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- 14 page printout
-
- From an old, undated, book published by Watts & Co. entitled:
- 'Pamphlets by Charles Watts' Vol. I.
-
- The book contains the motto: --
-
- "To Believe without evidence and demonstration is an
- act of ignorance and folly." -- Volney.
-
- **** ****
-
- CHRISTIANITY AND CIVILIZATION.
-
- Why Christianity is Still Professed.
-
- by
- Charles Watts
- Vice-President of the National Secular Society
-
- Watts & Co. 17, Johnson's Court, Fleet Street.
- London, England.
- **** ****
-
- 1880?
-
- CHRISTIANITY AND CIVILIZATION.
-
- It would be difficult to select two other words which are used
- as extensively as "Christianity" and "civilization," about which
- there are such vague and conflicting notions as to their meaning.
- If we ask Christians for a definition of their faith, it will be
- found that the answers given are as varied as they are numerous.
- The reply of a Roman Catholic will differ widely from that of a
- Protestant, while the meaning given to Christianity by a member of
- the Church of England would not be the same as the one furnished by
- the adherents of the many dissenting sects. A decided lack of
- harmony would be perceptible between the definitions offered by
- Unitarians and Trinitarians, by Quakers and Salvationists, by
- Swedenborgians and Christadelphians. The expounders of what is
- termed the "higher criticism " present a conception of Christianity
- the very opposite to that taught by the school represented by Dr.
- Talmage and the late C.H. Spurgeon. The same diversity as to the
- nature of the Christian faith obtains among nations. In Spain it
- has proved a cruel oppression, in Rome a priestly domination, in
- America a commercial commodity, in Scotland a gloomy nightmare, and
- in England an emotional pastime. This dissimilitude as to the
- character of the "new religion" appeared immediately after the
- alleged death of Christ. According to the New Testament, Paul
- preached a system of a philosophical character compared with that
- of Jesus. The Christianity of Paul was widely different from that
- of his "divine Master." The character of Christ was submissive and
- servile, that of Paul defiant and pugnacious. We could no more
- conceive Christ fighting with wild beasts at Ephesus, than we could
- suppose Paul submitting without protest or resistance to those
- insults and indignities which are alleged to have been heaped upon
- Christ. Neither could we for one moment imagine Paul advising his
- disciples when anyone smote them on one cheek to offer them the
- other. Paul introduced by his personal character a certain amount
- of boldness and energy into the Christian propaganda, and by the
- character of his mind he largely modified the Christian system. In
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- fact, each successive age has left its mark and impress upon
- Christianity. No system was ever less rigid and more plastic. It
- has certainly come up to the injunction of St. Paul "to be all
- things to all men." persons of the most contrary dispositions and
- of the most opposite natures have been its great illustrators,
- expounders, and living representatives. It has found room for all
- temperments; the ascetic and luxurious enjoyer of life the man of
- action and the man of contemplation; the monk and the king the
- philanthropist and the destroyer of his race; the iconoclastic
- hater of all ceremonies, and the superstitious devotee. All these
- opposites have found refuge within the pale of Christianity. But
- this heterogeneous family is by no means the result of and all
- embracing comprehensiveness in the system of Christ, but rather the
- effects of a theology characterized alike by its indefinite,
- incomplete, and indecisive principles.
-
- These different and contradictory views which are entertained
- as to what Christianity really is, prove that its truths are not
- self-evident, but that they depend, for their interpretation and
- manifestation, upon the education and surroundings of their
- professors. This deprives the faith of any just claim to
- infallibility and to a "divine origin." For, if the reason of man
- has to decide its meaning, one uniform conception of what it
- teaches is impossible, and the criterion by which its claims are
- tested is a human one. The term "Secular Christianity" we regard as
- a misnomer, for the system has no consistent signification if the
- notion of what is called the supernatural is ignored, The
- inspiration that induced Christ to say and do what is ascribed to
- him in the four gospels, was considered to have emanated from
- above. The power that moves and regulates the whole system of
- Christianity is designated by its believers as supernatural. Christ
- did not teach from purely secular motives, but through the belief
- that he was doing the will of his 'Father in heaven." The leading
- features of the teachings of the New Testament are; reliance upon
- a supernatural power, faith in Christ, belief in the efficacy of
- prayer, and in the immortality of the soul; also that poverty is a
- virtue, that submission is a duty, and that love to man should be
- subordinate to love to God. These principles, however consoling
- they may be to some, must, from their nature, check the progress of
- civilization. The extent of their retarding influence depends upon
- the degree of veneration in which they are held by their
- professors. With some Theists and Unitarians these theological
- notions are less dangerous, because such Christians are less
- dogmatic and less orthodox. But with a Wesleyan, a Baptist, or a
- member of the Salvation Army, such notions frequently lead to
- conduct antagonistic to general improvement. With these latter
- Christians, Christ is "all in all," and they are ever ready to
- exclaim: --
-
- "No foot of land do I possess,
- A stranger in the wilderness,
- I all their goods despise.
