1106 lines
51 KiB
D
1106 lines
51 KiB
D
17 page printout
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From an old, undated, book published by Watts & Co. entitled:
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'Pamphlets by Charles Watts' Vol. I.
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The book contains the motto: --
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"To Believe without evidence and demonstration is an
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act of ignorance and folly." -- Volney.
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**** ****
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM:
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BEING
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AN EXPOSITION OF SECULAR PRINCIPLES,
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Showing their Relation to the Political and Social
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Problems of the Day.
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by
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CHARLES WATTS
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(Vice-President of the National Secular Society).
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LONDON:
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WATTS & CO., 17, JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET ST.
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1896.
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Price Threepence.
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**** ****
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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PROEM.
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IT has frequently occurred to me that the presentation of
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Secular views in the form of question and answer would be an
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advantage, not only to youthful inquirers, but also to adults who
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lack either the opportunity or the inclination to study in detail
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the nature of Secularism and its principles and teachings.
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Moreover, I have often been asked to give a plain and concise
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definition of Secular philosophy, and to point out wherein it
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differs from New Testament Christianity, and in what way it is
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superior to the Christian faith. Many inquiries have also reached
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me as to what are the Secular views in reference to the nature and
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destiny of man, the government of the universe, and to the
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political and social problems of the day. I propose to comply with
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these requests on the Socratic method -- that is, by putting
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questions and supplying answers thereto. In doing this my endeavor
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will be to employ language that may be readily understood by those
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who wish to learn what the various phases of Secularism really are.
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This expository method appears to me to be necessary,
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particularly at the present time, when we are constantly receiving
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into our ranks, from the rising generation, numerous recruits, who
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evince a laudable desire to have at their command a definite record
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of Secular views, principles, objects, and aims. Of course I do not
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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intend to give an elaborate disquisition of Secular philosophy, but
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simply to furnish a concise, matter-of-fact epitome of our views as
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they are explained by the National Secular Society, and also by the
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leading writers of the Secular party.
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QUESTION. -- What is Secularism?
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ANSWER. -- In its etymological signification, it means the
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age, the finite, belonging to this world. Secularists, however, use
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the term in a more amplified sense, as embodying a philosophy of
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life, and inculcating rules of conduct that have no necessary
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association with any system of theology.
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Q. -- Have the Secularists an official statement of their
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principles?
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A. -- Yes, those recognized and adopted by the National
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Secular Society, which are as follows: -- Secularism teaches that
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conduct should be based on reason and knowledge. It knows nothing
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of divine guidance or interference; it excludes supernatural hopes
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and fears; it regards happiness as mans proper aim, and utility as
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his proper moral guide. Secularism affirms that progress is which
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is only possible through liberty, which is at once a right and a
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duty, and, therefore, seeks to remove every barrier to thought,
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action, and speech. Secularism declares that theology is condemned
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by reason as superstitious, and by experience as mischievous, and
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assails it as the historic enemy of progress. Secularism
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accordingly seeks to dispel superstition, to spread education, to
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disestablish religion, to rationalize morality, to promote peace,
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to dignify labor, to extend material well-being, and to realize the
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self-government of the people.
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Q. -- What is the basis of Secularism?
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A. -- The exercise of Freethought, guided by reason,
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experience, and general usefulness. By Freethought is here meant
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the right to entertain any opinions that commend themselves to the
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judgment of the honest and earnest searcher after truth, without
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his being made the victim of social ostracism in this world, or
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threatened with punishment in some other. Experience has proved the
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impossibility of uniformity of belief upon theological questions;
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therefore Freethought should be acknowledged as being the heritage
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of the human race.
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Q. -- Are Secularism and Freethought identical?
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A. -- Not exactly. All Secularists must be Freethinkers, but
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all Freethinkers are not necessarily Secularists. Freethought
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represents a mental condition, but Secularism contains a code of
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principles whereby human life can be regulated and human conduct
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governed.
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Q. -- What is Reason?
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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A. -- We define reason as being man's highest intellectual
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powers -- the understanding, the faculty of judgment, the power
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which discriminates, infers, deduces, and judges, the ability to
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premise future probabilities from past experience, and to
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distinguish truth from error.
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Q. -- What is Truth?
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A. -- That may be taken as true which the best knowledge
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endorses, the largest intellects accept, and the widest experience
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vouches for. Many so-called truths are liable to be corrected,
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modified, or superseded by more accurate power of judgment, or more
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perfect experience.
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Q. -- What is Experience?
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A. -- Experience represents knowledge acquired through study,
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investigation, and observation in the broadest sense possible. We
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do not use the word in the limited form, as Whately employs it, of
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individual experience, but as comprising the world's legacy of
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thought, action, scientific application, and mental culture, so far
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as we are enabled to avail ourselves of these intellectual
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agencies.
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Q. -- What is Secular Morality?
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A. -- We teach that morality consists in the performance of
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acts that will exalt and ennoble human character, and in avoiding
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conduct that is injurious either to the individual or to society at
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large.
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Q. -- What do Secularists mean by the term Duty?
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A. -- By "duty" we mean an obligation to perform actions that
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have a tendency to promote the welfare of others, as well as that
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of ourselves. Obligations are imposed upon us by the very nature of
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things and the requirements of society.
