ON BIGOTRY AND PROGRESS.
If any Christian reader has been patient
enough to follow me thus far, I now claim that he
will judge my argument and me, as before the bar of
God, and not by the conventional standards of the Christian
churches.
Morality and Truth are principles
in human nature both older and more widespread than
Christianity or the Bible: and neither Jesus nor
James nor John nor Paul could have addressed or did
address men in any other tone, than that of claiming
to be themselves judged by some pre-existing standard
of moral truth, and by the inward powers of the hearer.
Does the reader deny this? or, admitting it, does he
think it impious to accept their challenge? Does
he say that we are to love and embrace Christianity,
without trying to ascertain whether it be true or
false? If he say, Yes, such a man has
no love or care for Truth, and is but by accident
a Christian. He would have remained a faithful
heathen, had he been born in heathenism, though Moses,
Elijah and Christ preached a higher truth to him.
Such a man is condemned by his own confession, and
I here address him no longer.
But if Faith is a spiritual and personal
thing, if Belief given at random to mere high pretensions
is an immorality, if Truth is not to be quite trampled
down, nor Conscience to be wholly palsied in us, then
what, I ask, was I to do, when I saw that the genealogy
in the first chapter of Matthew is an erroneous copy
of that in the Old Testament? and that the writer
has not only copied wrong, but also counted wrong,
so, as to mistake eighteen for fourteen? Can any
man, who glories in the name of Christian, lay his
hand on his heart, and say, it was my duty to blind
my eyes to the fact, and think of it no further?
Many, alas, I know, would have whispered this to me;
but if any one were to proclaim it, the universal
conscience of mankind would call him impudent.
If however this first step was right,
was a second step wrong? When I further discerned
that the two genealogies in Matthew and Luke were
at variance, utterly irreconcilable, and
both moreover nugatory, because they are genealogies
of Joseph, who is denied to be the father of Jesus, on
what ground of righteousness, which I could approve
to God and my conscience, could I shut my eyes to
this second fact?
When forced, against all my prepossessions,
to admit that the two first chapters of Matthew and
the two first chapters of Luke are mutually destructive,
would it have been faithfulness to the God of Truth,
or a self-willed love of my own prejudices, if I had
said, “I will not inquire further, for fear
it should unsettle my faith?” The reader’s
conscience will witness to me, that, on the contrary,
I was bound to say, what I did say: “I
must inquire further in order that I may plant
the foundations of my faith more deeply on the rock
of Truth."’
Having discovered, that not all that
is within the canon of the Scripture is infallibly
correct, and that the human understanding is competent
to arraign and convict at least some kinds of error
therein contained; where was I to stop?
and if I am guilty, where did my guilt begin?
The further I inquired, the more errors crowded upon
me, in History, in Chronology, in Geography, in Physiology,
in Geology. Did it then at last become a
duty to close my eyes to the painful light? and if
I had done so, ought I to have flattered myself that
I was one of those, who being of the truth, come to
the lights that their deeds may be reproved?
Moreover, when I had clearly perceived,
that since all evidence for Christianity must involve
moral considerations, to undervalue the moral
faculties of mankind is to make Christian evidence
an impossibility and to propagate universal scepticism; was
I then so to distrust the common conscience, as to
believe that the Spirit of God pronounced Jael blessed,
for perfidiously murdering her husband’s trusting
friend? Does any Protestant reader feel disgust
and horror, at the sophistical defences set up for
the massacre of St. Bartholomew and other atrocities
of the wicked Church of Rome? Let him stop his
mouth, and hide his face, if he dares to justify the
foul crime of Jael.
Or when I was thus forced to admit,
that the Old Testament praised immorality, as well
as enunciated error; and found nevertheless in the
writers of the New Testament no indication that they
were aware of either; but that, on the contrary, “the
Scripture” (as the book was vaguely called)
is habitually identified with the infallible “word
of God;” was it wrong in me to suspect
that the writers of the New Testament were themselves
open to mistake?
When I farther found, that Luke not
only claims no infallibility and no inspiration, but
distinctly assigns human sources as his means of knowledge; when
the same Luke had already been discovered to be in
irreconcilable variance with Matthew concerning the
infancy of Jesus; was I sinful in feeling
that I had no longer any guarantee against other
possible error in these writers? or ought I to have
persisted in obtruding on the two evangelists on infallibility
of which Luke shows himself unconscious, which Matthew
nowhere claims, and which I had demonstrative proof
that they did not both possess? A thorough-going
Bibliolater will have to impeach me as a sinner on
this count.
