RELIGION
I
It ought to be laid down as a first
principle that grave questions which have divided
us in the past, and divide us still with much bitterness,
should not be thrust aside and kept out of view in
the hope of harmony. Where the attitude is such,
the hope is vain. They should be approached with
courage in the hope of creating mutual respect and
an honourable solution for all. Religion is such
a question. To the majority of men this touches
their most intimate life. Because of their jealous
regard for that intimate part of themselves they are
prepared for bitter hostilities with anyone who will
assail it; and because of the unmeasured bitterness
of assaults on all sides we have come to count it
a virtue to bring together in societies labelled non-sectarian,
men who have been violently opposed on this issue.
It will be readily allowed that to bring men together
anyhow, even suspiciously, is somewhat of an advance,
when we keep in mind how angrily they have quarrelled.
But ’tis not to our credit that in any assembly
a particular name hardly dare be mentioned; and it
must be realised that, whatever purpose it may serve
in lesser undertakings, in the great fight for freedom
no such attitude will suffice. No grave question
can be settled by ignoring it. Since it is our
duty to make the War of Independence a reality and
a success, we must invoke a contest that will as surely
rouse every latent passion and give every latent suspicion
an occasion and a field. That is the danger ahead.
We must anticipate that danger, meet and destroy it.
Perhaps at this suggestion most of us will at once
get restive. Some may say with irritation:
Why raise this matter? Others on the other side
may prepare forthwith to dig up the hatchet.
Is not the attitude on both sides evidence of the
danger? Does anyone suppose we can start a fight
for freedom without making that danger a grimmer reality?
Who can claim it a wise policy merely for the moment
to dodge it? For that is what we do. Let
us have courage and face it. At what I have to
say let no man take offence or fright it
commits no one to anything. It is written to try
and make opponents understand and respect one another,
not to set them at one another, least of all to make
them “liberal,” that is, lax and contemptible,
ready to explain everything away. We want primarily
the man who is prepared to fight his ground, but who
is big enough in heart and mind to respect opponents
who will also fight theirs. In the integrity
and courage of both sides is the guarantee of the independence
of both. That should be our guiding thought.
But as on this question most people abandon all tolerance,
it is quite possible what may be written will satisfy
none; still, it may serve the purpose of making a
need apparent. To repeat, we must face the question.
But whoever elects to start it, should approach the
issue with sympathy and forbearance. These are
as necessary as courage and resolution; yet, since
many often sacrifice firmness to sympathy, others
will take the opposite line of riding roughshod over
everyone, a harshness that confirms the weakling in
his weakness. To note all this is but to note
the difficulty; and if what is now written fails in
its appeal, it need only be said to walk unerringly
here would require the insight of a prophet and the
balance of an angel.
II
What everyone should take as a fair
demand is that all men should be sincere in their
professions, and that we should justify ourselves by
the consistency of our own lives rather than by the
wickedness of our neighbours: which is nothing
new. It is our trouble that we must emphasise
obvious duties. To approach the question frankly
with no matter what good faith will lead to much heart-burning,
perhaps, to no little bitterness; but if we realise
that all sides are about equally to blame, we may
induce an earnestness that may lead to better things.
It is in that hope I write. Catholics and Protestants,
instead of saying to one another the things with which
we are familiar, should look to their own houses;
and if in this age of fashionable agnosticism, they
should conclude that the general enemy is the atheist,
socialist, and the syndicalist, they should still
be reminded to look to their own houses; and if the
agnostic take this to justify himself, he should be
reminded he has never done anything to justify himself.
It may seem a curious way for inducing harmony to
set out to prove everyone in the wrong; but the point
is clear, not to attack what men believe but to ask
them to justify their words by their deeds. The
request is not unreasonable and it may be asked in
a tone that will show the sincerity of him who makes
it and waken a kindred feeling in all earnest men.
The world will be a better place to live in, and we
shall be all better friends when every man makes a
genuine resolve to give us all the example of a better
life.