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Q. -- From a Secular point of view, why should we speak the
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truth?
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A. -- Because experience teaches that lying and deceit tend
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to destroy that confidence between man and man which has been found
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to be necessary to maintain the stability of mutual social
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intercourse.
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Q. -- Why should we be honest?
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A. -- Because a dishonest act is an infringement upon the
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rights of others.
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Q. -- Why should we be just?
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A. -- Because history and observation have shown that where
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injustice has prevailed, there the happiness and well-being of the
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people have been impaired.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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Q. -- What explanation is given to the word "ought" when it
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is said we "ought" to do so and so?
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A. -- The only explanation orthodox Christianity gives to
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this term is pure selfishness. It says you "ought" to do so and so
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for "Christ's sake," that through him you may avoid eternal
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perdition. On the other hand, Secularism finds the meaning of
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"ought" in the very nature of things, as involving duty, and
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implying that something is due to others.
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Q. -- Wherein is Secularism superior to Christianity?
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A. -- In the fact that Secularism affirms certain rights
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which are denied by the orthodox Christianity of the Churches and
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the New Testament. These are: -- 1. The right of a person to reject
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any or all of the religions in the world, without fear of
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excommunication here, or condemnation hereafter. Christianity
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condemns this right in teaching: "But though we, or an angel from
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heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have
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preached unto you, let him be accursed" (Gal. i. 8). "He that
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believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not
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shall be damned" (Mark xvi. 16). 2. The right to refuse to regard
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all that Christ is supposed to have taught as "true gospel."
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Christianity denies this, and says to those who do not accept
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Christ's gospel, that he will come "in flaming fire, taking
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vengeance on them" (2 Thess. 8). 3. The right of anyone adhering to
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Freethought, even if it culminates in the denial of the very
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foundation of the Christian faith. This is denied by Christianity,
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which says: "For whosoever will deny me before men, him will I also
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deny before my father which is in heaven" (Matt. x. 33). 4. The
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right to act upon the opinion that attention should be given to
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this world in preference to any other. Christianity discourages
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this right, inasmuch as it teaches: "Take no thought for your life,
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... but seek ye first the kingdom of God" (Matt. vi. 25, 33). 5.
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The right to regard Science as being more valuable than theological
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faith. The New Testament teaches the opposite to this in saying:
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"Is any sick among you? ... The prayer of faith shall save the
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sick" (James v. 14, 15). "By grace are ye saved through faith ...
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Not of works, lest any man should boast" (Eph. ii. 8, 9). 6. The
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right to deem salvation quite possible apart altogether from
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Christ. The scripture says no, "for there is none other name
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[except Christ's] under heaven given among men, whereby we must be
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saved" (Acts iv. 12).
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Q. -- What is the difference between Secularism and
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Christianity?
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A. -- "Christianity," in the words of Mr. G.J. Holyoake,
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"treats of two sets of duties -- to God and to man: we hold that
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the duties to man take precedence in importance, and, indeed,
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include the highest possible duties to a benevolent God.
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Christianity holds that faith in Christ alone will save us: we hold
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that faith in good works will better save us, as humanity is higher
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than dogmas. Christianity teaches that prayer is a means of
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providential help: we teach that Science is the sole available
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means of temporal help. Christianity professes to supply the
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highest Motives and the surest consolations: we say no motives can
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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4
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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be purer or stronger than the love of goodness for its own sake,
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which brings consolation sweeter than dignities and loftier than
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talents. Christianity assumes that the moral sense cannot be
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educated without the Bible : we answer that the high culture
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attained in Greece, before the days of the Bible, is possible, in
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a purer and more universal sense, in these days of scientific
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civilization; we answer that the Bible, which has been understood
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in opposite senses by the ablest men -- the Bible, which has
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divided the holiest churches, and which down to this hour dictates
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harshness of language and bitterness of spirit -- cannot be a book
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of moral culture to the people. Christianity declares it has the
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promise of this life and of that which is to come: Secularism
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secures the realization of this life, and establishes fair desert
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also in any life to come for the 'best use of both worlds' is the
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secular use of this. Christianity contends that if the Christian is
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wrong he will be no worse off than ourselves hereafter; while, if
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he is right, we shall be in danger: but this only proves that our
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system is more generous than the Christian, because our system
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still provides no harm for the Christian hereafter, while his
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system does provide harm for those who do not accept it.
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Christianity either denies that there can be sincere dissent from
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its doctrines, or it teaches that for conscientious difference of
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opinion the last hour of life will be the beginning of never-ending
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misery. Secularism, on the contrary, says that that solemn moment
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when Death exerts his inexorable dominion, and the anguish of
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separating affection blanches the cheek; when even the dumb brute
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betrays inarticulate sympathy, and the grossest natures are
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refined, and rude lips spontaneously distil the silvery words of
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sympathy when the unfeeling volunteer acts of mercy, and tyranny
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pauses in its pursuit of vengeance, and the tempest of passion is
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stilled, and the injured forgive, and hate is subdued to love, and
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insensibility to affection -- we say, that can never be the moment
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chosen by a God of love in which to commence the execution of a
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purpose which humanity cannot conceive without terror, nor
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contemplate without dismay."
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Q. -- Is Secularism a necessity?
