All the Articles of the Darwin Faitli. 



The gold and the crystal can- 

 not equal it ; and the exchange 

 of it shall not be for jewels of 

 fine gold. 



The Topaz of Ethiopia shall 

 not equal it, neither shall it be 

 valued -with pure gold. 



Whence then cometh wisdom ? 

 and where is the place of under- 

 standing. 



Seeing it is hid from the eyes 

 of all living, and kept close from 

 the fowls of the air. 



Destruction and death say, We 

 have heard the fame thereof with 

 our ears. 



For He looketh to the ends of 

 the earth, and seeth under the 

 whole heaven ; 



To make the weight for the 

 winds ; and He weigheth the 

 waters by measure. 



When He made a decree for the 

 rain, and a way for the lightning 

 and thunder. 



And unto man He said, Behold, 

 the fear of the Lord, that is 

 wisdom ; and to depart from evil 

 is understanding. 



Canst thou by searching find 

 out God ? canst thou find out 

 the Almighty unto perfection ? 



But ask now the beasts, and 

 they shall teach thee : and the 

 fowls of the air, and they shall 

 tell thee. 



Who knoweth not in all these 

 that the hand of the Lord hath 

 wrought this? 



In whose hand is the soul of 

 every living thing, and the breath 

 of all mankind. JOB. 



which by the nature of the case is 

 materialistic, the actions of men, 

 so far as they are recogi!: 

 by science, are the results of 

 molecular changes in the matter of 

 which they are composed." 



" To a certain extent indeed it 

 may be said, that imperfect oss- 

 ification of the vertebral column 

 is of an embryonic character, but 

 on the other hand it would be 

 extremely incorrect to suppose 

 that the vertebral columns of the 

 older vertebrata are in any sense, 

 embryonic, in their whole 

 structure." 



Huxley. 



" Matter and spirit are both 



names for the imaginary substrata 



of groups of natural phenomena." 



Huxley. 



" In itself it is but of little 

 moment, whether we express the 

 phenomena of matter in terms of 

 spirit, or the phenomena of spirit 

 in terms of matter." 



Huxley. 



" The extension of the province 

 of what we call matter or caus- 

 ation, and the concomitant gradual 

 banishment from all regions 

 of human thought, of what we 

 call spirit and spontaneity." 



Huxley. 



" Traced back to its earliest 

 state, the matter arises as the 

 man does, in a particle of 

 nucleated protoplasm. 



Huxley. 



