2666 lines
121 KiB
Plaintext
2666 lines
121 KiB
Plaintext
41 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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INTRODUCTION
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This is the famous Christmas Sermon written by Colonel Ingersoll
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and printed in the Evening Telegram, on December 19, 1891.
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In answer to this "Christmas Sermon" the Rev. Dr. J.M.
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Buckley, editor of the Christian Advocate, the recognized organ of
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the Methodist Church, wrote an article, calling upon the public to
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boycott the Evening Telegram for publishing such a "sermon."
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This attack was headed "Lies That Are Mountainous." The
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Telegram promptly accepted the issue raised by Dr. Buckley and
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dared him to do his utmost. On the very same day it published an
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answer from Colonel Ingersoll that echoed throughout America.
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________
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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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1891
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The good part of Christmas is not always Christian -- it is
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generally Pagan; that is to say, human, natural.
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Christianity did not come with tidings of great joy, but with
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a message of eternal grief. It came with the threat of everlasting
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torture on its lips. It meant war on earth and perdition hereafter.
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It taught some good things -- the beauty of love and kindness
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in man. But as a torch-bearer, as a bringer of joy, it has been a
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failure. It has given infinite consequences to the acts of finite
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beings, crushing the soul with a responsibility too great for
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mortals to bear. It has filled the future with fear and flame, and
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made God the keeper of an eternal penitentiary, destined to be the
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home of nearly all the sons of men. Not satisfied with that, it has
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deprived God of the pardoning power.
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And yet it may have done some good by borrowing from the Pagan
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world the old festival called Christmas.
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Long before Christ was born the Sun-God triumphed over the
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powers of Darkness. About the time that we call Christmas the days
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begin perceptibly to lengthen. Our barbarian ancestors were
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worshipers of the sun, and they celebrated his victory over the
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hosts of night. Such a festival was natural and beautiful. The most
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natural of all religions is the worship of the sun. Christianity
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adopted this festival. It borrowed from the Pagans the best it has.
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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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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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I believe in Christmas and in every day that has been set
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apart for joy. We in America have too much work and not enough
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play. We are too much like the English.
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I think it was Heinrich Heine who said that he thought a
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blaspheming Frenchman was a more pleasing object to God than a
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praying Englishman. We take our joys too sadly. I am in favor of
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all the good free days -- the more the better.
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Christmas is a good day to forgive and forget -- a good day to
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throw away prejudices and hatreds -- a good day to fill your heart
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and your house, and the hearts and houses of others, with sunshine.
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Robert G. Ingersoll.
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**** ****
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COL. INGERSOLL'S REPLY TO DR. BUCKLEY.
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II.
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Whenever an orthodox editor attacks an unbeliever, look out
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for kindness, charity and love.
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The gentle editor of the Christian Advocate charges me with
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having written three "gigantic falsehoods." and he points them out
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as follows:
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First -- "Christianity did not come with tidings of great joy,
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but with a message of eternal grief."
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Second -- "It [Christianity] has filled the future with fear
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and flame, and made God the keeper of an eternal penitentiary,
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destined to be the home of nearly all the sons of men."
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Third -- "Not satisfied with that, it [Christianity] has
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deprived God of the pardoning power."
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Now, let us take up these "gigantic falsehoods" in their order
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and see whether they are in accord with the New Testament or not --
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whether they are supported by the creed of the Methodist Church.
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I insist that Christianity did not come with tidings of great
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joy, but with a message of eternal grief.
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According to the orthodox creeds, Christianity came with the
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tidings that the human race was totally depraved, and that all men
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were in a lost condition, and that all who rejected or failed to
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believe the new religion, would be tormented in eternal fire.
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These were not "tidings of great joy."
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If the passengers on some great ship were told that the ship
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was to be wrecked, that a few would be saved and that nearly all
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would go to the bottom, would they talk about "tidings of great
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joy"? It is to be presumed that Christ knew what his mission was,
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and what he came for. He says: "Think not that I am come to send
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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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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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peace on earth; I came not to send peace, but a sword. For I am
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come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter
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against her mother." In my judgment, these are not "tidings of
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great joy."
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Now, as to the message of eternal grief:
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"Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart
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from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire prepared for the devil
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and his angels."
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"And these shall go away into everlasting punishment; but the
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righteous [meaning the Methodists] into life eternal."
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"He that believeth not shall be damned."