III
A development that would require a
treatise in itself I will but touch on, to suggest
to all interested a matter of general and grave concern the
growing materialism of religious bodies. On all
sides self-constituted defenders of the faith are
troubling themselves, not with the faith but with
the numbers of their adherents who have jobs, equal
sharers in emoluments, and so forth. A Protestant
of standing writes a book and proves his religion
is one of efficiency; a Catholic of equal standing
quickly rejoins with another book to prove his religion
is also efficient; each blind to the fact that the
resulting campaign is disgraceful to both. When
religion ceases to represent to us something spiritual,
and purely spiritual, we begin to drift away from
it. “Where thy treasure is, there thy heart
is also.” “No man can serve God and
Mammon.” The modern rejoinder is familiar:
“We must live.” This, our generation
is not likely to forget. The grave concern is
that well-meaning men are accustoming themselves to
this cry to sacrifice all higher considerations for
the “equal division of emoluments.”
Let us as citizens and a community see that every
man has the right and the means to live; but when
self-interested bodies start a rivalry in the name
of their particular creeds, we know it ends in a squalid
greed and fight for place, in a pursuit of luxury,
the logical outcome of which must be to make the world
ugly, sordid and brutal. It would be a mistake
to overlook that high-minded men are allowing themselves
to be committed by plausible reasons to this growing
evil. It is misguided enthusiasm. There
is a divine authority that warns us all: “Be
zealous for the better gifts.”
IV
I wish to examine the attitude of
the average Christian to the Agnostic. “The
world is falling away from religion,” he will
cry when depressed, without thinking how much he himself
may be a contributing cause. Let him study it
in this light. What is his attitude? When
he comes to speak of the tendency of the age he will
indulge in vague generalities about atheism, socialism,
irreligion, and the rest; always the cause is outside
of him, and against him; he is not part of it.
I ask him to pass by the atheist awhile and take what
may be of more concern. There is a type of Catholic
and Protestant who has as little genuine religion in
him as any infidel, who does not deny the letter of
the law, but who does not observe its spirit, whose
only use for the letter is to criticise and harass
adversaries. Observe the high use he has for
liberty drinking, card-playing, gambling,
luxury; he has no place in his life for any worthy
deeds, nay, only scorn for such. Still he passes
for orthodox. If he is a Catholic, he secures
that by putting in an appearance at Mass on Sundays.
His mind is not there; he arrives late and goes early.
His Protestant fellow in his private judgment finds
more scope: “Let the women go listen to
the parson.” This is the sort of saying
gives him such a conceit of himself. We have the
type on both sides, so all can see it. Now it
is not in the way of the Pharisee we come to note
them, but to note that, strange as it may appear, either
or both together will come to applaud the denouncing
of the atheist. We gather such into our religious
societies, and flatter them that they are adherents
of religion and the bulwark of the faith, and they
forthwith anathematise the atheist with great gusto.
The one so anathematised is often as worthless as
themselves with a conceit to despise priest and parson
alike. But it sometimes happens he is a fine character
who has no religion as most of us understand it, but
who has yet a fine spiritual fervour, ready to fight
and make sacrifices for a national or social principle
that he believes will make for better things, a man
of integrity and worth whom the best of men may be
glad to hold as a friend. Yet we find in the
condition to which we have drifted such a one may
be pilloried by wasters, gamblers, rioters, a crew
that are the curse of every community. We lash
the atheist and the age but give little heed to the
insincerity and cant of those we do not refuse to
call our own. What an example for the man anathematised.
He sees the vice and meanness of those we allow to
pass for orthodox, and when he sees also the complacency
of the better part, he is unconvinced. We praise
the sweetness of the healing waters of Christ-like
charity, but despite our gospel he never gets it,
never. We give him execration, injustice; if
we let him go with a word, it is never a gentle word,
but a bitter epithet; and we wonder he is estranged,
when he sees our amazing composure in an amazing welter
of hypocrisy and deceit. There is, of course,
the better side, the many thousands of Catholics and
Protestants who sincerely aim at better things.
But what has to be admitted is that most sincerely
religious people adopt to the man of no established
religion the same attitude as does the hypocrite:
they join in the general cry. They should look
to their own houses; they should purge the temple
of the money-lender and the knave; they should see
that their field gives good harvest; they should remember
that not to the atheist only but to the orthodox was
it written: “Every tree therefore that
doth not yield good fruit shall be cut down and cast
into the fire.”
