Whoever has had an opportunity
of becoming acquainted with the mental condition of
the intelligent classes in Europe and America, must
have perceived that there is a great and rapidly-increasing
departure from the public religious faith, and that,
while among the more frank this divergence is not
concealed, there is a far more extensive and far more
dangerous secession, private and unacknowledged.
So wide-spread and so powerful is
this secession, that it can neither be treated with
contempt nor with punishment. It cannot be extinguished
by derision, by vituperation, or by force. The
time is rapidly approaching when it will give rise
to serious political results.
Ecclesiastical spirit no longer inspires
the policy of the world. Military fervor in behalf
of faith has disappeared. Its only souvenirs
are the marble effigies of crusading knights,
reposing in the silent crypts of churches on their
tombs.
That a crisis is impending is shown
by the attitude of the great powers toward the papacy.
The papacy represents the ideas and aspirations of
two-thirds of the population of Europe. It insists
on a political supremacy in accordance with its claims
to a divine origin and mission, and a restoration
of the mediaeval order of things, loudly declaring
that it will accept no reconciliation with modern civilization.
The antagonism we thus witness between
Religion and Science is the continuation of a struggle
that commenced when Christianity began to attain political
power. A divine revelation must necessarily be
intolerant of contradiction; it must repudiate all
improvement in itself, and view with disdain that
arising from the progressive intellectual development
of man. But our opinions on every subject are
continually liable to modification, from the irresistible
advance of human knowledge.
Can we exaggerate the importance of
a contention in which every thoughtful person must
take part whether he will or not? In a matter
so solemn as that of religion, all men, whose temporal
interests are not involved in existing institutions,
earnestly desire to find the truth. They seek
information as to the subjects in dispute, and as to
the conduct of the disputants.
The history of Science is not a mere
record of isolated discoveries; it is a narrative
of the conflict of two contending powers, the expansive
force of the human intellect on one side, and the compression
arising from traditionary faith and human interests
on the other.
No one has hitherto treated the subject
from this point of view. Yet from this point
it presents itself to us as a living issue in
fact, as the most important of all living issues.
A few years ago, it was the politic
and therefore the proper course to abstain from all
allusion to this controversy, and to keep it as far
as possible in the background. The tranquillity
of society depends so much on the stability of its
religious convictions, that no one can be justified
in wantonly disturbing them. But faith is in its
nature unchangeable, stationary; Science is in its
nature progressive; and eventually a divergence between
them, impossible to conceal, must take place.
It then becomes the duty of those whose lives have
made them familiar with both modes of thought, to
present modestly, but firmly, their views; to compare
the antagonistic pretensions calmly, impartially,
philosophically. History shows that, if this be
not done, social misfortunes, disastrous and enduring,
will ensue. When the old mythological religion
of Europe broke down under the weight of its own inconsistencies,
neither the Roman emperors nor the philosophers of
those times did any thing adequate for the guidance
of public opinion. They left religious affairs
to take their chance, and accordingly those affairs
fell into the hands of ignorant and infuriated ecclesiastics,
parasites, eunuchs, and slaves.
The intellectual night which settled
on Europe, in consequence of that great neglect of
duty, is passing away; we live in the daybreak of
better things. Society is anxiously expecting
light, to see in what direction it is drifting.
It plainly discerns that the track along which the
voyage of civilization has thus far been made, has
been left; and that a new departure, on all unknown
sea, has been taken.
Though deeply impressed with such
thoughts, I should not have presumed to write this
book, or to intrude on the public the ideas it presents,
had I not made the facts with which it deals a subject
of long and earnest meditation. And I have gathered
a strong incentive to undertake this duty from the
circumstance that a “History of the Intellectual
Development of Europe,” published by me several
years ago, which has passed through many editions
in America, and has been reprinted in numerous European
languages, English, French, German, Russian, Polish,
Servian, etc., is everywhere received with favor.
In collecting and arranging the materials
for the volumes I published under the title of “A
History of the American Civil War,” a work of
very great labor, I had become accustomed to the comparison
of conflicting statements, the adjustment of conflicting
claims. The approval with which that book has
been received by the American public, a critical judge
of the events considered, has inspired me with additional
confidence. I had also devoted much attention
to the experimental investigation of natural phenomena,
and had published many well-known memoirs on such
subjects. And perhaps no one can give himself
to these pursuits, and spend a large part of his life
in the public teaching of science, without partaking
of that love of impartiality and truth which Philosophy
incites. She inspires us with a desire to dedicate
our days to the good of our race, so that in the fading
light of life’s evening we may not, on looking
back, be forced to acknowledge how unsubstantial and
useless are the objects that we have pursued.