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A. -- Yes; for the three following reasons: (1) Because
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theology has failed to regenerate society; (2) because there are
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thousands of honest inquirers who cannot accept as true any of the
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supernatural faiths of the world; (3) because some guide for human
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conduct is desirable, therefore Secularism is a necessity to those
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who are unable to believe in theological teachings.
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Q. -- What do Secularists seek to destroy?
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A. -- Not the truths that are contained either in
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Christianity or in the Bible; these are for the service of mankind,
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irrespective of any religious profession. Our aim is to destroy the
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errors of theology -- such as the belief in its creeds and dogmas;
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dependence upon alleged supernatural power as a means of help; the
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notion that the prayer of supplication is of value; that man is
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necessarily a depraved being; that an ill-spent life can be atoned
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for by death-bed repentance; that salvation can be obtained through
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Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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5
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
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the merits of Christ; that, if there be a heaven, the only passport
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to it is faith in the Christian scheme of redemption; that there
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exist a personal Devil and a material hell; and that the Bible is
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an infallible record.
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Q. -- What is the Secular view of the Bible?
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A. -- Secularism affirms that the Bible is a merely human
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production, abounding in the errors and superstitions specially
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common to ancient human works, the venerable days of old being the
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infancy of mankind. Secularists regard the Bible as a book composed
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of a large number of distinct and incongruous pamphlets, quite
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unauthenticated, written by various persons, nobody really knows by
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whom; at far distant periods, nobody exactly knows when; which have
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been floated down to us, as the "accidents of time" determined, by
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oral traditions and written copies, subject to all the blunders and
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perversions of ignorant and fanatical men, in ages perfectly
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uncritical and unscrupulous; whose originals have irretrievably
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perished; which frequently refer to prior authorities that have
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utterly perished also, and whose various readings are counted by
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tens of thousands. The various books which compose the New
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Testament were first circulated at a time when ignorance was the
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rule, and knowledge the exception; when the critical spirit was
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non-existent, and true believers accounted all forgeries in favor
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of their religion not only permissible, but praiseworthy. The
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amount of falsification prevalent which can be demonstrated even
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now, when so many of the required testimonies are lost, is
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astounding, and even appalling, to one who newly enters upon the
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inquiry by studying the works of some competent and impartial
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scholar. Of these falsifications and uncertainties the ordinary
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Christian knows nothing; and the learned Christians, who are
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thoroughly aware of them, are anything but anxious to point them
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out to their less informed brethren. The Secularist, knowing these
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facts, together with the equally demonstrated truth that both the
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Old and New Testaments are contradictory in their statements and
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teachings, estimates the book by its merits, and not by its
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supposed authority. The Bible, like all books, should be our
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servant, and not our master. Secularism applies the eclectic
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principle to all books, and, being bound by no authority save
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cultivated reason, the evil, folly, and errors of each are
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discarded, while the good, wise, and true are retained to assist in
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making a noble, dignified, and happy life for mankind on earth.
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Q. -- Are Secularists Atheists?
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A. -- Not necessarily so. Mr. George Jacob Holyoake, the
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founder of Secularism, says to the reader in his preface to the
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Trial of Theism: "All we beg of him is not to confound Atheism with
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Secularism, which is an entirely different question, It is not
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necessary to Secularism to say God does not exist, nor to question
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the alleged proofs of such existence. The sphere of Secularism is
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irrespective of Theism, Atheism, or the Bible. Its province is the
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ethics of nature. Secularism does not declare why nature exists, or
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how it exists. Nature is. Secularism commences with this ample,
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indisputable, and infinite fact of wonder, study, and progress."
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||
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||
|
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
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|
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THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
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Q. -- Did not Mr. Bradlaugh say that Secularism leads to
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Atheism when logically reasoned out?
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A. -- Yes; but he also said, in his debate with Dr. McCann:
|
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"Clearly, all Secularists are not Atheists. Clearly, many people
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who believe themselves to be sincere Theists can sign the
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||
declarations and principles which I have read to you [those of the
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National Secular Society], without doing any violation to their
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honest declaration; but, so far as I am personally concerned, and
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probably many will agree with me, I contend that the result of
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Secularism is Atheism. Only don't put it on all, Don't put it on
|
||
the Society. There are many Atheists in the Society, and some who
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are not." Besides, if Secularism and Atheism were necessarily one,
|
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then Mr. Bradlaugh's words would have no meaning when he said that
|
||
Secularism led, when logically carried out, to Atheism. If it leads
|
||
to Atheism, then it is not Atheism.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the difference between Secularism and Atheism?
|
||
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A. -- Secularism is a practical philosophy, providing rules
|
||
for human guidance in daily life, while Atheism represents certain
|
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theories in reference to the supposed existence of God and the
|
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supernatural in the universe.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Have Christians in their teachings anything analogous
|
||
to the stated relation between Secularism and Atheism?
