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chapter 7

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the largest and most important influence of the bible in literature lies beyond all these visible effects upon language and style and imagery and form. it comes from the strange power of the book to nourish and inspire, to mould and guide, the inner life of

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man. “it finds me,” said coleridge; and the word of the philosopher is one that the plain man can understand and repeat.

the hunger for happiness which lies in every human heart can never be satisfied without righteousness; and the reason why the bible reaches down so deep into the breast of man is because it brings news of a kingdom which is righteousness and peace and joy in the holy spirit. it brings this news not in the form of a dogma, a definition, a scientific statement, but in the form of literature, a living picture of experience, a perfect ideal embodied in a character and a life. and because it does this, it has inspiration for those who write in the service of truth and humanity.

the bible has been the favourite book of those who were troubled and downtrodden, and of those who bore the great burden of a great task. new light has broken forth from it to lead the upward struggle of mankind from age to age. men have come back to it because they could not do without it. nor will its influence wane, its radiance be darkened, unless literature ceases to express the noblest of

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human longings, the highest of human hopes, and mankind forgets all that is now incarnate in the central figure of the bible,—the divine deliverer.

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