- I trample on their whole delight,
- And seek a city out of sight,
- A city in the skies."
-
-
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- For:
- "Nothing is worth a thought beneath,
- But how I may escape the death
- That never, never dies."
-
- Such is the complex character of the Christian religion, which
- its enthusiastic devotees boast has been the cause of modern
- civilization. "See," they exclaim, "how it made men free,
- established liberty, abolished the corruptions of Rome, liberated
- the human mind from heathen darkness, gave peace to the world, and
- introduced a new and pure religion." To put the matter mildly, all
- this is pure assumption and nothing more, and this we hope to show
- beyond all possible doubt. We shall endeavor to prove that
- Christianity does not contain the elements which have produced
- civilization, but that modern progress is the result of agencies
- the very antithesis to New Testament teachings. Before doing this,
- however, we ask, when and where did Christianity cause the changes
- above mentioned? What we call civilization means a condition of
- society where movements are in operation that will banish
- barbarism, and in its place establish culture and the right of
- personal freedom. Now, in what nation his Christianity accomplished
- this result? It is no credit to any faith to have destroyed Roman
- learning, and then to have plunged Europe into a state of mental
- darkness. Yet this is what the early Christians did, as the history
- of the Middle Ages amply testifies, The monuments of Christianity
- are huge buildings erected at the expense of the blood and muscle
- of unremunerated laborers, True, Christianity produced
- architecture, and so it did monkish lying chronicles. It incited
- Europe to a state of ferment, and also inspired the Crusaders to
- wage their unholy wars; it lighted the fires of Smithfield and
- Oxford, and it established the Holy Inquisition and the Star
- Chamber, wherein human beings were tortured and cruelly put to
- death. The adherents of this "new religion" have spread war,
- strife, and desolation among, nations in their attempt to subdue
- races who were no more savages than were the Christians themselves.
- This was the work of the promoters of the "new and pure religion."
- Christianity was erected upon the ruins of Greek and Roman
- philosophy, but it failed to give birth to principles that could be
- practically carried out in daily life. All that tends to produce a
- state of civilization and to supply the needs and ensure the
- refinement of a people, does not date its inception from the
- introduction of Christianity, for that lacks not only any scheme of
- education, but much of its teaching encourages unthrift and favors
- despotism.
-
- We are told that the Christian clergy were the scholars of the
- nation for a thousand years, although the Christian Mosheim says,
- in his "Ecclesiastical History," that "The bishops in general were
- so illiterate, that few of that body were capable of composing the
- discourses which they delivered to the people." Even the clergy,
- who were comparatively learned, kept all their knowledge to
- themselves, while the general masses were steeped in ignorance and
- moral degradation. Christianity has established churches, but when
- did it give the artisan any ownership in them? For centuries the
- Christian Church has been the opponent of all literary, political,
- and social advancement. It did not found mechanics' institutes,
- free schools, or unsectarian universities. But it did close the
-
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- avenues of learning against those who did not swear by its faith.
- Its protestant supporters argued against giving Roman Catholics and
- Jews their civil rights. Henry, (afterwards lord) Brougham, once
- asked in the House of Commons how the bishops could Condemn
- perjury, when they declared before God that they were moved by the
- Holy Ghost to accept many thousand pounds a year for preaching
- "Blessed be ye poor?" The fact is, money is at the root of
- religion, as established in England, and we see in every cathedral
- pile an emblem of a petrified faith.
-
- Many able expounders of Christianity, failing to recognize the
- true causes of civilization, urge that it has produced what they
- term "a change of heart," and that this change has a more
- beneficial effect upon the general conditions of society than
- secular agencies have. Now, we fail to discover any proof of this
- allegation. Western civilization is the result of the evolution of
- the intellect far more than it is of the fostering of the emotions.
- In transforming society from what it was to what it is, the
- teachings of science have proved more efficacious than the
- preaching of sermons, and the brain power of such masterminds as
- Galileo, Newton, Watt, and Stephenson has been a greater civilizing
- factor than all the emotional force manifested by the host of
- divines who have contributed to the history of the Christian faith.
- We hope to show that the improvements of modern life are not the
- outcome of putting into practice the injunctions of Christ, but
- rather the consequence of following the truths born of such
- geniuses as those whose names we have mentioned. The discovery of
- coal and of electricity, the mechanical inventions of the last two
- hundred years, the control of the lightning, and the navigation of
- the seas, have been the potent agencies in bringing about modern
- civilization. But these agencies have been secured through the
- medium of cultivated intellects and are not the result of any
- Christian "change of heart."