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||
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A. -- Yes; many Christians believe that the logical outcome
|
||
of their teachings is Calvinism, while others will not admit that
|
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Calvinism is any part of Christianity.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Where is the Secular science, and where are the
|
||
hospitals and other institutions of the Secular party?
|
||
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A. -- All science is secular, and it did not originate in any
|
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supernatural faith. Hospitals, and other benevolent institutions,
|
||
are the result of human sympathy. They existed long before the dawn
|
||
of Christianity, and to-day Secularists and all classes of
|
||
unbelievers contribute towards their support. The Christians built
|
||
no hospitals until the fourth century A.D.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the reason that professed Christians suppose
|
||
they have done more useful work than Secularists?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Because they have had more time, greater wealth, and
|
||
better opportunities than Secularists have had. Christians claim a
|
||
history of two thousand years, during which time they have
|
||
possessed untold wealth, and almost unlimited power. Secularism, on
|
||
the other hand, has only existed, as an organization, for about
|
||
fifty years, funds left for its propagation have been stolen by
|
||
Christians, and Christian laws have made Secular advocacy illegal.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Have Secularists accomplished as much in their fifty
|
||
years of existence, as the Christians did during the first half
|
||
century of their existence?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
A. -- Undoubtedly, and more. The early Christians had no
|
||
science worthy of the name; they achieved no political or social
|
||
reforms, and they gave the masses no real education. It was not
|
||
until the third century that Christian places of worship were
|
||
erected. Secularists have several halls throughout the country, and
|
||
they would have many more but for the disgraceful fact that, as
|
||
already stated, Christians have appropriated to themselves money
|
||
left for Secular purposes.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What Progressive movements have Secularists taken part
|
||
in?
|
||
|
||
A. -- In the struggles for the abolition of slavery; the
|
||
repeal of the taxes upon knowledge; the establishment of a national
|
||
system of education; the various efforts that have been made to
|
||
extend the franchise among the masses; the securing of the right of
|
||
free speech and a free press; the substitution of affirmation
|
||
instead of swearing; the improvement of the social status of woman;
|
||
the fostering of kindness to animals; tho cultivation of peace and
|
||
goodwill among nations; the settlement of disputes by intellectual
|
||
arbitration rather than by brute force; the better adjustment of
|
||
the relations between Capital and Labor, and the entire cessation
|
||
of prosecution for the holding of opinions, let them be what they
|
||
may.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Are there any records of special acts of benevolence
|
||
upon the part of unbelievers in the Christian faith?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Yes, many. Among the numerous bequests left by rich
|
||
men, the gifts of Freethinkers have appeared conspicuous. The
|
||
founder of Girard College, not a believer in Christianity, in
|
||
addition to the six million dollars required for the establishment
|
||
of that college, gave, throughout his lifetime and at his death,
|
||
thirty thousand dollars to the hospitals, twenty thousand dollars
|
||
to the deaf and dumb asylum, twenty thousand dollars to the orphan
|
||
asylum, twenty thousand dollars to the Lancaster schools, ten
|
||
thousand dollars to provide fuel for the Philadelphia poor, ten
|
||
thousand dollars to aid distressed sea-captains, twenty thousand
|
||
dollars for the relief of poor masons, fifty thousand dollars for
|
||
various other charities in Philadelphia, and three hundred thousand
|
||
dollars for the absolute poor. James Smithson left five thousand
|
||
dollars to found the institution named after him at Washington;
|
||
John Redmond gave three hundred thousand dollars to support three
|
||
beds in the Boston Hospital; James Lick gave one million dollars to
|
||
found an astronomical observatory; William M'Clure gave half a
|
||
million dollars to aid the working men; and George Ilford gave
|
||
thirty thousand dollars for the scientific training of women. Mr.
|
||
Butland, a prominent member of the Toronto Secular Society,
|
||
bequeathed fifty thousand dollars to the general hospitals of
|
||
Toronto. In Glasgow the Mitchell Library was established at the
|
||
cost of seventy thousand pounds by a Freethinker; and in the same
|
||
city Mr. George Baillie left eighteen thousand pounds to establish
|
||
unsectarian schools, reading-rooms, etc.
|
||
|
||
Q. Have Secularists any faith or religion?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
A. -- That depends upon the meaning attached to the words
|
||
"faith" and "religion." If these terms are understood as
|
||
representing theological and dogmatic teachings, we have neither.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- How do Secularists understand the terms here mentioned?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Our faith is limited to possible results in this life,
|
||
and it is based upon the experience of the past, not upon
|
||
conjectures as to a future existence. Religion, with us, signifies
|
||
morality -- that is, practical duties, not speculative opinions.
|
||
This is the etymological meaning of the word.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Have Secularists any standard of right, such as the
|
||
Christian's "Golden Rule," which is: "Whatsoever ye would that men
|
||
should do to you, do ye even to them"?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We do not accept this as the best standard of right,
|
||
but only as an expression of likes and dislikes. Besides, it
|
||
belongs to the Pagan world, and it is not the unique teaching of
|
||
Christianity. We hold that the best conduct is to do that which is
|
||
conducive to the general good, independently of what we would that
|
||
others should do to us. Conduct that results in being useful to
|
||
others and ourselves is undoubtedly the best for all mankind.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Does this express the Secular idea of duty?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Yes, inasmuch as it represents that conduct which grows
|
||
out of our relation to each other. It includes our obligation to
|
||
parents, family, and the State, to whom, and to which, we are
|
||
individually indebted for benefits received.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is there no other duty?
