Question. Do you regard
the Briggs trial as any evidence of the growth of
Liberalism in the church itself?
Answer. When men get
together, and make what they call a creed, the supposition
is that they then say as nearly as possible what they
mean and what they believe. A written creed,
of necessity, remains substantially the same.
In a few years this creed ceases to give exactly
the new shade of thought. Then begin two processes,
one of destruction and the other of preservation.
In every church, as in every party, and as you may
say in every corporation, there are two wings one
progressive, the other conservative. In the
church there will be a few, and they will represent
the real intelligence of the church, who become dissatisfied
with the creed, and who at first satisfy themselves
by giving new meanings to old words. On the
other hand, the conservative party appeals to emotions,
to memories, and to the experiences of their fellow-members,
for the purpose of upholding the old dogmas and the
old ideas; so that each creed is like a crumbling
castle. The conservatives plant ivy and other
vines, hoping that their leaves will hide the cracks
and érosions of time; but the thoughtful see
beyond these leaves and are satisfied that the structure
itself is in the process of decay, and that no amount
of ivy can restore the crumbling stones.
The old Presbyterian creed, when it
was first formulated, satisfied a certain religious
intellect. At that time people were not very
merciful. They had no clear conceptions of justice.
Their lives were for the most part hard; most of
them suffered the pains and pangs of poverty; nearly
all lived in tyrannical governments and were the sport
of nobles and kings. Their idea of God was born
of their surroundings. God, to them, was an
infinite king who delighted in exhibitions of power.
At any rate, their minds were so constructed that
they conceived of an infinite being who, billions of
years before the world was, made up his mind as to
whom he would save and whom he would damn. He
not only made up his mind as to the number he would
save, and the number that should be lost, but he saved
and damned without the slightest reference to the character
of the individual. They believed then, and some
pretend to believe still, that God damns a man not
because he is bad, and that he saves a man not because
he is good, but simply for the purpose of self-glorification
as an exhibition of his eternal justice. It
would be impossible to conceive of any creed more horrible
than that of the Presbyterians. Although I admit and
I not only admit but I assert that the
creeds of all orthodox Christians are substantially
the same, the Presbyterian creed says plainly what
it means. There is no hesitation, no evasion.
The horrible truth, so-called, is stated in the clearest
possible language. One would think after reading
this creed, that the men who wrote it not only believed
it, but were really glad it was true.
Ideas of justice, of the use of power,
of the use of mercy, have greatly changed in the last
century. We are beginning dimly to see that
each man is the result of an infinite number of conditions,
of an infinite number of facts, most of which existed
before he was born. We are beginning dimly to
see that while reason is a pilot, each soul navigates
the mysterious sea filled with tides and unknown currents
set in motion by ancestors long since dust. We
are beginning to see that defects of mind are transmitted
precisely the same as defects of body, and in my judgment
the time is coming when we shall not more think of
punishing a man for larceny than for having the consumption.
We shall know that the thief is a necessary and natural
result of conditions, preparing, you may say, the
field of the world for the growth of man. We
shall no longer depend upon accident and ignorance
and providence. We shall depend upon intelligence
and science.
The Presbyterian creed is no longer
in harmony with the average sense of man. It
shocks the average mind. It seems too monstrous
to be true; too horrible to find a lodgment in the
mind of the civilized man. The Presbyterian
minister who thinks, is giving new meanings to the
old words. The Presbyterian minister who feels,
also gives new meanings to the old words. Only
those who neither think nor feel remain orthodox.
For many years the Christian world
has been engaged in examining the religions of other
peoples, and the Christian scholars have had but little
trouble in demonstrating the origin of Mohammedanism
and Buddhism and all other isms except ours.
After having examined other religions in the light
of science, it occurred to some of our theologians
to examine their own doctrine in the same way, and
the result has been exactly the same in both cases.
Dr. Briggs, as I believe, is a man of education.
He is undoubtedly familiar with other religions,
and has, to some extent at least, made himself familiar
with the sacred books of other people. Dr. Briggs
knows that no human being knows who wrote a line of
the Old Testament. He knows as well as he can
know anything, for instance, that Moses never wrote
one word of the books attributed to him. He knows
that the book of Genesis was made by putting two or
three stories together. He also knows that it
is not the oldest story, but was borrowed. He
knows that in this book of Genesis there is not one
word adapted to make a human being better, or to shed
the slightest light on human conduct. He knows,
if he knows anything, that the Mosaic Code, so-called,
was, and is, exceedingly barbarous and not adapted
to do justice between man and man, or between nation
and nation. He knows that the Jewish people
pursued a course adapted to destroy themselves; that
they refused to make friends with their neighbors;
that they had not the slightest idea of the rights
of other people; that they really supposed that the
earth was theirs, and that their God was the greatest
God in the heavens. He also knows that there
are many thousands of mistakes in the Old Testament
as translated. He knows that the book of Isaiah
is made up of several books. He knows the same
thing in regard to the New Testament. He also
knows that there were many other books that were once
considered sacred that have been thrown away, and that
nobody knows who wrote a solitary line of the New Testament.