After Luke and Matthew stood before
me as human writers, liable to and convicted of human
error, was there any reason why I should look on Mark
as more sacred? And having perceived all three
to participate in the common superstition, derived
from Babylon and the East, traceable in history to
its human source, existing still in Turkey and Abyssinia, the
superstition which mistakes mania, epilepsy, and other
forms of disease, for possession by devils; should
I have shown love of truth, or obstinacy in error,
had I refused to judge freely of these three writers,
as of any others who tell similar marvels? or was
it my duty to resolve, at any rate and against evidence,
to acquit them of the charge of superstition and misrepresentation?
I will not trouble the reader with
any further queries. If he has justified me in
his conscience thus far, he will justify my proceeding
to abandon myself to the results of inquiry. He
will feel, that the Will cannot, may not, dare not
dictate, whereto the inquiries of the Understanding
shall lead; and that to allege that it ought,
is to plant the root of Insincerity, Falsehood, Bigotry,
Cruelty, and universal Rottenness of Soul.
The vice of Bigotry has been so indiscriminately
imputed to the religious, that they seem apt to forget
that it is a real sin; a sin which in Christendom
has been and is of all sins most fruitful, most poisonous:
nay, grief of griefs! it infects many of the purest
and most lovely hearts, which want strength of understanding,
or are entangled by a sham theology, with its false
facts and fraudulent canons. But upon all who
mourn for the miseries which Bigotry has perpetrated
from the day when Christians first learned to curse;
upon all who groan over the persécutions and
wars stirred up by Romanism; upon all who blush at
the overbearing conduct of Protestants in their successive
moments of brief authority, a sacred duty
rests in this nineteenth century of protesting against
Bigotry, not from a love of ease, but from a spirit
of earnest justice.
Like the first Christians, they must
become confessors of the Truth; not obtrusively,
boastfully, dogmatically, or harshly; but, “speaking
the truth in love,” not be ashamed to avow, if
they do not believe all that others profess, and that
they abhor the unrighteous principle of judging men
by an authoritative creed. The evil of Bigotry
which has been most observed, is its untameable injustice,
which converted the law of love into licensed murder
or gratuitous hatred. But I believe a worse evil
still has been, the intense reaction of the human mind
against Religion for Bigotry’s sake. To
the millions of Europe, bigotry has been a confutation
of all pious feeling. So unlovely has religion
been made by it,
Horribili super aspectu mortalibus instans,
that now, as 2000 years ago, men are
lapsing into Atheism or Pantheism; and a totally new
“dispensation” is wanted to retrieve the
lost reputation of Piety.
Two opposite errors are committed
by those who discern that the pretensions of the national
religious systems are overstrained and unjustifiable.
One class of persons inveighs warmly, bitterly, rudely
against the bigotry of Christians; and know not how
deep and holy affections and principles, in spite
of narrowness, are cherished in the bosom of the Christian
society. Hence their invective is harsh and unsympathizing;
and appears so essentially unjust and so ignorant,
as to exasperate and increase the very bigotry which
it attacks. An opposite class know well, and
value highly, the moral influences of Christianity,
and from an intense dread of harming or losing these,
do not dare plainly and publicly to avow their own
convictions. Great numbers of English laymen
are entirely assured, that the Old Testament abounds
with error, and that the New is not always unimpeachable:
yet they only whisper this; and in the hearing of a
clergyman, who is bound by Articles and whom it is
indecent to refute, keep a respectful silence.
As for ministers of religion, these, being called perpetually
into a practical application of the received doctrine
of their church, are of all men least able to inquire
into any fundamental errors in that doctrine.
Eminent persons among them will nevertheless aim after
and attain a purer truth than that which they find
established: but such a case must always be rare
and exceptive. Only by disusing ministerial service
can any one give fair play to doubts concerning the
wisdom and truth of that which he is solemnly ministering:
hence that friend of Arnold’s was wise in this
world, who advised him to take a curacy in order to
settle his doubts concerning the Trinity. Nowhere
from any body of priests, clergy, or ministers, as
an Order, is religious progress to be anticipated,
until intellectual creeds are destroyed. A greater
responsibility therefore is laid upon laymen, to be
faithful and bold in avowing their convictions.
Yet it is not from the practical ministers
of religion, that the great opposition to religious
reform proceeds. The “secular clergy”
(as the Romanists oddly call them) were seldom so
bigoted as the “regulars.” So with
us, those who minister to men in their moral trials
have for the most part a deeper moral spirit, and
are less apt to place religion in systems of propositions.