|
||
|
||
A -- No; because our only concern is with this world and its
|
||
inhabitants, beyond which we recognize no moral duty or
|
||
responsibility. The only demand we admit is, that our conduct
|
||
should be in harmony with what the best interests of the community
|
||
require of its members.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What motive have Secularists for compliance with this
|
||
demand?
|
||
|
||
A. -- The desire to maintain social affinity, and to raise
|
||
the standard of ethical culture and general intelligence by the
|
||
example of right-doing. Experience proves that this is the surest
|
||
way of promoting the general good.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- But is not that reducing morality to a personal
|
||
advantage?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Quite so; and herein lies the excellence of the Secular
|
||
method, for the general good is the result of personal action. It
|
||
is a mistake to suppose that individual happiness is possible while
|
||
we are surrounded with ignorance and vice; therefore Secularists
|
||
urge that their neighbors should be well instructed in order that
|
||
all, individually, may share the highest good.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Do Secularists believe in a future life?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Some do, and others do not. That is a question left to
|
||
each person to decide for himself. The National Secular Society
|
||
does not dogmatize upon the subject either pro or con. It cannot
|
||
affirm there is such a life, because to prove it is impossible; it
|
||
cannot deny a future life, because we know nothing of it, and to
|
||
deny that of which we acknowledge we know nothing would be
|
||
illogical.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is the Secular position upon this subject a safe one?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We think so; for, by making the best of this life,
|
||
physically, morally, and intellectually, we are pursuing the wisest
|
||
course, whatever the issues in reference to a future life may be.
|
||
If there should be another life, the Secularist must share it with
|
||
his opponent. Our opinions do not affect the reality in the
|
||
slightest degree. If we are to sleep forever, we shall so sleep,
|
||
despite the belief in immortality; and if we are to live forever,
|
||
we shall so live, despite the belief that possibly death ends all.
|
||
It must also be remembered that, if man possesses a soul, that soul
|
||
will be the better through being in a body that has been properly
|
||
trained; and if there is to be a future life, that life will be the
|
||
better if the higher duties of the present one have been fully and
|
||
honestly performed.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Have Secularists no fear of future punishment,
|
||
supposing they are wrong?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Certainly not; for if there be a just God, before whom
|
||
we are to appear to be judged, he will never punish those to whom
|
||
he has not vouchsafed the faculty of seeing beyond the grave,
|
||
because they honestly avowed that their mental vision was limited
|
||
to this side of the tomb. Thus the Secularists feel quite safe as
|
||
regards any futurity that may be worth having. If the present be
|
||
the only life, then it will be all the more valuable if we give it
|
||
our undivided attention. If, on the other hand, there is to be
|
||
another life, then, in that case, we shall have won the right to
|
||
its advantages through having been faithful to our convictions,
|
||
just to our fellows, and in having striven to leave the world purer
|
||
than we found it.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Do not Secularists miss a great consolation in not
|
||
believing in a future life?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Decidedly not; for the reason that the belief is only
|
||
speculative, having no foundation in known facts. Besides, we have
|
||
the conviction that our secular conduct on earth will entitle us to
|
||
the realization of its fullest pleasure. And this conviction is not
|
||
marred by the belief that the majority of the human race will be
|
||
condemned to a fate "which humanity cannot conceive without terror,
|
||
nor contemplate without dismay."
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is not the belief in a future life necessary as a
|
||
motive to moral conduct?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
A. -- No; because people live good lives without such a
|
||
belief, while many who believe in "a life beyond the grave" are
|
||
guilty of the most immoral conduct. The consideration that our
|
||
actions affect, for good or for evil, our follow creatures here
|
||
ought to supply a sufficient motive for right living.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- But are not the hope of heaven and the fear of hell
|
||
among the strongest incentives to virtue, and the most potent
|
||
deterrents to vice?
|
||
|
||
A. -- In some cases this may be so, but that is the result of
|
||
a false education. The highest incentive to good conduct should be
|
||
our personal honor and the welfare of others; the strongest
|
||
deterrent to bad conduct ought to be the knowledge that it results
|
||
in injurious consequences upon the whole of the community.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Do Secularists believe in what is termed the "Divine
|
||
Providence" of the universe?
|
||
|
||
A. -- They do not. Our only providence is that which is
|
||
derived from science, forethought, industry, and human effort. We
|
||
have no faith in miracles or in the efficacy of prayer. Other
|
||
conditions being equal, we believe that the crops of an unbeliever
|
||
will ripen quite as well upon his estate as those upon the estate
|
||
of the most pious.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What injunction do Secularists give in accordance with
|
||
their view of life?
|
||
|
||
A. -- That we should trust to ourselves, and not rely upon
|
||
supposed heavenly favor. That we should seek in the order of nature
|
||
a basis for practical precepts in life, and regard the laws of
|
||
nature and man as being the foundation of all virtue and
|
||
prosperity.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Do Secularists accept any authority, or is every man
|
||
allowed to do as he likes?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We accept the authority of cultivated reason, and facts
|
||
that have been verified by experience. No one should be permitted
|
||
to do as he likes, if in so doing his acts tend to injure others,
|
||
and to disturb the harmony and well-being of the social state.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What, from a Secular standpoint, principally influences
|
||
man's character?
