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Praise, Explanation & Criticism
Henry Drummond (James Pott & Co.: 1890), 69 pages. »
In this timeless speech, Henry Drummond argues that the greatest thing, the summum bonum, is love. But this love is not here just a cliché, the love of pop songs and romantic comedies. As Drummond puts it: "Patience; kindness; generosity; humility; courtesy; unselfishness; good temper; guilelessness; sincerity — these make up the supreme gift... You will observe that all are in relation to men, in relation to life, in relation to the known to-day and the near to-morrow, and not to the unknown eternity." I have always appreciated this fact, that the biblical portrait of love is not merely a beautiful but empty concept, but rather a love with form and flesh. Drummond enumerates and expounds on the nature of biblical love, contrasting it with other goods, analyzing its aspects, and defending its primacy of place. ~ Afterall
Henry Drummond (1851-1897)
By far the most original thing here is the simple conception of Heaven
as a City. The idea of religion without a Church — "I saw no Temple
therein" — is anomalous enough; but the association of the blessed life
with a City — the one place in the world from which Heaven seems most
far away — is something wholly new in religious thought. No other
religion which has a Heaven ever had a Heaven like this. The Greek, if
he looked forward at all, awaited the Elysian Fields; the Eastern
sought Nirvana. All other Heavens have been Gardens, Dreamlands —
passivities more or less aimless. Even to the majority among ourselves
Heaven is a siesta and not a City. It remained for John to go straight
to the other extreme and select the citadel of the world's fever, the
ganglion of its unrest, the heart and focus of its most strenuous toil,
as the framework for his ideal of the blessed life. ~ Excerpt