V
There is a word to be said to the
man for whom was invented the curious name agnostic.
I’m concerned only with him who is sincere and
high-minded. Let us pass the flippant critics
of things they do not understand. But all sincere
men are comrades in a deep and fine sense. What
the honest unbeliever has to keep in mind is that the
darker side is but one side. If he stands studying
a crowd of the orthodox and finds therein the drunkard,
the gambler, the sensualist; and if he says bitter
things of the value of religion and gets in return
the clerical fiat of one who is more a politician
than a priest; and if he rejoins contemptuously, “This
is fit for women and children,” let him be reminded
that he can also study the other side if he care.
If he has the instinct of a fighter he must know every
army has in its trail the camp-follower and the vulture,
but when the battle is set and the danger is imminent,
only the true soldier stands his ground. Because
some who are of poor spirit are in high place, let
him not forget the old spirit still exists. Not
only the women but the best intellects of men still
keep the old traditions. Newman and Pascal, Dante
and Milton, Erigena and Aquinas, are all dead, but
in our time even they have had followers not too far
off. In the same spirit Gilbert Chesterton found
wonder at a wooden post, and Francis Thompson, in
his divine wandering, troubled the gold gateways of
the stars. Let our friend before he frames his
final judgment pause here. He may well be baffled
by many anomalies of the time, his eye may rest on
the meaner horde, his ear be filled with the arrogance
of some unworthy successor of Paul; and if he says:
“Why permit these things?” he may be told
there are some alive in this generation who will question
all such things, and who, however hard it go with
them, have no fear for the final victory.
VI
Perhaps the conventional Christian
and conventional non-Christian may rest a moment to
consider the reality. Between the bitter believer
and the exasperated unbeliever, Christianity is being
turned from a practice to a polemic, and if we are
to recall the old spirit we must recall the old earnestness
and simplicity of the early Martyrs. We do not
hear that they called Nero an atheist, but we do hear
that they went singing to the arena. By their
example we may recover the spirit of song, and have
done with invective. If we find music and joyousness
in the old conception, it is not in the fashion of
the time to explain it away in some “new theology,”
for he to whom it is not a fashion, but a vital thing,
keeps his anchor by tradition. To him it is the
shining light away in the mists of antiquity; it is
the strong sun over the living world; it is the pillar
of fire over the widening seas and worlds of the unknown;
it is the expanse of infinity. When he is lost
in its mystery he adverts to the wonder about him,
for all that is wonderful is touched with it, and
all that is lovely is its expression. It is in
the breath of the wind, pure and bracing from the
mountain top. It is in the song of the lark holding
his musical revel in the sunlight. It is in the
ecstasy of a Spring morning. It is in the glory
of all beautiful things. When it has entered
and purified his spirit, his heart goes out to the
persecuted in all ages and countries. None will
he reject. “I am not come to call the just
but sinners.” He remembers those words,
and his great charity encompasses not only the persecuted
orthodox, but the persecuted heretics and infidels.
VII
I will not say if such an endeavour
as I suggest can have an immediate success. But
I think it will be a step forward if we get sincere
men on one side to understand the sincerity of the
other side; and if in matters of religion and speculation,
where there is so much difficulty and there is likely
to be so much conflict of opinion, there should be
no constraint, but rather the finest charity and forbearance;
then the orthodox would be concerned with practising
their faith rather than in harassing the infidel,
and the infidel would receive a more useful lesson
than the ill-considered tirades he despises. He
may remain still unconvinced, but he will give over
his contempt. This question of religion is one
on which men will differ, and differing, ultimately
they will fight if we find no better way. We
must remember while freedom is to win we are facing
a national struggle, and if we are threatened within
by a civil war of creeds it may undo us. That
is why we must face the question. That is why
I think utter frankness in these grave matters is
of grave urgency. If we approach them in the right
spirit we need have no fear for at heart
the most of men are susceptible to high appeals.
What we need is courage and intensity; it is gabbling
about surface things makes the bitterness. If
in truth we safeguard the right of every man as we
are bound to do we shall win the confidence of all,
and we may hope for a braver and better future, wherein
some light of the primal Beauty may wander again over
earth as in the beginning it dawned on chaos when
the Spirit of God first moved over the waters.