|
||
|
||
A. -- His physical organization, early education, and general
|
||
environment. These are the main conditions that determine the
|
||
nature of human character and conduct.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is meant by education?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Not merely the possession of knowledge, but the ability
|
||
to use knowledge so that it may be beneficial both to the
|
||
individual and to the general community.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Are men, their surroundings and natural laws, the only
|
||
forces that are concerned with the affairs of life?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We believe that life is what it is through men acting
|
||
and reacting upon each other, and in consequence of their
|
||
complying, or non-complying, with the laws of existence, and making
|
||
those laws subservient to their various objects in life as means to
|
||
an end.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is there no power over human existence except natures
|
||
laws and man's effort?
|
||
|
||
A. -- That is more than we can say with our limited
|
||
knowledge. But, so far as we know at present, these are the only
|
||
agencies or factors that can be relied upon to sustain and regulate
|
||
human affairs.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- How do Secularists account for the origin of nature and
|
||
her laws?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We do not attempt to do so, inasmuch as we know nothing
|
||
of what are called "final causes." Still, we accept the theory that
|
||
probably nature and her laws may have always existed under some
|
||
conditions -- that there is one eternal existence of which all
|
||
known forms are modes of manifestation.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Which theory do Secularists regard as being the more
|
||
reasonable -- that of Special Creation, or that of Evolution?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Undoubtedly the theory of Evolution, for that accords
|
||
with certain discoveries in science, and, moreover, it recognizes
|
||
the fact that all forms of nature are subject to perpetual change,
|
||
and that the whole universe is the theater of incessant activity.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the difference between Evolution and Special
|
||
Creation?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Evolution may be defined as an unfolding, opening-out,
|
||
or unwinding; a disclosure of something which was not previously
|
||
known, but which existed before in a more condensed or hidden form.
|
||
According to this theory, there is no new existence called into
|
||
being, but a making conspicuous to our eyes that which was
|
||
previously concealed. "Evolution teaches that the universe and man
|
||
did not always exist in their present form; neither are they the
|
||
product of a sudden creative act, but rather the result of
|
||
innumerable changes from the lower to the higher, each step in
|
||
advance being an evolution from a pre-existing condition." On the
|
||
other hand, the special creation doctrine teaches that, daring a
|
||
limited period, God created the universe and man, and that the
|
||
various phenomena are not the result simply of natural law, but the
|
||
outcome of supernatural design. According to Mr. Herbert Spencer,
|
||
the whole theory of Evolution is based upon three principles --
|
||
namely, that matter is indestructible, motion continuous, and force
|
||
persistent.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What are the objections to the theory of Special
|
||
Creation?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
A. -- To accept this theory as being true, we have to think
|
||
of a time when there was no time -- of a place where there was no
|
||
place. Is this possible? If it were, it would be interesting to
|
||
learn where an infinite God was at that particular period, and how,
|
||
in "no time," he could perform his creative act. Besides, if a
|
||
being really exist who created all things, the obvious question at
|
||
once is, "Where was this being before anything else existed?" "Was
|
||
there a time when God over all was God over nothing? Can we believe
|
||
that a God over nothing began to be out of nothing, and to create
|
||
all things when there was nothing?" More over, if the universe was
|
||
created, from what did it emanate? From nothing? But "from nothing
|
||
nothing can come." Was it created from something that already was?
|
||
If so, it was no creation at all, but only a continuation of that
|
||
which was in existence. Further, "creation needs action; to act is
|
||
to use force; to use force implies the existence of something upon
|
||
which that force can be used. But if that 'something' were there
|
||
before creation, the act of creating was simply the re-forming of
|
||
pre-existing materials."
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is there any other serious objection to the belief that
|
||
an infinite God created the universe?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Yes. If God is infinite, he is everywhere. if
|
||
everywhere, he is in the universe; if in the universe now, he was
|
||
always there. If he were always in the universe, there never was a
|
||
time when the universe was not; therefore, it could never have been
|
||
created.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is it reasonable to believe in the theory of Special
|
||
Creation, when science proclaims the stability of natural law?
|
||
|
||
A. -- We think not; for, as the late Professor Tyndall, in
|
||
his lecture on "Sound," remarked, if there is one thing that
|
||
science has demonstrated more clearly than another, it is the
|
||
stability of the operations of the laws of nature. We feel assured
|
||
from experience that this is so, and we act upon such assurance in
|
||
our daily life.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the correct meaning of Agnosticism?
|
||
|
||
A. -- It has been well said that, to clearly understand what
|
||
Agnosticism is, it is desirable to remember the fact that one of
|
||
the very first heresies which distracted the early Catholic Church
|
||
was that of the Gnostics. They took their name from the Greek word
|
||
for knowledge (or science); but, of course, they used it within
|
||
certain sufficiently-marked limits. They did not mean that they
|
||
possessed universal knowledge of all things, but only that they had
|
||
the knowledge of what the Christian religion really was, or ought
|
||
to be. This is here offered as a parallel example of the
|
||
application of a general term to one particular subject or object
|
||
of human knowledge. Precisely similar are the limits of the word
|
||
which the addition of the little negative particle 'a' (without)
|
||
makes to signify precisely the opposite of Gnosticism. Gnosticism
|
||
meant a full, complete, and accurate knowledge of the origin,
|
||
nature, attributes, and mode of operation of the deity;
|
||
Agnosticism, on the contrary, signifies the very opposite of this.