Besides all this, Dr. Briggs knows
that the Old and New Testaments are filled with interpolations,
and he knows that the passages of Scripture which
have been taken as the foundation stones for creeds,
were written hundreds of years after the death of Christ.
He knows well enough that Christ never said:
“I came not to bring peace, but a sword.”
He knows that the same being never said: “Thou
art Peter, and on this rock will I build my church.”
He knows, too, that Christ never said: “Whosoever
believes shall be saved, and whosoever believes not
shall be damned.” He knows that these were
interpolations. He knows that the sin against
the Holy Ghost is another interpolation. He
knows, if he knows anything, that the gospel according
to John was written long after the rest, and that
nearly all of the poison and superstition of orthodoxy
is in that book. He knows also, if he knows
anything, that St. Paul never read one of the four
gospels.
Knowing all these things, Dr. Briggs
has had the honesty to say that there was some trouble
about taking the Bible as absolutely inspired in word
and punctuation. I do not think, however, that
he can maintain his own position and still remain a
Presbyterian or anything like a Presbyterian.
He takes the ground, I believe, that there are three
sources of knowledge: First, the Bible; second,
the church; third, reason. It seems to me that
reason should come first, because if you say the Bible
is a source of authority, why do you say it?
Do you say this because your reason is convinced
that it is? If so, then reason is the foundation
of that belief. If, again, you say the church
is a source of authority, why do you say so?
It must be because its history convinces your reason
that it is. Consequently, the foundation of that
idea is reason. At the bottom of this pyramid
must be reason, and no man is under any obligation
to believe that which is unreasonable to him.
He may believe things that he cannot prove, but he
does not believe them because they are unreasonable.
He believes them because he thinks they are not unreasonable,
not impossible, not improbable. But, after all,
reason is the crucible in which every fact must be
placed, and the result fixes the belief of the intelligent
man.
It seems to me that the whole Presbyterian
creed must come down together. It is a scheme
based upon certain facts, so-called. There is
in it the fall of man. There is in it the scheme
of the atonement, and there is the idea of hell, eternal
punishment, and the idea of heaven, eternal reward;
and yet, according to their creed, hell is not a punishment
and heaven is not a reward. Now, if we do away
with the fall of man we do away with the atonement;
then we do away with all supernatural religion.
Then we come back to human reason. Personally,
I hope that the Presbyterian Church will be advanced
enough and splendid enough to be honest, and if it
is honest, all the gentlemen who amount to anything,
who assist in the trial of Dr. Briggs, will in all
probability agree with him, and he will be acquitted.
But if they throw aside their reason, and remain
blindly orthodox, then he will be convicted.
To me it is simply miraculous that any man should
imagine that the Bible is the source of truth.
There was a time when all scientific facts were measured
by the Bible. That time is past, and now the
believers in the Bible are doing their best to convince
us that it is in harmony with science. In other
words, I have lived to see a change of standards.
When I was a boy, science was measured by the Bible.
Now the Bible is measured by science. This is
an immense step. So it is impossible for me to
conceive what kind of a mind a man has, who finds
in the history of the church the fact that it has
been a source of truth. How can any one come
to the conclusion that the Catholic Church has been
a source of truth, a source of intellectual light?
How can anyone believe that the church of John Calvin
has been a source of truth? If its creed is not
true, if its doctrines are mistakes, if its dogmas
are monstrous delusions, how can it be said to have
been a source of truth?
My opinion is that Dr. Briggs will
not be satisfied with the step he has taken.
He has turned his face a little toward the light.
The farther he walks the harder it will be for him
to turn back. The probability is that the orthodox
will turn him out, and the process of driving out
men of thought and men of genius will go on until
the remnant will be as orthodox as they are stupid.
Question. Do you think
mankind is drifting away from the supernatural?
Answer. My belief is
that the supernatural has had its day. The church
must either change or abdicate. That is to say,
it must keep step with the progress of the world or
be trampled under foot. The church as a power
has ceased to exist. To-day it is a matter of
infinite indifference what the pulpit thinks unless
there comes the voice of heresy from the sacred place.
Every orthodox minister in the United States is listened
to just in proportion that he preaches heresy.
