Question. Now that a
lull has come in politics, I thought I would come
and see what is going on in the religious world?
Answer. Well, from what
little I learn, there has not been much going on during
the last year. There are five hundred and twenty-six
Congregational Churches in Massachusetts, and two hundred
of these churches have not received a new member for
an entire year, and the others have scarcely held
their own. In Illinois there are four hundred
and eighty-three Presbyterian Churches, and they have
now fewer members than they had in 1879, and of the
four hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and eighty-three
have not received a single new member for twelve months.
A report has been made, under the auspices of the
Pan-Presbyterian Council, to the effect that there
are in the whole world about three millions of Presbyterians.
This is about one-fifth of one per cent. of the inhabitants
of the world. The probability is that of the
three million nominal Presbyterians, not more than
two or three hundred thousand actually believe the
doctrine, and of the two or three hundred thousand,
not more than five or six hundred have any true conception
of what the doctrine is. As the Presbyterian
Church has only been able to induce one-fifth of one
per cent. of the people to even call themselves Presbyterians,
about how long will it take, at this rate, to convert
mankind? The fact is, there seems to be a general
lull along the entire line, and just at present very
little is being done by the orthodox people to keep
their fellow-citizens out of hell.
Question. Do you really
think that the orthodox people now believe in the
old doctrine of eternal punishment, and that they
really think there is a kind of hell that our ancestors
so carefully described?
Answer. I am afraid that
the old idea is dying out, and that many Christians
are slowly giving up the consolations naturally springing
from the old belief. Another terrible blow to
the old infamy is the fact that in the revised New
Testament the word Hades has been substituted.
As nobody knows exactly what Hades means, it will
not be quite so easy to frighten people at revivals
by threatening them with something that they don’t
clearly understand. After this, when the impassioned
orator cries out that all the unconverted will be
sent to Hades, the poor sinners, instead of getting
frightened, will begin to ask each other what and where
that is. It will take many years of preaching
to clothe that word in all the terrors and horrors,
pains, and penalties and pangs of hell. Hades
is a compromise. It is a concession to the philosophy
of our day. It is a graceful acknowledgment to
the growing spirit of investigation, that hell, after
all, is a barbaric mistake. Hades is the death
of revivals. It cannot be used in song.
It won’t rhyme with anything with the same
force that hell does. It is altogether more
shadowy than hot. It is not associated with
brimstone and flame. It sounds somewhat indistinct,
somewhat lonesome, a little desolate, but not altogether
uncomfortable. For revival purposes, Hades is
simply useless, and few conversions will be made in
the old way under the revised Testament.
Question. Do you really
think that the church is losing ground?
Answer. I am not, as
you probably know, connected with any orthodox organization,
and consequently have to rely upon them for my information.
If they can be believed, the church is certainly
in an extremely bad condition. I find that the
Rev. Dr. Cuyler, only a few days ago, speaking of
the religious condition of Brooklyn and
Brooklyn, you know, has been called the City of Churches
states that the great mass of that Christian city was
out of Christ, and that more professing Christians
went to the theatre than to the prayer meeting.
This, certainly, from their standpoint, is a most
terrible declaration. Brooklyn, you know, is
one of the great religious centres of the world a
city in which nearly all the people are engaged either
in delivering or in hearing sermons; a city filled
with the editors of religious periodicals; a city of
prayer and praise; and yet, while prayer meetings are
free, the theatres, with the free list entirely suspended,
catch more Christians than the churches; and this
happens while all the pulpits thunder against the
stage, and the stage remains silent as to the pulpit.
At the same meeting in which the Rev. Dr. Cuyler made
his astounding statements the Rev. Mr. Pentecost was
the bearer of the happy news that four out of five
persons living in the city of Brooklyn were going
down to hell with no God and with no hope. If
he had read the revised Testament he would have said
“Hades,” and the effect of the statement
would have been entirely lost. If four-fifths
of the people of that great city are destined to eternal
pain, certainly we cannot depend upon churches for
the salvation of the world. At the meeting of
the Brooklyn pastors they were in doubt as to whether
they should depend upon further meetings, or upon a
day of fasting and prayer for the purpose of converting
the city.