|
||
It declares that we have no knowledge of God; that we cannot
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
pretend to say that such a Supreme Intelligence exists; and that we
|
||
are absolutely precluded from affirming that the universe is really
|
||
destitute of such a central 'Nous,' or Highest Intelligence. "Canat
|
||
thou," asked the writer of the grand old Semitic drama -- "Canst
|
||
thou by searching find out God?" This interrogation the honest
|
||
Agnostic has put to himself, and, after long and earnest
|
||
exercitation of mind, after the intensest study of the world
|
||
external and of the inner consciousness, he arrives at the
|
||
conclusion that the question cannot be satisfactorily answered,
|
||
either Affirmatively or negatively. The Agnostic does not argue
|
||
that, "because we cannot see God, therefore he [God) is not." The
|
||
Agnostic knows too well his own limited nature and the boundary of
|
||
the knowable to claim for himself a God-like degree and measure of
|
||
knowledge.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Is it not a fact that many of the principles of the
|
||
National Secular Society are not new?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Probably that is so, but we are not aware that any
|
||
sect, Christian or anti-Christian, possesses a special vested
|
||
interest in goodness, or a monopoly of truth. Everything that is
|
||
worth having belongs to man everywhere, and the principles of
|
||
Secularism most certainly do not claim to be any exception to this
|
||
rule. Truth is the universal prerogative of mankind in general, and
|
||
goodness and virtue are qualities fortunately placed within the
|
||
reach of humanity at large. If the principles of Secularism cannot
|
||
lay claim to originality because they have been taught before, this
|
||
is an objection that would apply with quite as much force, and
|
||
certainly with as much truth, to most other systems, including
|
||
Christianity itself. The ethical maxims to be met with in the Now
|
||
Testament may all be found in some form or other in heathen
|
||
philosophies propounded long before Jesus of Nazareth is supposed
|
||
to have trodden the shores of Galilee. It is surely a most puerile
|
||
charge to bring against a system, that the whole of its teachings
|
||
are not new. Morality is as old as humanity, and virtue coexistent
|
||
with human action. But if Secularism or any other system can do
|
||
something towards extending the domain of the one, and causing the
|
||
other to take deeper root in the human mind, it deserves the
|
||
respect of all good men, and it ought not to be sneered at because
|
||
it has nothing new to teach.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- How do Secularists, as a rule, propose to deal with
|
||
what they regard as the errors of Christianity?
|
||
|
||
A. -- There are three principal modes of criticizing the
|
||
pretensions set forth on behalf of popular Christianity. First, it
|
||
is alleged such pretensions are entirely destitute of truth, and
|
||
that they have been of no service whatever to mankind. This view we
|
||
certainly cannot endorse. Many of the superstitions of the world
|
||
have been allied with some fact, and have, in their exercise upon
|
||
the minds of a portion of their devotees, served, for a time no
|
||
doubt, a useful purpose. In the second place, certain opponents of
|
||
Christianity regard it as being deserving of immediate extinction.
|
||
This, in our opinion, is unjust to its adherents, who have as much
|
||
right to possess what they hold to be true as we have to entertain
|
||
views which we believe to be correct. Theological faiths should be
|
||
supplanted by intellectual growth, not crushed by dogmatic force.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
The third and, as we think, the most sensible and fair mode of
|
||
dealing with Christianity is to regard it as not being the only
|
||
system of truth; as not having had a special origin; as not being
|
||
suited to all minds as having fulfilled its original purpose, and
|
||
as possessing no claim of absolute domination. This attitude of
|
||
Secularism towards popular orthodoxy is based upon the voice of
|
||
history and the philosophy of the true liberty of thought.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What does Secularism teach in reference to marriage?
|
||
|
||
A. -- It teaches that marriage should be the result of mutual
|
||
affection, and that such a union creates the responsibility of
|
||
undivided allegiance, mutual fidelity, and mutual consideration. It
|
||
affirms that in the domestic circle there should be no one-sided,
|
||
absolute authority; that husband and wife should be partners, not
|
||
only in theory, but in deed, and animated alike by the desire to
|
||
promote one another's happiness. The genuine Secularist must be a
|
||
brave, kindly, sincere, and just man. His Secularism will be felt
|
||
as a radiating blessing first, and most warmly and brightly, in his
|
||
own home. If a man neglects and illtreats his wife and children, we
|
||
must distinctly disavow him as a Secularist.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What does the term "happiness" imply?