The robur legionum of bigotry, I believe, is
found, first, in non-parochial clergy, and
next in the anonymous writers for religious journals
and “conservative” newspapers; who too
generally adopt a style of which they would be ashamed,
if the names of the writers were attached; who often
seem desirous to make it clear that it is their trade
to carp, insult, or slander; who assume a tone of
omniscience, at the very moment when they show narrowness
of heart and judgment. To such writing those who
desire to promote earnest Thought and tranquil Progress
ought anxiously to testify their deep repugnance.
A large part of this slander and insult is prompted
by a base pandering to the (real or imagined) taste
of the public, and will abate when it visibly ceases
to be gainful.
The law of God’s moral universe,
as known to us, is that of Progress. We trace
it from old barbarism to the methodized Egyptian idolatry;
to the more flexible Polytheism of Syria and Greece;
the poetical Pantheism of philosophers, and the moral
monotheism of a few sages. So in Palestine and
in the Bible itself we see, first of all, the image-worship
of Jacob’s family, then the incipient elevation
of Jéhovah above all other Gods by Moses, the practical
establishment of the worship of Jéhovah alone by Samuel,
the rise of spiritual sentiment under David and the
Psalmists, the more magnificent views of Hezekiah’s
prophets, finally in the Babylonish captivity the new
tenderness assumed by that second Isaiah and the later
Psalmists. But ceremonialism more and more encrusted
the restored nation; and Jesus was needed to spur
and stab the conscience of his contemporaries, and
recal them to more spiritual perceptions; to proclaim
a coming “kingdom of heaven,” in which
should be gathered all the children of God that were
scattered abroad; where the law of love should reign,
and no one should dictate to another. Alas! that
this great movement had its admixture of human imperfection.
After this, Steven the protomartyr, and Paul once
him persecutor, had to expose the emptiness of all
external santifications, and free the world from the
law of Moses. Up to this point all Christians
approve of progress; but at this point they
want to arrest it.
The arguments of those who resist
Progress are always the same, whether it be Pagans
against Hebrews, Jews against Christians, Romanists
against Protestants, or modern Christians against the
advocates of a higher spiritualism. Each established
system assures its votaries, that now at length they
have attained a final perfection: that their
foundations are irremovable: progress up
to that position was a duty, beyond it is a
sin. Each displaces its predecessor by superior
goodness, but then each fights against his successor
by odium, contempt, exclusions and (when possible)
by violences. Each advances mankind one
step, and forbids them to take a second. Yet
if it be admitted that in the earlier movement the
party of progress was always right, confidence that
the case is now reversed is not easy to justify.
Every persecuting church has numbered
among its members thousands of pious people, so grateful
for its services, or so attached to its truth, as
to think those impious who desire something purer and
more perfect. Herein we may discern, that every
nation and class is liable to the peculiar illusion
of overesteeming the sanctity of its ancestral creed.
It is as much our duty to beware of this illusion,
as of any other. All know how easily our patriotism
may degenerate into an unjust repugnance to foreigners,
and that the more intense it is, the greater the need
of antagonistic principles. So also, the real
excellencies of our religion may only so much the more
rivet us in a wrong aversion to those who do not acknowledge
its authority or perfection.
It is probable that Jesus desired
a state of things in which all who worship God spiritually
should have an acknowledged and conscious union.
It is clear that Paul longed above all things to overthrow
the “wall of partition” which separated
two families of sincere worshippers. Yet we now
see stronger and higher walls of partition than ever,
between the children of the same God, with
a new law of the letter, more entangling to the conscience,
and more depressing to the mental energies, than any
outward service of the Levitical law. The cause
of all this is to be found in the claim of Messiahship
for Jesus. This gave a premium to crooked logic,
in order to prove that the prophecies meant what they
did not mean and could not mean. This perverted
men’s notions of right and wrong, by imparting
factitious value to a literary and historical proposition,
“Jesus is the Messiah,” as though that
were or could be religion. This gave merit to
credulity, and led pious men to extol it as a brave
and noble deed, when any one overpowered the scruples
of good sense, and scolded them down as the wisdom
of this world, which is hostile to God. This put
the Christian church into an essentially false position,
by excluding from it in the first century all the
men of most powerful and cultivated understanding
among the Greeks and Romans. This taught Christians
to boast of the hostility of the wise and prudent,
and in every controversy ensured that the party which
had the merit of mortifying reason most signally should
be victorious. Hence, the downward career of
the Church into base superstition was determined and
inevitable from her very birth; nor was any improvement
possible, until a reconciliation should be effected
between Christianity and the cultivated reason which
it had slighted and insulted.
