gospel--of his soul, of his goods, of his body. Growing with his growth, preached and professed in a hundred different ways in various ages of the world, these gospels represent the unceasing purpose of his widening thoughts."
The once pre-ministerial student then said: "The gospel of his relations to the powers unseen has brought sometimes hope, too often despair. In a wide outlook on the immediate and remote effects of the attempts to establish this relation, one event discredits the great counsel of Confucius (who realized what a heavy yoke religion might be) to keep aloof from spiritual beings. Surviving the accretions of twenty centuries, the life and immortality brought to light by the gospel of Christ remain the earnest desire of the best portion of the race."
The next point Osler makes concerns possessions: "The gospel of his goods-of man's relation to his fellow men, is written in blood on every page of history. Quietly and slowly the righteousness that exalteth a nation, the principles of eternal justice, have won acquiescence, at any rate in theory, though as nations and individuals we are still far from carrying them into practice."
In the following part Osler addresses the real subject: "And the third gospel, the gospel of his body, which brings man into relation with nature- true evangelion, the glad tidings of conquest beside which all others sink into insignificance-is the final conquest of nature out of which has come Man's Redemption of Man, the subject to which I am desirous of directing your attention...The history of man is the story of great martyrdom-plague, pestilence and famine, battle and murder, crimes unspeakable, tortures inconceivable; and the inhumanity of man to man has even outdone what appears to be atrocities in nature."