Though I have spared no pains in the
composition of this book, I am very sensible how unequal
it is to the subject, to do justice to which a knowledge
of science, history, theology, politics, is required;
every page should be alive with intelligence and glistening
with facts. But then I have remembered that this
is only as it were the preface, or forerunner, of
a body of literature, which the events and wants of
our times will call forth. We have come to the
brink of a great intellectual change. Much of
the frivolous reading of the present will be supplanted
by a thoughtful and austere literature, vivified by
endangered interests, and made fervid by ecclesiastical
passion.
What I have sought to do is, to present
a clear and impartial statement of the views and acts
of the two contending parties. In one sense I
have tried to identify myself with each, so as to
comprehend thoroughly their motives; but in another
and higher sense I have endeavored to stand aloof,
and relate with impartiality their actions.
I therefore trust that those, who
may be disposed to criticise this book, will bear
in mind that its object is not to advocate the views
and pretensions of either party, but to explain clearly,
and without shrinking those of both. In the management
of each chapter I have usually set forth the orthodox
view first, and then followed it with that of its
opponents.
In thus treating the subject it has
not been necessary to pay much regard to more moderate
or intermediate opinions, for, though they may be
intrinsically of great value, in conflicts of this
kind it is not with the moderates but with the extremists
that the impartial reader is mainly concerned.
Their movements determine the issue.
For this reason I have had little
to say respecting the two great Christian confessions,
the Protestant and Greek Churches. As to the
latter, it has never, since the restoration of science,
arrayed itself in opposition to the advancement of
knowledge. On the contrary, it has always met
it with welcome. It has observed a reverential
attitude to truth, from whatever quarter it might
come. Recognizing the apparent discrepancies
between its interpretations of revealed truth and the
discoveries of science, it has always expected that
satisfactory explanations and reconciliations would
ensue, and in this it has not been disappointed.
It would have been well for modern civilization if
the Roman Church had done the same.
In speaking of Christianity, reference
is generally made to the Roman Church, partly because
its adherents compose the majority of Christendom,
partly because its demands are the most pretentious,
and partly because it has commonly sought to enforce
those demands by the civil power. None of the
Protestant Churches has ever occupied a position so
imperious none has ever had such wide-spread
political influence. For the most part they have
been averse to constraint, and except in very few
instances their opposition has not passed beyond the
exciting of theological odium.
As to Science, she has never sought
to ally herself to civil power. She has never
attempted to throw odium or inflict social ruin on
any human being. She has never subjected any
one to mental torment, physical torture, least of
all to death, for the purpose of upholding or promoting
her ideas. She presents herself unstained by cruelties
and crimes. But in the Vatican we
have only to recall the Inquisition the
hands that are now raised in appeals to the Most Merciful
are crimsoned. They have been steeped in blood!
There are two modes of historical
composition, the artistic and the scientific.
The former implies that men give origin to events;
it therefore selects some prominent individual, pictures
him under a fanciful form, and makes him the hero
of a romance. The latter, insisting that human
affairs present an unbroken chain, in which each fact
is the offspring of some preceding fact, and the parent
of some subsequent fact, declares that men do not
control events, but that events control men.
The former gives origin to compositions, which, however
much they may interest or delight us, are but a grade
above novels; the latter is austere, perhaps even
repulsive, for it sternly impresses us with a conviction
of the irresistible dominion of law, and the insignificance
of human exertions. In a subject so solemn as
that to which this book is devoted, the romantic and
the popular are altogether out of place. He who
presumes to treat of it must fix his eyes steadfastly
on that chain of destiny which universal history displays;
he must turn with disdain from the phantom impostures
of pontiffs and statesmen and kings.
If any thing were needed to show us
the untrustworthiness of artistic historical compositions,
our personal experience would furnish it. How
often do our most intimate friends fail to perceive
the real motives of our every-day actions; how frequently
they misinterpret our intentions! If this be
the case in what is passing before our eyes, may we
not be satisfied that it is impossible to comprehend
justly the doings of persons who lived many years
ago, and whom we have never seen.
In selecting and arranging the topics
now to be presented, I have been guided in part by
“the Confession” of the late Vatican Council,
and in part by the order of events in history.
Not without interest will the reader remark that the
subjects offer themselves to us now as they did to
the old philosophers of Greece. We still deal
with the same questions about which they disputed.
What is God? What is the soul? What is the
world? How is it governed? Have we any standard
or criterion of truth? And the thoughtful reader
will earnestly ask, “Are our solutions of these
problems any better than theirs?”