The real, simón-pure, orthodox
clergyman delivers his homilies to empty benches,
and to a few ancient people who know nothing of the
tides and currents of modern thought. The orthodox
pulpit to-day has no thought, and the pews are substantially
in the same condition. There was a time when
the curse of the church whitened the face of a race,
but now its anathema is the food of laughter.
Question. What, in your
judgment, is to be the outcome of the present agitation
in religious circles?
Answer. My idea is that
people more and more are declining the postponement
of happiness to another world. The general tendency
is to enjoy the present. All religions have taught
men that the pleasures of this world are of no account;
that they are nothing but husks and rags and chaff
and disappointment; that whoever expects to be happy
in this world makes a mistake; that there is nothing
on the earth worth striving for; that the principal
business of mankind should be to get ready to be happy
in another world; that the great occupation is to
save your soul, and when you get it saved, when you
are satisfied that you are one of the elect, then
pack up all your worldly things in a very small trunk,
take it to the dock of time that runs out into the
ocean of eternity, sit down on it, and wait for the
ship of death. And of course each church is
the only one that sells a through ticket which can
be depended on. In all religions, as far as
I know, is an admixture of asceticism, and the greater
the quantity, the more beautiful the religion has
been considered, The tendency of the world to-day
is to enjoy life while you have it; it is to get something
out of the present moment; and we have found that
there are things worth living for even in this world.
We have found that a man can enjoy himself with wife
and children; that he can be happy in the acquisition
of knowledge; that he can be very happy in assisting
others; in helping those he loves; that there is some
joy in poetry, in science and in the enlargement and
development of the mind; that there is some delight
in music and in the drama and in the arts. We
are finding, poor as the world is, that it beats a
promise the fulfillment of which is not to take place
until after death. The world is also finding
out another thing, and that is that the gentlemen
who preach these various religions, and promise these
rewards, and threaten the punishments, know nothing
whatever of the subject; that they are as blindly
ignorant as the people they pretend to teach, and
the people are as blindly ignorant as the animals
below them. We have finally concluded that no
human being has the slightest conception of origin
or of destiny, and that this life, not only in its
commencement but in its end, is just as mysterious
to-day as it was to the first man whose eyes greeted
the rising sun. We are no nearer the solution
of the problem than those who lived thousands of years
before us, and we are just as near it as those who
will live millions of years after we are dead.
So many people having arrived at the conclusion that
nobody knows and that nobody can know, like sensible
folks they have made up their minds to enjoy life.
I have often said, and I say again, that I feel as
if I were on a ship not knowing the port from which
it sailed, not knowing the harbor to which it was going,
not having a speaking acquaintance with any of the
officers, and I have made up my mind to have as good
a time with the other passengers as possible under
the circumstances. If this ship goes down in
mid-sea I have at least made something, and if it
reaches a harbor of perpetual delight I have lost
nothing, and I have had a happy voyage. And
I think millions and millions are agreeing with me.
Now, understand, I am not finding
fault with any of these religions or with any of these
ministers. These religions and these ministers
are the necessary and natural products of sufficient
causes. Mankind has traveled from barbarism to
what we now call civilization, by many paths, all
of which under the circumstances, were absolutely
necessary; and while I think the individual does as
he must, I think the same of the church, of the corporation,
and of the nation, and not only of the nation, but
of the whole human race. Consequently I have
no malice and no prejudices. I have likes and
dislikes. I do not blame a gourd for not being
a cantaloupe, but I like cantaloupes. So I do
not blame the old hard-shell Presbyterian for not
being a philosopher, but I like philosophers.
So to wind it all up with regard to the tendency
of modern thought, or as to the outcome of what you
call religion, my own belief is that what is known
as religion will disappear from the human mind.
And by “religion” I mean the supernatural.
By “religion” I mean living in this world
for another, or living in this world to gratify some
supposed being, whom we never saw and about whom we
know nothing, and of whose existence we know nothing.
In other words, religion consists of the duties we
are supposed to owe to the first great cause, and
of certain things necessary for us to do here to insure
happiness hereafter. These ideas, in my judgment,
are destined to perish, and men will become convinced
that all their duties are within their reach, and
that obligations can exist only between them and other
sentient beings. Another idea, I think, will
force itself upon the mind, which is this: That
he who lives the best for this world lives the best
for another if there be one. In other words,
humanity will take the place of what is called “religion.”
Science will displace superstition, and to do justice
will be the ambition of man.
My creed is this: Happiness
is the only good. The place to be happy is here.
The time to be happy is now. The way to be happy
is to make others so.
Question. What is going
to take the place of the pulpit?
Answer. I have for a
long time wondered why somebody didn’t start
a church on a sensible basis. My idea is this:
There are, of course, in every community, lawyers,
doctors, merchants, and people of all trades and professions
who have not the time during the week to pay any particular
attention to history, poetry, art, or song.
