation but never a one has ground out any- thing that has satisfactorily solved the riddle of universe, but have only ended where they began. Indeed the wisest of them all, Socrates, Saky, a Mouni (Budha) Solomon, Schopen- haur, baffled utterly in the quest, took refuge in Pessimism and ended their Samson-like labors by pulling down the pillars of the intellectual universe upon themselves, finding no resource better than the Philosophy of De- spair. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! Thus no refuge from the Iconoclasm of science can be found in philosophy, the profoundest researches of which end in nothing but the Agnosticism which must helplessly confess that the end of all wisdom is we do not, cannot know. What wonder paul said to the Corinthians,” the world by wis- dom knew not God.” This disloca- tion of the traditional Theological view, brought about by the new science of nature for which no pan- acea can be found, in Philosophy, is doubtless some disturbing force that is fermenting in the minds of the student body in the United States at the present time and occasioning so many tragical suicides. Often in my pulpit experience did I watch with anxiety the effect upon Students, re- turned from college for their Holi- days, when seated in the family pew they listened with polite attention to the preacher as he set forth the an- cient dogmas with which they vain- ly tried to reconcile the staple college instruction in the natural Sciences. Later warned by the wreck of many a youth’s inherited beliefs, I address- ed myself to the limit of my humble powers and the perturbation of some of my parishioners to the task of working out a possible approach- ment that might tide them as well as myself over this Critical impasse. But while it is easy to destroy men’s beliefs it is an almost superhuman task to reconstruct equally satisfying religious views. The best that I could do was to acquiesce for the time be- ing in the truce which my generation declared between Religion and Sci- ence. From that day to this it must be confessed that no rational recon- ciliation has been effected between the two views by either the cham- pions of religion or science. There is not a shadow of doubt that a pre-es- tablished harmony will be discovered between the present irreconcilables in God’s good time. The Authorof Sci- ence and Revelation is the same God and cannot be at war with himself. But this seeming gulf will only be bridged when Man’s knowledge of the true interpretation of Scripture and of the revelation of Science is vastly increased and clarified. In the mean- time it behooves all to maintain their souls with peace and patience, pray- |. ing for nothing so much as light, more light! But so far had this ir- reconcilable situation at that time affected my mind that I could not continue in the pulpit preaching a form of Religion with which I was no longer in rational accord and I determined to resign and ascertain my theological bearings. Wool Growers Make Plans for Mark- eting Clip. The Centre county Sheep and Wool Grower’s Association are making plans to market their wool co-opera- tively again this year. This plan of selling wool has proven very satis- factory. More growers are taking advantage of the association each year and the amount of rejections have been decreased until last year there was only approximately 5% of inferior grade. A supply of wool twine has been purchased by the association and can be obtained at the Agricultural Exten- sion office in Bellefonte, and also from the members of the board of directors in the various communities. Shear- ing is underway in the county and special care should be taken by the growers not to get their clip dirty or wet. It should be tied in good shape with paper twine, as there-is usual ly a difference of from five to seven cents a pound between rejections and No. 1 wool. Proud Woman Once upon a time there was in Sa- lem a storekeeper who did not like proud people, not even if they were among his customers. He had one patron who was extra proud. She sent her. servants to do her shopping. That was when a “hired girl” got $3 a week pay, and a wealthy family kent *wo or three maids. So proud was this woman that she would not even let her servant carry bundles. She insisted that the store- keeper send them. One morning she ordered a spool of cotton. The store- keeper called his errand boy, told him to get a wheelbarrow. He put the spool of cotton on the wheelbarrow and ordered the boy to deliver it. Did it have an effect? It did not.—Salem News. Lot Like Him Two public men In Washington were one day talking of the traits of a certain member of congress, who has a way of permitting himself to get “all het up” over trifies and who generally makes a great to-do with’ respect to small things. “Yes, sir,” observed one of the men first mentioned, “that chap invariably hitches a Corliss engine to a gimlet.” the accomplishment of If you want a nice Porch Rocker, FREE, The Watchman will help you get it. Come in and find out how it can be done. Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432 W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing LUMBER? T1-16-t£ coms IC Shoes Na Smart, indeed, are the Arch Shoes we are syowing for ladies of middle age. They have style, plenty of it, but comfort as well. 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