-
- Experience amply testifies that if we keep our bodies in a
- healthy condition and properly drain our land, the probability is
- that if epidemics come upon us they will soon depart, and if these
- duties are neglected, it is likely that diseases may not only visit
- us, but that they will linger in our midst despite any "change of
- heart" that might have taken place. If, however, by this phrase is
- meant, that men should cease to do evil and learn to do good, then
- we do not deny the advantages of such a change, but we contend that
- intelligence and secular agencies are necessary to render such
- advantages serviceable for all civilizing purposes. We further
- assert that before a person's character is changed for the better,
- the conditions which surround him must be improved; for, as Spencer
- has shown, a moral character cannot emanate from immoral
- surroundings. Thus the very "change of heart" spoken of depends
- upon the superior environment caused by external influences.
- Moreover, we find that this "change of heart" has not induced
- Christians to seek to remove slavery, religious inequalities,
- political wrongs and social injustice; neither has it inspired them
- with a desire to encourage education or to favor the discovery and
- the application of the sciences. In the face of these facts, it
- cannot be consistently said that the Christian's "change of heart"
- has brought about the civilization of the nineteenth century.
-
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- Persons with unbiased minds, and who are capable of
- generalizing facts, will doubtless recognize that civilization is
- not the result of any one thing, or of the efforts of any one man,
- and least of all of those of a person who possibly might have lived
- in Palestine two thousand years ago. The progress of a nation is to
- be attributed to efforts of many men and women of different
- generations; and also to a combination of circumstances that have
- been in operation during all ages, preparing the way for the
- advancement of a higher condition of things. For instance, if it
- had not been for the scientific discoveries of a Watt, a Dalton,
- and a Black of the last century, the application of the sciences
- with which their names are associated would not have been capable
- of being so easily applied to the ends of general utility in this
- present age. It is equally true that for the freedom from
- theological intolerance which we possess to-day, we are indebted to
- the persistent and fearless advocacy of the Freethought pioneers of
- past ages, as well as to the efforts of Freethinkers of more recent
- times.
-
- We are aware that many of the most able thinkers entertain
- different views from ours as to the cause of human progress, but
- the question is, Whose views are supported by historical facts and
- by general experience? If the sources of civilization are contained
- in the New Testament, how is it that at the time when its teachings
- were observed, more than at any other period, civilization was
- comparatively unknown? It is only within the present century, when
- skepticism and reliance on mundane resources have been and still
- are so prevalent, that real progress to any great extent has been
- accomplished. Moreover, we know too well that two of the principal
- civilizing agencies -- science and general knowledge -- have been
- bitterly opposed and continually retarded by those very persons who
- professed to be the exemplars of Christ's teachings. When the facts
- of modern science were first proclaimed, they were denounced as
- untrue by Christians who for centuries constantly condemned them as
- being antagonistic to the welfare of the people. New truths that
- were demonstrated by early scientists were regarded by believers in
- Christianity as instances of the insanity of the discoverers, and
- every fossil wonder disclosed was referred by Christians to the
- limited explanation of the Noachian deluge. Finding threats and
- intimidation failed to check the advance of truth, persecution and
- imprisonment were the weapons used by Christian hands towards those
- who investigated the laws of nature, and who sought to make such
- laws known to their fellow creatures. Dr. Ferguson, in his
- work,"The Penalties of Greatness," acknowledges that the Roman
- Catholic Church was the first to extinguish the light of reason.But
- truth existed in spite of the deadly agencies which surrounded it.
- Not only did this Christian Church employ means to prevent the
- least difference of opinion on religious subjects, by the invention
- of the most finished instruments of torture, but science itself
- became the object of burning jealousy and persecution, and men were
- made to deny, the very laws of nature.
-
- Dr. Dick, in his work, the "Philosophy of Religion," shows
- that the Protestant Church exhibited a similar spirit of
- persecution. The same may be said of Christians in their more
- recent treatment of such men as Lyell, Darwin, Huxley, and Tyndall.
- Dr. White's "Warfare of Science" contains innumerable facts showing
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- how scientific men have been denounced by Protestants and charged
- with promulgating theories that were said to be injurious to the
- welfare of mankind. And yet the very knowledge that these men
- endeavored to impart is now admitted to be among the most potent
- factors in sustaining, and improving our civilization. For as
- Buckle observes, "Real knowledge, the knowledge on which all
- civilization is based, solely consists in an acquaintance with the
- relations which things and ideas bear to each other and to
- themselves in other words in an acquaintance with physical and
- mental laws."