The general argument of this book, then, is as follows:
I first direct attention to the origin
of modern science as distinguished from ancient, by
depending on observation, experiment, and mathematical
discussion, instead of mere speculation, and shall
show that it was a consequence of the Macedonian campaigns,
which brought Asia and Europe into contact. A
brief sketch of those campaigns, and of the Museum
of Alexandria, illustrates its character.
Then with brevity I recall the well-known
origin of Christianity, and show its advance to the
attainment of imperial power, the transformation it
underwent by its incorporation with paganism, the existing
religion of the Roman Empire. A clear conception
of its incompatibility with science caused it to suppress
forcibly the Schools of Alexandria. It was constrained
to this by the political necessities of its position.
The parties to the conflict thus placed,
I next relate the story of their first open struggle;
it is the first or Southern Reformation. The
point in dispute had respect to the nature of God.
It involved the rise of Mohammedanism. Its result
was, that much of Asia and Africa, with the historic
cities Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Carthage, were wrenched
from Christendom, and the doctrine of the Unity of
God established in the larger portion of what had
been the Roman Empire.
This political event was followed
by the restoration of science, the establishment of
colleges, schools, libraries, throughout the dominions
of the Arabians. Those conquerors, pressing forward
rapidly in their intellectual development, rejected
the anthropomorphic ideas of the nature of God remaining
in their popular belief, and accepted other more philosophical
ones, akin to those that had long previously been attained
to in India. The result of this was a second conflict,
that respecting the nature of the soul. Under
the designation of Averroism, there came into prominence
the theories of Emanation and Absorption. At the
close of the middle ages the Inquisition succeeded
in excluding those doctrines from Europe, and now
the Vatican Council has formally and solemnly anathematized
them.
Meantime, through the cultivation
of astronomy, geography, and other sciences, correct
views had been gained as to the position and relations
of the earth, and as to the structure of the world;
and since Religion, resting itself on what was assumed
to be the proper interpretation of the Scriptures,
insisted that the earth is the central and most important
part of the universe, a third conflict broke out.
In this Galileo led the way on the part of Science.
Its issue was the overthrow of the Church on the question
in dispute. Subsequently a subordinate controversy
arose respecting the age of the world, the Church insisting
that it is only about six thousand years old.
In this she was again overthrown The light of history
and of science had been gradually spreading over Europe.
In the sixteenth century the prestige of Roman Christianity
was greatly diminished by the intellectual reverses
it had experienced, and also by its political and
moral condition. It was clearly seen by many
pious men that Religion was not accountable for the
false position in which she was found, but that the
misfortune was directly traceable to the alliance
she had of old contracted with Roman paganism.
The obvious remedy, therefore, was a return to primitive
purity. Thus arose the fourth conflict, known
to us as the Reformation the second or
Northern Reformation. The special form it assumed
was a contest respecting the standard or criterion
of truth, whether it is to be found in the Church
or in the Bible. The determination of this involved
a settlement of the rights of reason, or intellectual
freedom. Luther, who is the conspicuous man of
the epoch, carried into effect his intention with
no inconsiderable success; and at the close of the
struggle it was found that Northern Europe was lost
to Roman Christianity.
We are now in the midst of a controversy
respecting the mode of government of the world, whether
it be by incessant divine intervention, or by the
operation of primordial and unchangeable law.
The intellectual movement of Christendom has reached
that point which Arabism had attained to in the tenth
and eleventh centuries; and doctrines which were then
discussed are presenting themselves again for review;
such are those of Evolution, Creation, Development.
Offered under these general titles,
I think it will be found that all the essential points
of this great controversy are included. By grouping
under these comprehensive heads the facts to be considered,
and dealing with each group separately, we shall doubtless
acquire clear views of their inter-connection and
their historical succession.
I have treated of these conflicts
as nearly as I conveniently could in their proper
chronological order, and, for the sake of completeness,
have added chapters on
An examination of what Latin Christianity
has done for modern civilization.
A corresponding examination of what Science has done.
The attitude of Roman Christianity
in the impending conflict, as defined by the Vatican
Council.
The attention of many truth-seeking
persons has been so exclusively given to the details
of sectarian dissensions, that the long strife, to
the history of which these pages are devoted, is popularly
but little known. Having tried to keep steadfastly
in view the determination to write this work in an
impartial spirit, to speak with respect of the contending
parties, but never to conceal the truth, I commit it
to the considerate judgment of the thoughtful reader.
JohnWilliam Draper
University, new York, December, 1878.