In my judgment, it would be much better
to devise ways and means to keep a good many people
from fasting in Brooklyn. If they had more meat,
they could get along with less meeting. If fasting
would save a city, there are always plenty of hungry
folks even in that Christian town. The real
trouble with the church of to-day is, that it is behind
the intelligence of the people. Its doctrines
no longer satisfy the brains of the nineteenth century;
and if the church proposes to hold its power, it must
lose its superstitions. The day of revivals is
gone. Only the ignorant and unthinking can hereafter
be impressed by hearing the orthodox creed. Fear
has in it no reformatory power, and the more intelligent
the world grows the more despicable and contemptible
the doctrine of eternal misery will become.
The tendency of the age is toward intellectual liberty,
toward personal investigation. Authority is no
longer taken for truth. People are beginning
to find that all the great and good are not dead that
some good people are alive, and that the demonstrations
of to-day are fully equal to the mistaken theories
of the past.
Question. How are you getting along with
Delaware?
Answer. First rate.
You know I have been wondering where Comegys came
from, and at last I have made the discovery.
I was told the other day by a gentleman from Delaware
that many years ago Colonel Hazelitt died; that Colonel
Hazelitt was an old Revolutionary officer, and that
when they were digging his grave they dug up Comegys.
Back of that no one knows anything of his history.
The only thing they know about him certainly, is,
that he has never changed one of his views since he
was found, and that he never will. I am inclined
to think, however, that he lives in a community congenial
to him. For instance, I saw in a paper the other
day that within a radius of thirty miles around Georgetown,
Delaware, there are about two hundred orphan and friendless
children. These children, it seems, were indentured
to Delaware farmers by the managers of orphan asylums
and other public institutions in and about Philadelphia.
It is stated in the paper, that:
“Many of these farmers are rough
task-masters, and if a boy fails to perform the work
of an adult, he is almost certain to be cruelly treated,
half starved, and in the coldest weather wretchedly
clad. If he does the work, his life is not likely
to be much happier, for as a rule he will receive
more kicks than candy. The result in either
case is almost certain to be wrecked constitutions,
dwarfed bodies, rounded shoulders, and limbs crippled
or rendered useless by frost or rheumatism.
The principal diet of these boys is corn pone.
A few days ago, Constable W. H. Johnston went to
the house of Reuben Taylor, and on entering the sitting
room his attention was attracted by the moans of its
only occupant, a little colored boy, who was lying
on the hearth in front of the fireplace. The
boy’s head was covered with ashes from the fire,
and he did not pay the slightest attention to the
visitor, until Johnston asked what made him cry.
Then the little fellow sat up and drawing on old
rag off his foot said, ‘Look there.’
The sight that met Johnston’s eye was horrible
beyond description. The poor boy’s feet
were so horribly frozen that the flesh had dropped
off the toes until the bones protruded. The
flesh on the sides, bottoms, and tops of his feet
was swollen until the skin cracked in many places,
and the inflamed flesh was sloughing off in great flakes.
The frost-bitten flesh extended to his knees, the joints
of which were terribly inflamed. The right one
had already begun suppurating. This poor little
black boy, covered with nothing but a cotton shirt,
drilling pants, a pair of nearly worn out brogans and
a battered old hat, on the morning of December 30th,
the coldest day of the season, when the mercury was
seventeen degrees below zero, in the face of a driving
snow storm, was sent half a mile from home to protect
his master’s unshucked corn from the depredations
of marauding cows and crows. He remained standing
around in the snow until four o’clock, then
he drove the cows home, received a piece of cold corn
pone, and was sent out in the snow again to chop stove
wood till dark. Having no bed, he slept that
night in front of the fireplace, with his frozen feet
buried in the ashes. Dr. C. H. Richards found
it necessary to cut off the boy’s feet as far
back as the ankle and the instep.”
This was but one case in several.
Personally, I have no doubt that Mr. Reuben Taylor
entirely agrees with Chief Justice Comegys on the
great question of blasphemy, and probably nothing would
so gratify Mr. Reuben Taylor as to see some man in
a Delaware jail for the crime of having expressed
an honest thought. No wonder that in the State
of Delaware the Christ of intellectual liberty has
been crucified between the pillory and the whipping-post.
Of course I know that there are thousands of most
excellent people in that State people who
believe in intellectual liberty, and who only need
a little help and I am doing what I can
in that direction to repeal the laws that
now disgrace the statute book of that little commonwealth.