-
- No one can seriously question the fact that general education
- has played a most important part in producing and in increasing
- civilization, yet it has taken the Christian world nearly eighteen
- hundred years to arrive at the conclusion that it is necessary that
- the people should have adequate means of instruction at their
- command. Every step taken towards obtaining a national system of
- education has been determinedly opposed by men who were the leading
- expounders of the Christian faith. And the most resolute opponents
- of our present public schools are to be found in the Christian
- ranks. Buckle states that where Christian governments "have not
- openly, forbidden the free dissemination of knowledge they have
- done all they could to chock it. On all the implements of knowledge
- and on all the means by which it is diffused, such as papers,
- books, political journals, and the like, they have imposed duties
- so heavy that they could hardly have done worse, if they had been
- the sworn advocates of popular ignorance. Indeed, looking at what
- they have actually, accomplished, it may be emphatically said that
- they have taxed the human mind."
-
- Civilization is not an invention, but a growth; a process from
- low animal conditions to higher physical, moral, and intellectual
- attainments. The real value of civilization consists in its being
- the means whereby the community can enjoy personal comfort and
- general happiness. Now the elements that have contributed to such
- a societarian condition, are those that Christianity, has not
- concerned itself with, either as originator or as promoter. The
- lesson of all history, teaches the fact that the progress of a
- people depends upon their knowledge of, and their obedience to
- organic and inorganic laws. This great truth has not been
- sufficiently recognized by the expounders of Christianity. On the
- contrary, following in this particular the example of their Master,
- they have urged that man's principal attention should be directed
- to the alleged supernatural, and to the considerations of a life
- beyond the grave. The secular affairs of existence have been
- deemed, by the consistent professors of Christianity,, as being of
- only secondary importance. This disregard of mundane duties is, no
- doubt, the logical sequence of believing such teachings of the New
- Testament, as: "He that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that
- hateth his life, in this world shall keep it until life eternal"
- (John 12: 2,5). Also, "Everyone that hath forsaken houses, or
- brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children,
- or lands, for my name's sake, shall receive a hundred fold, and
- shall inherit everlasting life" (Matt. 19: 29), This is actually
- offering a premium for neglecting the requirements of this world,
- and for ignoring the natural promptings of humanity.
-
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- In any accurate history of the advancement of the human race,
- the influence of external forces must be considered. The emotions
- of our nature have doubtless played an active part in civilizing
- processes, but external conditions have also proved potent factors
- in all progressive movements. For instance, the geographical
- position and climate of nations have always had a marvelous effect
- upon the temperaments and the beliefs of individuals, thus either
- marring or improving the development of Civilization. An observant
- traveller can readily discern the difference between the
- temperament of the inhabitants of the Swiss and of the Italian
- sides of the Alps, or between those who reside on the English and
- on the French side of the Channel. The Swiss are as solemn as their
- snow-capped mountains, and the Italians are as lively as the
- English larks whose songs accompany the dawn of the summer morn.
- The mental calibre of the French, as a rule, differs in many
- respects from that of the English; and a faith that may satisfy an
- Oriental mind, would probably be found inadequate to meet the
- requirements of the Western intellect. This is a feature in the
- process of civilization that Christianity has not taken into
- account for it prescribes the same faith for all nations and for
- all people, despite the varied climates and the different
- localities in which they are born and trained. Buckle has shown
- that man's progress is the result of his physical environment; for
- it has been found to be impossible to establish a high civilization
- in certain countries, and under certain climatic influences. Take,
- for instance, the people of Asia, and of Africa; also the
- Abyssinians. In spite of all the efforts of Christian missionaries
- civilization in those countries is at its lowest ebb. As a writer
- aptly remarks; "If it were the Church that created civilization,
- then we should see similar results in different latitudes, and
- among different races. But the facts are opposed to this claim.
- Wherever there is a high civilization, there is a good soil and a
- temperate climate," This fact Proves that it is not to Christianity
- that we owe civilization, but rather that it depends for its
- manifestations upon the healthy conditions of society and its
- surroundings.
-
- Briefly summarized, it appears to us that the principal causes
- of modern civilization are: The development of the intellect, this
- rules the world to-day; the expansion of mechanical genius, this
- provides for the increased needs of the people; the extension of
- national commerce, this causes an interchange of ideas; the
- invention of printing, this provides for the circulation of newly-
- discovered facts; the beneficial influence of climate, this affects
- the condition both of body and mind; the knowledge and the
- application of science, these reveal the value and the power of
- natural resources; the spread of skepticism, this provides for the
- vindication of the right of mental freedom; the practical
- recognition of political Justice, this forms the basis of all just
- governments; and finally, the establishment of the social equality
- of women with men, this secures the emancipation of women from that
- state of domestic servitude and general inferiority in which
- theology had for centuries kept them. The question here to be
- considered is, are the causes of civilization just named, even
- indicated in the New Testament? We submit they are not, for if the
- following injunctions were implicitly obeyed, there would be a
- complete stagnation of all civilization, "Love not the world,
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- neither the things that are in the world," "For what is a man
- profited if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" "Seek
- ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness and all these
- things [food, clothes, etc.] shall be added unto you." "Whosoever
- he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my
- disciple," "Take no thought for your life," "Resist not evil,"
- "Blessed be ye poor," "Labor not for the meat which perisheth,"
- "Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was called,"
- "Submit yourself to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake,"
- "Let every, soul be subject unto the higher powers, for there is no
- power but of God. ... Whosoever therefore resisteh the power
- resisteth the ordinance of God, and they that resist shall receive
- to themselves damnation." "Wives submit yourselves to your own
- husbands," "As the Church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives
- be to their husbands in everything," "What therefore God hath
- joined together let no man put asunder," "Servants be subject to
- your masters with all fear, not only to the good and gentle, but
- also to the froward," "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon
- earth," "Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would
- borrow of thee turn not thou away," "Lend hoping for nothing
- again," "He that taketh away thy goods ask them not again," Forgive
- your brother who sins "until seventy times seven," "Whosoever shall
- not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye depart out of that
- city, shake off the dust of your feet," "If any man preach any
- other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be
- accursed," "If any man teach otherwise, and consent not to the
- wholesome words, even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ ... he is
- proud, knowing nothing. ... from such withdraw thyself," "Of whom
- is Hymenaeus and Alexander, whom I have delivered unto Satan, that
- they may learn not to blaspheme."