Such reconciliation commenced, I believe,
from the tenth century, when the Latin moralists began
to be studied as a part of a theological course.
It was continued with still greater results when Greek
literature became accessible to churchmen. Afterwards,
the physics of Galileo and of Newton began not only
to undermine numerous superstitions, but to give to
men a confidence in the reality of abstract truth,
and in our power to attain it in other domains than
that of geometrical demonstration. This, together
with the philosophy of Locke, was taken up into Christian
thought, and Political Toleration was the first fruit.
Beyond that point, English religion has hardly gone.
For in spite of all that has since been done in Germany
for the true and accurate exposition of the
Bible, and for the scientific establishment of the
history of its component books, we still remain deplorably
ignorant here of these subjects. In consequence,
English Christians do not know that they are unjust
and utterly unreasonable, in expecting thoughtful
men to abide by the creed of their ancestors.
Nor, indeed, is there any more stereotyped and approved
calumny, than the declaration so often emphatically
enunciated from the pulpit, that unbelief in the
Christian miracles is the fruit of a wicked heart
and of a soul enslaved to sin. Thus do estimable
and well-meaning men, deceived and deceiving one another,
utter base slander in open church, where it is indecorous
to reply to them, and think that they are
bravely delivering a religions testimony.
No difficulty is encountered, so long
as the inward and the outward rule of
religion agree, by whatever names men call
them, the Spirit and the Word or
Reason and the Church, or Conscience and
Authority. None need settle which of the two rules
is the greater, so long as the results coincide:
in fact, there is no controversy, no struggle, and
also probably no progress. A child cannot guess
whether father or mother has the higher authority,
until discordant commands are given; but then commences
the painful necessity of disobeying one in order to
obey the other. So, also, the great and fundamental
controversies of religion arise, only when a discrepancy
is detected between the inward and the outward rule:
and then, there are only two possible solutions.
If the Spirit within us and the Bible (or Church)
without us are at variance, we must either follow
the inward and disregard the outward law; else we must
renounce the inward law and obey the outward.
The Romanist bids us to obey the Church and crush
our inward judgment: the Spiritualist, on the
contrary, follows his inward law, and, when necessary,
defies Church, Bible, or any other authority.
The orthodox Protestant is better and truer than the
Romanist, because the Protestant is not like the latter,
consistent in error, but often goes right: still
he is inconsistent as to this point. Against
the Spiritualist he uses Romanist principles, telling
him that he ought to submit his “proud reason”
and accept the “Word of God” as infallible,
even though it appear to him to contain errors.
But against the Romanist the same disputant avows
Spiritualist principles, declaring that since “the
Church” appears to him to be erroneous, he dares
not to accept it as infallible. What with the
Romanist he before called “proud reason,”
he now designates as Conscience, Understanding, and
perhaps the Holy Spirit. He refused to allow
the right of the Spiritualist to urge, that the
Bible contains contradictions and immoralities,
and therefore cannot be received; but he claims a
full right to urge that the Church has justified
contradictions and immoralities, and therefore is
not to be submitted to. The perception that this
position is inconsistent, and, to him who discerns
the inconsistency, dishonest, is every year driving
Protestants to Rome. And in principle
there are only two possible religions: the Personal
and the Corporate; the Spiritual and the External.
I do not mean to say that in Romanism there is nothing
but what is Corporate and External; for that is impossible
to human nature: but that this is what the theory
of their argument demands; and their doctrine of Implicit
(or Virtual) Faith entirely supersedes intellectual
perception as well as intellectual conviction.
The theory of each church is the force which determines
to what centre the whole shall gravitate. However
men may talk of spirituality, yet let them once enact
that the freedom of individuals shall be absorbed
in a corporate conscience, and you find that the narrowest
heart and meanest intellect sets the rule of conduct
for the whole body.
It has been often observed how the
controversies of the Trinity and Incarnation depended
on the niceties of the Greek tongue. I do not
know whether it has ever been inquired, what confusion
of thought was shed over Gentile Christianity, from
its very origin, by the imperfection of the New Testament
Greek. The single Greek word [Greek:
pistis] needs probably three translations into our
far more accurate tongue, viz., Belief,
Trust, Faith; but especially Belief and Faith have
important contrasts. Belief is purely intellectual;
Faith is properly spiritual. Hence the endless
controversy about Justification by [Greek: pistis],
which has so vexed Christians; hence the slander cast
on unbelievers or misbelievers (when
they can no longer be burned or exiled), as though
they were faithless and infidels.
