[401] "God," said Plato, "is supremely good" ("Republic," book ii. ch. 18); and "virtue is likeness or assimilation to God" ("Theætetus," § 384).
[402] Milman, "Latin Christianity," vol. i. p. 357.
[403] Guyot, "Earth and Man," p. 322.
[404] Wallace, "On Natural Selection," p. 326.
[405] "First Principles," p. 38.
[406] Ibid. p. 496.
[407] Buchanan, "Modern Atheism," p. 285.
[408] "Scientific Basis of Faith," p. 6.
[409] "First Principles," p. 43.
[410] Without referring to the writings of theologians, we may take any definition of religion which incidentally occurs in general literature. For example, Froude defines religion as "the attitude of reverence in which noble-minded men instinctively place themselves toward the Unknown Power which made man and his dwelling-place. It is the natural accompaniment of their lives, the sanctification of their actions and their acquirements. It is what gives to man in the midst of the rest of Creation his special elevation and dignity" ("History of England," vol. xii. p. 560).