-
- Here are a few passages from the Scriptures, the highest
- Christian authority, which enjoin conduct that cannot possibly
- promote civilization, but must necessarily retard it. The teachings
- herein set forth are, neglect of the world, personal indifference
- to human needs, non-resistance of wrongs, to regard poverty as a
- blessing, abject submission to "the powers that be," the subjection
- of woman, the giving up all for Christ, reckless lending without
- any conditions for the return of the loan, and the encouragement of
- a bitter spirit of prosecution. Well may the late John S. Mill
- exclaim, in his work on Liberty, "That not one Christian in a
- thousand guides or tests his individual conduct by reference to
- those [New Testament] laws." The reason why those laws cannot be
- obeyed, in the nineteenth century is because, as Mill further
- states, the morality of Christ is, "in many important points
- incomplete and one-sided, and unless ideas and feelings not
- sanctioned by it had contributed to the formation of European life
- and character, human affairs would have been in a worse condition
- than they now are. Other ethics than any which can be evolved from
- exclusively Christian sources must exist side by side with
- Christian ethics to produce the moral regeneration of mankind."
-
- It may be asked by professors of the Christian faith, "If
- Christianity is so unprogressive in its nature, and so much opposed
- to a high condition of civilization as you allege that it is, how
- is it that the profession of Christianity is so extensive to-day?"
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- In estimating the position that a system occupies in a
- community, it is necessary to distinguish between its profession
- and its practice. It must be evident to the impartial observer,
- that while the name Christianity is still retained in our midst,
- its essential principles have become impotent as a factor in daily
- life. As James Cotter Morison observes in his "Service of Man":
- 'There seems to be no exception to the rule, that the older
- religions grow, the more infirm do they become, the less hold do
- they keep on the minds of well informed and thoughtful men. Their
- truths, once accepted without question, are gradually doubted, and
- in the end denied by increasing numbers. ... All the chief dogmas
- of the Christian. Creeds have been for several centuries before the
- world. They were once not only believed, but adored. Now the
- numbers who doubt or dispute them are increasing every day. Time
- has not been their friend, but their enemy. Religious truth begins
- with undoubting acceptance, and after a shorter or longer period of
- supremacy, with the growth of knowledge and more severe canons of
- criticism, passes gradually into the category of questioned and
- disputed theories, ending at last in the class of rejected and
- exploded errors." The proceedings at recent Congresses and
- Conferences amply justify the truth of the above statements. At the
- present time the Churches are rent by intestine divisions, and
- assailed on all sides from without by all that is vigorous,
- intelligent, liberal, free, and progressive in our modern
- civilization. Christianity stands now as the mythologies of Greece
- and Rome stood at the period when it arose. The gods were more
- numerous than ever before, the temples more magnificent, the
- sacrifices and festivals more splendid, the priesthood more
- arrogant; but living faith had deserted them, the intellect of the
- age despised them, and its loftiest morality condemned them;
- therefore, despite their wealth, pomp, and power, they were
- irrevocably doomed to destruction.
-
- History repeats itself, hence a similar state of the decay,
- that marked the career of the religions of Greece and Rome, has
- characterized the history of Christianity. The truth of this
- allegation will be obvious to those who study the variety of stages
- through which the faith has passed. True the name has been
- retained, but not the faith the name was once supposed to
- represent. People in different nations and different ages have
- accepted the term Christianity, and applied it to a theological and
- ceremonial system arranged in accordance with their education and
- their habits. The Christianity introduced into this country by
- Augustine in the sixth century, was not the Christianity taught in
- the East. The faith of the Middle Ages was not the faith that is
- professed in the nineteenth century.