Now, it seems to me that it would be a good thing to
have a church and for these men to employ a man of
ability, of talent, to preach to them Sundays, and
let this man say to his congregation: “Now,
I am going to preach to you for the first few Sundays eight
or ten or twenty, we will say on the art,
poetry, and intellectual achievements of the Greeks.”
Let this man study all the week and tell his congregation
Sunday what he has ascertained. Let him give
to his people the history of such men as Plato, as
Socrates, what they did; of Aristotle, of his philosophy;
of the great Greeks, their statesmen, their poets,
actors, and sculptors, and let him show the debt that
modern civilization owes to these people. Let
him, too, give their religions, their mythology a
mythology that has sown the seed of beauty in every
land. Then let him take up Rome. Let him
show what a wonderful and practical people they were;
let him give an idea of their statesmen, orators, poets,
lawyers because probably the Romans were
the greatest lawyers. And so let him go through
with nation after nation, biography after biography,
and at the same time let there be a Sunday school
connected with this church where the children shall
be taught something of importance. For instance,
teach them botany, and when a Sunday is fair, clear,
and beautiful, let them go into the fields and woods
with their teachers, and in a little while they will
become acquainted with all kinds of tress and shrubs
and flowering plants. They could also be taught
entomology, so that every bug would be interesting,
for they would see the facts in science
something of use to them. I believe that such
a church and such a Sunday school would at the end
of a few years be the most intelligent collection
of people in the United States. To teach the
children all of these things and to teach their parents,
too, the outlines of every science, so that every
listener would know something of geology, something
of astronomy, so that every member could tell the
manner in which they find the distance of a star
how much better that would be than the old talk about
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and quotations from Haggai
and Zephaniah, and all this eternal talk about the
fall of man and the Garden of Eden, and the flood,
and the atonement, and the wonders of Revelation!
Even if the religious scheme be true, it can be told
and understood as well in one day as in a hundred
years. The church says, “He that hath
ears to hear let him hear.” I say:
“He that hath brains to think, let him think.”
So, too, the pulpit is being displaced by what we
call places of amusement, which are really places where
men go because they find there is something which satisfies
in a greater or less degree the hunger of the brain.
Never before was the theatre as popular as it is
now. Never before was so much money lavished
upon the stage as now. Very few men having their
choice would go to hear a sermon, especially of the
orthodox kind, when they had a chance to see a great
actor.
The man must be a curious combination
who would prefer an orthodox sermon, we will say,
to a concert given by Theodore Thomas. And I
may say in passing that I have great respect for Theodore
Thomas, because it was he who first of all opened
to the American people the golden gates of music.
He made the American people acquainted with the great
masters, and especially with Wagner, and it is a debt
that we shall always owe him. In this day the
opera that is to say, music in every form is
tending to displace the pulpit. The pulpits have
to go in partnership with music now. Hundreds
of people have excused themselves to me for going
to church, saying they have splendid music.
Long ago the Catholic Church was forced to go into
partnership not only with music, but with painting
and with architecture. The Protestant Church
for a long time thought it could do without these
beggarly elements, and the Protestant Church was simply
a dry-goods box with a small steeple on top of it,
its walls as bleak and bare and unpromising as the
creed. But even Protestants have been forced
to hire a choir of ungodly people who happen to have
beautiful voices, and they, too, have appealed to
the organ. Music is taking the place of creed,
and there is more real devotional feeling summoned
from the temple of the mind by great music than by
any sermon ever delivered. Music, of all other
things, gives wings to thought and allows the soul
to rise above all the pains and troubles of this life,
and to feel for a moment as if it were absolutely
free, above all clouds, destined to enjoy forever.
So, too, science is beckoning with countless hands.
Men of genius are everywhere beckoning men to discoveries,
promising them fortunes compared with which Aladdin’s
lamp was weak and poor. All these things take
men from the church; take men from the pulpit.
In other words, prosperity is the enemy of the pulpit.
When men enjoy life, when they are prosperous here,
they are in love with the arts, with the sciences,
with everything that gives joy, with everything that
promises plenty, and they care nothing about the prophecies
of evil that fall from the solemn faces of the parsons.
They look in other directions. They are not
thinking about the end of the world. They hate
the lugubrious, and they enjoy the sunshine of to-day.
And this, in my judgment, is the highest philosophy:
First, do not regret having lost yesterday; second,
do not fear that you will lose to-morrow; third, enjoy
to-day.
Astrology was displaced by astronomy.
Alchemy and the black art gave way to chemistry.
Science is destined to take the place of superstition.
In my judgment, the religion of the future will be
Reason.
The Tribune, Chicago, Illinois,
November, 1891.