Sm,—I find it hard to square Mr. Feilden's belief n
a personal God— "a Power above the judgement-seat of human reason and force "—with his desire to further world fellowship. If I believed in a personal deity, I should believe that He had arranged everything for the best in the best of all possible worlds. I should consider it the unforgivable sin to make y attempt to alter any of His arrangements. It seems to me illogical say God made the world and at the same time to try to alter the °rid to suit ourselves.
For this reason I hold, in opposition to Mr. Feilden, that to go beyond
e material in seeking foundations for world fellowship is to make lure certain. The only firm basis is the conviction that Love is God ; is requires no "spiritual" buttressing whatever.—Yours faithfully, HAMILTON PYFE. ,