-
- Dean Milman, in his "History of Civilization," observes: Its
- (Christianity's) specific character will almost entirely depend
- upon the character of the people who are its votaries ... It will
- darken with the darkness and brighten with the light of each
- succeeding century." Lord Macaulay says with no less truth than
- brilliancy Christianity conquered Paganism, but Paganism infected
- Christianity. The rites of the Pantheon passed into her worship,
- and the subtleties of the Academy into her creed." Francis William
- Newman, in his "Phases of Faith," also remarks: "I at length saw
- how untenable is the argument drawn from the inward history of
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- Christianity in favor of its superhuman origin. In fact, this
- religion cannot pretend to self-sustaining power. Hardly was it
- started on its course when it began to be polluted by the
- heathenism and false philosophy around it. With the decline of
- national genius and civil culture it became more and more debased.
- So far from being able to uphold the existing morality of the best
- Pagan teachers, it became barbarized itself, and sank into deep
- superstition and manifold moral corruption. From ferocious men it
- learned ferocity. When civil society began to coalesce into order,
- Christianity also turned for the better, and presently learned to
- use the wisdom first of Romans, then of Greeks; such studies opened
- men's eyes to new apprehensions of the scripture and of its
- doctrine. By gradual and human means, Europe, like ancient Greece,
- grew up towards better political institutions and Christianity
- improved with them."
-
- Thus, according to these authorities, it will be seen that the
- adherence to Christian theology which was observable in its
- primitive history is no longer perceptible. The aim and desire of
- modern reformers are to base morals, politics, and commerce on the
- principles of utility. Human instincts are found to be too strong,
- the necessities of life too potent, the exigencies of existence too
- imperative to allow the standard of two thousand years ago to
- regulate the actions of to-day. The political world is now
- conducted on secular principles; scientific research is unfettered
- by theology, and is therefore secular and the practical ethics of
- modern society are utilitarianism and are therefore secular. Our
- civilization is indissolubly connected with these three important
- facts.
-
- So extensively is the change -- produced by the skeptical
- tendency of the age -- progressing that we are continually hearing
- of some avowal either upon the part of a prelate, a clergyman, or
- a learned professor, of a new view of the Christian faith, or of a
- modification of the once popular theology. The nature of the new
- departure depends, of course, upon the intellectual status and the
- social position of those, who either give up altogether the
- profession of their old beliefs, or who so modify those beliefs
- that they may be considered more in harmony with the requirements
- of the age. But a general agreement appears to exist amongst the
- superior intelligent expounders of Christianity that the ideas that
- were for centuries entertained as to the character of their faith,
- and of its sanctions, can no longer be supported in the face of
- modern criticism. It cannot be doubted that many of the new views
- that are being promulgated as to what Christianity really is,
- strike at the very root of the system as it was taught in former
- times. Still, despite this fact, there is such a manifest desire to
- retain the name of Christian upon the part of a large section of
- society, that it may be useful to inquire what the magic influences
- are that impel so many persons to tenaciously cling to a name that
- represents no practical principle in the actions that govern the
- well-being of the community.
-
- it has been frequently urged by orthodox believers, that if
- all the facts of Christianity could he disposed of, Christian
- experience would still remain, and that it is this which gives the
- consolation that no criticism can destroy. Probably this will
-
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- explain why a large number of persons continue to adhere to the
- profession of Christianity. It, however, reduces the basis of their
- faith to the level of fanaticism, for the same reason could be
- given with equal force in justification of the manifestation of the
- wildest enthusiasm associated with the worst forms of superstition.
- It is the old idea that a thing is true because one feels it to be
- so. This is an assumption that assuredly should find no support
- from thinking persons, inasmuch as it could be cited to prove the
- truth of the greatest errors that have ever degraded the human
- mind. The savage, who worships his idol of wood and stone, derives
- consolation from his abject prostration. Why should Christian
- missionaries seek to rob him of his source of supreme comfort? The
- answer is, because the poor savage is thought to be mistaken in his
- useless and humiliating devotion. For a similar reason we remind
- the orthodox professor that the consolation experienced from a
- faith destitute of any practical value, and which consigns the
- majority of the human race to everlasting torture is un worthy of
- man, and would be a disgrace to any God. Besides, the probability
- that such consolation is based on fiction is not very complimentary
- to the power of truth. The lesson of experience is, that it is more
- serviceable to the world to revere what is true than to sacrifice
- the general results of reality for the selfish satisfaction of
- personal consolation.
