Mansfield Park
Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen (1775-1817) June, 1994 [Etext #141] [Date last updated: Frbruary 4, 2005] MANSFIELD PARK (1814) by Jane Austen CHAPTER I
O Stainless Mother, reject not us sinners in thine intercession with Him
Whom thou didst bear.
COPTIC.
Wonderful was this day in the little town of Judah where these two
women, each in her way an instrument of God in the upbuilding of His
Kingdom, met and rejoiced together. There is revealed to us something of
the possibilities of our religion when we try to follow the thought of
these two women. They are so utterly devoted to God that God can speak
to them. I think that it is well for us to dwell on this fact for a
moment. We are apt to look upon inspiration, what is described as being
filled with the Holy Ghost, as somewhat of a mechanical mode of God's
operation. Our mistaken view is that God takes control of the faculties
of a human being and uses them for His own purposes.
But that is quite to misunderstand God's method. God uses the faculties
of a man in proportion as the man yields himself to Him; and one who is
living a sincere religion becomes in a degree the medium of God's
self-expression. This possibility of expressing God increases as we
increase in sanctity. Those who have completely yielded themselves to
God in a life of sanctity become in a deep sense the representatives of
God: they have, in S. Paul's phraseology, His mind. To be capable of so
becoming the divine instrument it is necessary, not only to offer no
opposition to God's purposes, but to make ourselves the active
Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen (1775-1817) June, 1994 [Etext #141] [Date last updated: Frbruary 4, 2005] MANSFIELD PARK (1814) by Jane Austen CHAPTER I