I have seen many people from that State lately who
really wish that Colonel Hazelitt had never died.
Question. What has the
press generally said with regard to the action of
Judge Comegys? Do they, so far as you know, justify
his charge?
Answer. A great many
papers having articles upon the subject have been
sent to me. A few of the religious papers seem
to think that the Judge did the best he knew, and
there is one secular paper called the Evening News,
published at Chester, Pa., that thinks “that
the rebuke from so high a source of authority will
have a most excellent effect, and will check religious
blasphemers from parading their immoral creeds before
the people.” The editor of this paper
should at once emigrate to the State of Delaware, where
he properly belongs. He is either a native of
Delaware, or most of his subscribers are citizens
of that country; or, it may be that he is a lineal
descendant of some Hessian, who deserted during the
Revolutionary war. Most of the newspapers in
the United States are advocates of mental freedom.
Probably nothing on earth has been so potent for
good as an untrammeled, fearless press. Among
the papers of importance there is not a solitary exception.
No leading journal in the United States can be found
upon the side of intellectual slavery. Of course,
a few rural sheets edited by gentlemen, as Mr. Greeley
would say, “whom God in his inscrutable wisdom
had allowed to exist,” may be found upon the
other side, and may be small enough, weak enough and
mean enough to pander to the lowest and basest prejudices
of their most ignorant subscribers. These editors
disgrace their profession and exert about the same
influence upon the heads as upon the pockets of their
subscribers that is to say, they get little
and give less.
Question. Do you not
think after all, the people who are in favor of having
you arrested for blasphemy, are acting in accordance
with the real spirit of the Old and New Testaments?
Answer. Of course, they
act in exact accordance with many of the commands
in the Old Testament, and in accordance with several
passages in the New. At the same time, it may
be said that they violate passages in both.
If the Old Testament is true, and if it is the inspired
word of God, of course, an Infidel ought not be allowed
to live; and if the New Testament is true, an unbeliever
should not be permitted to speak. There are many
passages, though, in the New Testament, that should
protect even an Infidel. Among them is this:
“Do unto others as ye would that others should
do unto you.” But that is a passage that
has probably had as little effect upon the church
as any other in the Bible. So far as I am concerned,
I am willing to adopt that passage, and I am willing
to extend to every other human being every right that
I claim for myself. If the churches would act
upon this principle, if they would say every
soul, every mind, may think and investigate for itself;
and around all, and over all, shall be thrown the sacred
shield of liberty, I should be on their side.
Question. How do you
stand with the clergymen, and what is their opinion
of you and of your views?
Answer. Most of them
envy me; envy my independence; envy my success; think
that I ought to starve; that the people should not
hear me; say that I do what I do for money, for popularity;
that I am actuated by hatred of all that is good and
tender and holy in human nature; think that I wish
to tear down the churches, destroy all morality and
goodness, and usher in the reign of crime and chaos.
They know that shepherds are unnecessary in the absence
of wolves, and it is to their interest to convince
their sheep that they, the sheep, need protection.
This they are willing to give them for half the wool.
No doubt, most of these minsters are honest, and
are doing what they consider their duty. Be this
as it may, they feel the power slipping from their
hands. They know that the idea is slowly growing
that they are not absolutely necessary for the protection
of society. They know that the intellectual
world cares little for what they say, and that the
great tide of human progress flows on careless of their
help or hindrance. So long as they insist upon
the inspiration of the Bible, they are compelled to
take the ground that slavery was once a divine institution;
they are forced to defend cruelties that would shock
the heart of a savage, and besides, they are bound
to teach the eternal horror of everlasting punishment.
They poison the minds of children;
they deform the brain and pollute the imagination
by teaching the frightful and infamous dogma of endless
misery. Even the laws of Delaware shock the enlightened
public of to-day. In that State they simply fine
and imprison a man for expressing his honest thoughts;
and yet, if the churches are right, God will damn
a man forever for the same offence. The brain
and heart of our time cannot be satisfied with the
ancient creeds. The Bible must be revised again.
Most of the creeds must be blotted out. Humanity
must take the place of theology. Intellectual
liberty must stand in every pulpit. There must
be freedom in all the pews, and every human soul must
have the right to express its honest thought.
Washington correspondent,
Brooklyn Eagle, March 19, 1881.