-
- It is, however, impossible to argue profitably with people who
- do not use their mental faculties, and hence the greatest delusions
- that take possession of the human mind often remain unchecked and
- irremovable. On the other hand, when the intellect is brought into
- play, the result is the growth of new ideas. The attempts made by
- any of the clergy to explain away the objectionable features of
- certain doctrines are prompted, possibly, by their desire to retain
- their position in the Church, which is their only means of
- obtaining the necessaries of life. Those who have qualified
- themselves only for the theological profession know the
- difficulties that beset them when doubts enter their minds as to
- the truth of the creeds they profess. They may preach "Blessed be
- ye poor," but personally they, dread poverty, and they do their
- best to avoid sharing its "blessings." They may advise their
- congregations, in the words of Jesus, to "Take no thought for your
- life, what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your
- body,, what ye shall put on. Behold the fowls of the air; for they
- sow not neither do they reap, nor gather into barns yet your
- heavenly, Father feedeth them." So far, however, as the clergy
- themselves are concerned, they find it necessary to be at times
- exceedingly anxious for the morrow, and, rather than having faith
- that their "heavenly Father" will feed and clothe them, their
- concern is how to get cash to purchase food, drink, and clothes. It
- is not surprising, therefore, that clergymen and ministers with
- more than "a living wage" hesitate to give up the name by which
- they live. A change would perhaps mean ruin, and self-preservation
- is the first law of nature even among clericals, where personal and
- family interests are concerned. Besides, every man has not the
- courage to sever his connections with old institutions, old
- friends, and the comforts of life. Thus a second reason is
- discovered why many persons remain professors of Christianity. They
-
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- see no chance of providing for their daily bread outside of the
- Christian body, and consequently they prefer to bear the ills they
- have -- in clinging to an empty name -- than fly to others they
- know not of.
-
- In some cases men remain Christians in name because they
- persuade themselves that they can harmonize their new departure
- with modern discoveries. It has been so with astronomy and geology.
- At first these sciences were denounced as being heretical, now they
- are accepted as agreeing with Christian teachings. It was the same
- with that terribly destructive agent Evolution, which to theology
- meant revolution The only way a man could remain in the Christian
- ranks, and agree with Darwin's theory, was to contend that it
- agreed with the Bible, and, as a sort of final indication of
- friendship for the distinguished skeptic, they buried him in
- Westminster Abbey. It is remarkable how easy some people find it to
- rest under false convictions, particularly when such convictions
- are backed by pecuniary gain and found to be in accordance with
- fashionable opinions. Then people become like Goldsmith's vicar in
- his "Deserted Village,"
-
- "Remote from towns he ran his godly race,
- Nor e'er had changed, nor wished to change his place"
-
- The tendency at the present time within the Churches is to
- raise new theological ghosts as fast as the old ones are laid. We
- are now face to face with a fresh enemy to the long cherished
- notions of the Christian profession. It is a movement that
- commenced years ago outside the pulpit, and it bears the high and
- dignified name of "The Higher Criticism." Looking at the results
- already achieved by this destructive criticism, the question again
- arises, Why do men remain professors of Christianity? The answers
- that we have already given explain why some of the clergy continue
- in the fold, but what are the reasons that so many of the laity
- linger therein? The reply is in the first place because they are
- too intellectually indolent, and they find it more convenient to
- accept things as they are than to examine and study the value or
- otherwise of what they are asked to believe. If we look at the
- attendance at the ordinary church or chapel, who do we discover
- occupying the pews? Mostly women and children, who do not concern
- themselves about criticism, either higher or lower. In fact the
- indifferent section of believers constitute the large majority of
- professors of Christianity. Such persons never doubt and never
- inquire. Changes of opinion are the result of causes that seldom
- affect the intellectually lazy. With them it is not a question of
- mental honesty, but a case of inactivity of mind, which results in
- a deep slumber, that only ignorance induces. To excite the general
- mass of mankind to any perceptible degree of serious thought, a
- volcanic eruption in the intellectual world would be required. So
- long as persons are contented to "shut their eyes and open their
- mouths," or while they are too idle to use their faculties in
- thinking for themselves, they will probably remain Christians in
- name. Orthodox folks are too prone to rely upon others as to what
- they shall believe; it saves a degree of mental exercise for which
- the many have but little taste or inclination. This seems to
- account for the persistence of belief in all ages and in all
- countries, whether Christian or not. Hence millions of our fellow-
-
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- mortals remain in the faith and follow the customs of their
- fathers, having no desire for, or conception of change. In all the
- great religious communities of the world we find that men adopt a
- faith; it is not really a belief at all, for the road to
- intelligent belief is through the portals of doubt and
- investigation, in the absence of which true belief is not formed
-
- As a further illustration that indifference is a prominent
- cause of the name of Christianity being perpetuated, we may mention
- the case of shopkeepers and commercial men, whose indifference is
- intensified by self-interest. They attend church either to please
- their customers or to gain some relief from the anxieties
- pertaining to their weekly labors. They listen to the sermons, but
- they pay little or no heed to what they hear. It is the fashion to
- attend "a place of worship," and they consider that their business
- success depends upon their going with the multitude, at least
- outwardly. The clergyman or minister is too shrewd to talk to such
- persons about the grave discussions going on in popular reviews, or
- new books of heretical tendency. And if the preacher does allude to
- the subject, it is for the purpose of showing that if his hearers
- have heard that anything has gone wrong with the faith or the
- Church, they need not be alarmed, it is only the spite of
- "infidelity," and he will see to the matter and put all things
- right. Supposing the educated, reading young men of his
- congregation express any doubts, the minister may deliver a course
- of sermons, not allowing any discussion, in which. he boldly
- asserts that the Bible and the Church still rest on an impregnable
- rock, against which many skeptics have been dashed to pieces in
- trying to blast it with "infidel" powder. He concludes by urging
- that the faith of Jesus has its hold upon the human heart,
- satisfying all its desires and longings, and that to yield up this
- faith would be followed by consequences appalling to contemplate.