But nothing of this ought to be allowed
to blind us to the truly spiritual and holy developments
of historical Christianity, much less,
make us revert to the old Paganism or Pantheism which
it supplanted. The great doctrine on which
all practical religion depends, the doctrine
which nursed the infancy and youth of human nature, is,
“the sympathy of God with the perfection of individual
man.” Among Pagans this was so marred by
the imperfect characters ascribed to the Gods, and
the dishonourable fables told concerning them, that
the philosophers who undertook to prune religion too
generally cut away the root, by alleging that God
was mere Intellect and wholly destitute of Affections.
But happily among the Hebrews the purity of God’s
character was vindicated; and with the growth of conscience
in the highest minds of the nation the ideal image
of God shone brighter and brighter. The doctrine
of his Sympathy was never lost, and from the Jews
it passed into the Christian church. This doctrine,
applied to that part of man which is divine, is the
wellspring of Repentance and Humility, of Thankfulness,
Love, and Joy. It reproves and it comforts; it
stimulates and animates. This it is which led
the Psalmist to cry, “Whom have I in heaven but
Thee? there is none upon earth that I desire beside
Thee.” This has satisfied prophets, apostles,
and martyrs with God as their Portion. This has
been passed from heart to heart for full three thousand
years, and has produced bands of countless saints.
Let us not cut off our sympathies from those, who
have learnt to sympathize with God; nor be blind to
that spiritual good which they have; even if it be,
more or less sensibly, tinged with intellectual error.
In fact, none but God knows, how many Christian hearts
are really pure from bigotry. I cannot refuse
to add my testimony, such as it is, to the effect,
that the majority is always truehearted.
As one tyrant, with a small band of unscrupulous tools,
manages to use the energies of a whole nation of kind
and well-meaning people for cruel purposes, so the
bigoted few, who work out an evil theory with consistency,
often succeed in using the masses of simpleminded
Christians as their tools for oppression. Let
us not think more harshly than is necessary of the
anathematizing churches. Those who curse us with
their lips, often love us in their hearts. A
very deep fountain of tenderness can mingle with their
bigotry itself: and with tens of thousands, the
evil belief is a dead form, the spiritual love is
a living reality. Whether Christians like it
or not, we must needs look to Historians, to Linguists,
to Physiologists, to Philosophers, and generally,
to men of cultivated understanding, to gain help in
all those subjects which are preposterously called
Theology: but for devotional aids, for
pious meditations, for inspiring hymns, for purifying
and glowing thoughts, we have still to wait upon that
succession of kindling souls, among whom may be named
with special honour David and Isaiah, Jesus and Paul,
Augustine, A Kempis, Fenelon, Leighton, Baxter, Doddridge,
Watts, the two Wesleys, and Channing.
Religion was created by the inward
instincts of the soul: it had afterwards to be
pruned and chastened by the sceptical understanding.
For its perfection, the co-operation of these two parts
of man is essential. While religious persons
dread critical and searching thought, and critics
despise instinctive religion, each side remains imperfect
and curtailed.
It is a complaint often made by religious
historians, that no church can sustain its spirituality
unimpaired through two generations, and that in the
third a total irreligion is apt to supervene.
Sometimes indeed the transitions are abrupt, from
an age of piety to an age of dissoluteness. The
liability to such lamentable révulsions is
plainly due to some insufficiency in the religion
to meet all the wants of human nature. To scold
at that nature is puerile, and implies an ignorance
of the task which religion undertakes. To lay
the fault on the sovereign will of God, who has “withheld
his grace” from the grandchildren of the pious,
might be called blasphemy, if we were disposed to
speak harshly. The fault lies undoubtedly in the
fact, that Practical Devoutness and Free Thought stand
apart in unnatural schism. But surely the age
is ripe for something better; for a religion
which stall combine the tenderness, humility, and
disinterestedness, that are the glory of the purest
Christianity, with that activity of intellect, untiring
pursuit of truth, and strict adherence to impartial
principle, which the schools of modern science embody.
When a spiritual church has its senses exercised to
discern good and evil, judges of right and wrong by
an inward power, proves all things and holds fast
that which is good, fears no truth, but rejoices in
being corrected, intellectually as well as morally, it
will not be liable to be “carried to and fro”
by shifting winds of doctrine. It will indeed
have movement, namely, a steady onward one,
as the schools of science have had, since they left
off to dogmatize, and approached God’s world
as learners; but it will lay aside disputes of words,
eternal vacillations, mutual illwill and dread of new
light, and will be able without hypocrisy to proclaim
“peace on earth and goodwill towards men,”
even towards those who reject its beliefs and sentiments
concerning “God and his glory.”