|
||
|
||
A. -- It implies, firstly, material well-being, sufficiency
|
||
of food, clothing, and house-room, with good air, good water, and
|
||
good sanitary conditions; for these things are necessary to bodily
|
||
health, which, in turn, is essential to the health of the mind, for
|
||
only in health is real happiness possible. Again, it implies mental
|
||
well-being, sufficiency of instruction and education for every one,
|
||
so that the intellect may be nourished and developed to the full
|
||
extent of its capabilities. Given the sound mind in the sound body,
|
||
the term "happiness" further implies free exercise of these,
|
||
absolutely free in every respect so long as the equal rights of
|
||
others are not trenched upon, or the common good is not impeded. In
|
||
this full development of mind as well as body it need scarcely be
|
||
said that true happiness brings into its service all the noblest
|
||
and most beautiful arts of life.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Are there not other requisites to happiness besides
|
||
those just mentioned?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Yes; we must add, as essential to true happiness, what
|
||
are commonly called the virtues of the heart, the fervor of Zeal or
|
||
Enthusiasm, and the finer fervor of Benevolence, Sympathy, or, to
|
||
use the best name, Love. For, if Wisdom gives the requisite light,
|
||
Love alone can give the requisite vital heat; Wisdom, climbing the
|
||
arduous mountain solitudes, must often let the lamp slip from her
|
||
benumbed fingers, must often be near perishing in fatal lethargy
|
||
amidst ice and snow-drifts, if Love be not there to cheer and
|
||
revive her with the glow and the flames of the heart's quenchless
|
||
fires.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Has the National Secular Society any political program
|
||
advocating party polities?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
A. -- No. Each member of the Society is allowed to entertain
|
||
whatever political opinions may commend themselves to his or her
|
||
judgment. There is, however, one requirement which we urge, and
|
||
that is that all should do their best to promote political justice
|
||
among every section of the community. The method to be adopted to
|
||
secure this object is left to individual choice.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the teaching of Secularism in reference to the
|
||
social problems of the day?
|
||
|
||
A. -- It teaches as a duty that we should recognize the
|
||
necessity of discovering the best possible solutions, and, when
|
||
those solutions are found, to apply them with all the moral force
|
||
at our command. This useful work must be carried on by each of us
|
||
in our capacity as social reformers -- a task which will be
|
||
inspired by the genius of Secularism, for no consistent Secularist
|
||
can remain idle while evils abound that mar the happiness of the
|
||
human family. The special duty of a member of the Secular
|
||
organization consists in demanding that freedom which will enable
|
||
every reformer to carry on his good work without intimidation or
|
||
persecution of any kind, and also in doing his utmost to remove
|
||
such impediments to progress as have been caused by priestly
|
||
invention, and by the false conceptions of human duty which have
|
||
been engendered by theological teachings.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- What is the official attitude of Secularism towards
|
||
Socialism, Individualism, and Anarchism?
|
||
|
||
A. -- The relation of Secularism to all the "isms" named is
|
||
the same as it is towards the political and religious movements of
|
||
the day -- namely, Eclectic -- that is, it selects the best from
|
||
among them all. Provided he does his best to combat existing evils,
|
||
each member of the Secular party is at liberty to support any
|
||
movement that seems to him wise and useful, supposing it to be
|
||
based upon "peace, law, and order." In fact, Secularists should
|
||
feel bound to investigate, as far as possible, all proposals made
|
||
for the redemption of mankind, regardless of sect or party. Special
|
||
care, however, should always be taken to discriminate between true
|
||
and false methods, and not to confound vain theories with practical
|
||
remedies.
|
||
|
||
Q. -- Has not the National Secular Society any published
|
||
authoritative statement as to the duty of its members in reference
|
||
to the political questions of the day?
|
||
|
||
A. -- Yes, it distinctly teaches that freedom of thought, of
|
||
speech, and of action for all is a claim consistent with reason,
|
||
and essential to human progress; that the exercise of personal
|
||
liberty, which does not infringe upon the freedom of others, is the
|
||
right of all, without any regard to class distinctions. This
|
||
principle Secularists maintain, without committing themselves to
|
||
all that is taught in the exercise of that right. The official
|
||
position taken by the National Secular Society in reference to
|
||
reforms of general social matters may be seen from its published
|
||
statement, under the heading of "Immediate Practical Objects," in
|
||
the Secular Almanack, which is published annually.
|
||
|
||
_________
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
THE SECULARIST'S CATECHISM.
|
||
|
||
I have now concluded an exposition of the leading features of
|
||
Secularism and its teachings, and my sincere hope is that this
|
||
humble effort may prove an advantage to earnest searchers after
|
||
truth. Secularists find ample work to be done; for, as time rolls
|
||
on, one improvement suggests another. The watchword of Secular
|
||
philosophy is "Onward, and onward still." It has been well
|
||
remarked, human progress is like the ascent of a mountain, whose
|
||
crest does not look very high from the distant plain, but which, as
|
||
we climb it, heaves shoulder beyond shoulder, each fresh one
|
||
discovered as we reach the summit of the inferior, and each summit
|
||
in its turn seeming the very utmost peak as we are toiling towards
|
||
it. True, the Secularistic fabric may be slow in its erection, as
|
||
imperceptible as is the construction of a coral reef; it is,
|
||
however, certain in its growth. And although at present we have to
|
||
encounter the obstacles of superstition and the spite of
|
||
intolerance, the work of progress still goes on. This inspires us
|
||
with hope for the future. We believe the time will arrive when
|
||
fancy will give place to reality, and imagination will yield to the
|
||
facts of life. Then, instead of the evils of priestcraft, the reign
|
||
of bigotry and the strife of theology, we trust to have
|
||
manifestations of sincere love of man to man; an awe-inspiring
|
||
happiness in the majestic presence of universal nature, and "man,
|
||
the great master of all," shall live a life of enduring service to
|
||
the cause of individual and national redemption.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America. If you have such books
|
||
please send us a list that includes Title, Author, publication
|
||
date, condition and price.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|