- These appeals to ignorance and uncontrolled emotion succeed, for a
- time, in suppressing doubt, stopping inquiry, and securing a
- profession of a faith in the acceptance of which reason and
- investigation have had no part.
-
- In addition to those who remain professing Christians from
- interested motives, from aversion to change, or through inheriting
- the belief of their parents, there are others who have what the
- term "intelligent convictions" of the truth of the faith they avow.
- They believe in Jesus as an historical character, whose life is
- truly recorded in the gospels. Conflicting texts may be found in
- the scriptures, doubts may be expressed by Bible critics as to the
- genuineness of the gospels, it may be found difficult to explain
- many events described in the New Testament. Nevertheless, the
- professors of Christianity from "conviction" accept the declaration
- that "God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
- that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have
- everlasting life." Believers of this class are easily made
- professors of Christianity, and are as easily kept so, for they
- feel sure, that their belief, secures for them safety in "the world
- to come." The doctrine, of rewards and punishments has always been
- a powerful factor in the promulgation of the orthodox faith. The
- Devil has been the clergyman's best friend, and now that it is
- acknowledged that the belief in the existence of such a being was
- a delusion, and that hell was a fiction, Christianity is losing
-
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- its, former influence over the human mind -- the faith has to be
- reconstructed to suit requirements of this skeptical age. Of course
- those who believe "in Christ and him crucified," have only an ideal
- founded upon in imaginary Christ. They ignore the elementary facts
- of nature for in the constitution of man and of nature in general
- there is going on a perpetual struggle for existence, which does
- not harmonize with the alleged love of God for the world, It may be
- said that the existence of so much suffering and misery in the
- world is a mystery, but if this is so, it does not dispose of the
- fact that such drawbacks to man's happiness are here, and no God of
- love is apparently disposed to remove them. Besides, it is
- difficult to believe that "God so loved the world," that he sent
- his son to be tortured on the cross to achieve a purpose which God,
- if he were all-powerful, could have accomplished without this
- exhibition of cruelty and injustice. Those persons who remain
- Christians because of their 'desire to believe that Christ was
- really their crucified Savior, can never fully recognize the
- horrible nature of "the agony and bloody sweat," the sufferings
- endured by the man of sorrow and grief, and the sadness experienced
- by him when abandoned by his God at the hour of death. They also
- ignore, in the person of Christ, the scientific fact that death is
- the termination of life, for he is supposed to have performed more
- wonderful things after his death than he did before.
-
- Briefly stated, it may be said that the thoughtless multitude
- adhere to the profession of Christianity because they are either
- too indifferent to oppose it, or they cling to the belief through
- fear of punishment hereafter; or still further, they adhere to the
- old faith in consequence of their inability to understand what is
- to replace the orthodox belief. Among persons of intellectual
- ability there are two considerations that principally induce them
- to favor the continuation of the profession of the Christian name.
- They suppose that it is to their interest to be thought in accord
- with the fashionable belief of the day, and they are impressed with
- the idea that the masses are kept in check by believing that the
- doctrine of hell-fire is a true one. Thus the profession of
- Christianity is perpetuated through mental laziness, lack of
- intellectual capacity, consideration of self-interest, or through
- the notion that fear, even if based on fiction, is necessary to
- keep the uninformed in order and subjection. While the triumphs of
- political and scientific inquiry, in dismissing from men's minds
- despotic and erroneous views, have been numerous, theology is still
- making desperate struggles to cling to its old positions. It will
- require, probably, more than one generation of educated persons to
- eliminate from the human mind the ideas that cause men and women to
- remain professors of Christianity. Although we may believe, with
- Shelley, that the evil faith will not last forever, it dies hard
- nevertheless. In the persistent warfare with this evil, supported
- as it has been by so many varying interests, many brave reformers
- have exhausted their energies, while other toilers have had to give
- up the battle. The magnitude of the undertaking to reform the
- religious world reminds us of Butler's lines: --
-
- Reforming schemes are none of mine,
- To mend the world's vast design;
- Like little men in a little boat,
- Trying to pull to them the ship afloat.
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