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"He that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the
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wrath of God abideth on him."
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"Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill
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the soul; but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul
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and body in hell."
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"And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up forever and
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ever."
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Knowing, as we do, that but few people have been believers,
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that during the last eighteen hundred years not one in a hundred
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has died in the faith, and that consequently nearly all the dead
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are in hell, it can truthfully be said that Christianity came with
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a message of eternal grief.
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Now, as to the second "gigantic falsehood," to the effect that
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Christianity filled the future with fear and flame, and made God
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the keeper of an eternal penitentiary, destined to be the home of
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nearly all the sons of men.
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In the Old Testament there is nothing about punishment in some
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other world, nothing about the flames and torments of hell. When
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Jehovah killed one of his enemies he was satisfied. His revenge was
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glutted when the victim was dead. The Old Testament gave the future
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to sleep and oblivion. But in the New Testament we are told that
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the punishment in another world is everlasting, and that "the smoke
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of their torment ascendeth up forever and ever."
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This awful doctrine, these frightful texts, filled the future
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with fear and flame. Building on these passages, the orthodox
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churches have constructed a penitentiary, in which nearly all the
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sons of men are to be imprisoned and tormented forever, and of this
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prison God is the keeper. The doors are opened only to receive.
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The doctrine of eternal punishment is the infamy of infamies.
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As I have often said, the man who believes in eternal torment, in
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the justice of endless pain, is suffering from at least two
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diseases -- petrifaction of the heart and putrefaction of the
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brain.
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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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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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The next question is whether Christianity has deprived God of
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the pardoning power.
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The Methodist Church and every orthodox church teaches that
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this life is a period of probation; that there is no chance given
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for reformation after death; that God gives no opportunity to
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repent in another world.
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This is the doctrine of the Christian world. If this dogma be
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true, then God will never release a soul from hell -- the pardoning
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power will never be exercised.
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How happy God will be and how happy all the saved will be,
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knowing that billions and billions of his children, of their
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fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, wives, and children are
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convicts in the eternal dungeons, and that the words of pardon will
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never be spoken!
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Yet this is in accordance with the promise contained in the
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New Testament, of happiness here and eternal joy hereafter, to
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those who would desert brethren or sisters. or father or mother. or
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wife or children.
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It seems to me clear that Christianity did not bring "tidings
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of great Joy," but that it came with a "message of eternal grief"
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-- that it did "fill the future with fear and flame," that it did
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make God "the keeper of an eternal penitentiary," that the
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penitentiary" was destined to be the home of nearly all the sons of
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men," and that "it deprived God of the pardoning power.
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Of course you can find passages full of peace, in the Bible,
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others of war -- some filled with mercy, and others cruel as the
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fangs of a wild beast.
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According to the Methodists, God has an eternal prison -- an
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everlasting Siberia. There is to be an eternity of grief, of agony
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and shame.
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What do I think of what the Doctor says about the Telegram for
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having published my Christmas sermon?
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The editor of the Christian Advocate has no idea of what
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intellectual liberty means. He ought to know that a man should not
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be insulted because another man disagrees with him.
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What right has Dr. Buckley to disagree with Cardinal Gibbons,
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and what right has Cardinal Gibbons to disagree with Dr. Buckley?
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The same right that I have to disagree with them both.
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I do not warn people against reading Catholic or Methodist
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papers or books. But I do tell them to investigate for themselves
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-- to stand by what they believe to be true, to deny the false,
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and, above all things, to preserve their mental manhood. The good
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Doctor wants the Telegram destroyed -- wants all religious people
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to unite for the purpose of punishing the Telegram -- because it
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published something with which the reverend Doctor does not agree,
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or rather that does not agree with the Doctor.
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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It is too late. That day has faded in the West of the past.
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The doctor of theology has lost his power. Theological thunder has
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lost its lightning -- it is nothing now but noise, pleasing those
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who make it and amusing those who hear.
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The Telegram has nothing to fear. It is, in the highest sense,
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||
a newspaper -- wide-awake, alive, always on time, good to its
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friends, fair with its enemies, and true to the public.
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What have I to say to the Doctor's personal abuse?
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Nothing. A man may call me a devil, or the devil, or he may
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say that I am incapable of telling the truth, or that I tell lies,
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and yet all this proves nothing. My arguments remain unanswered.
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I cannot afford to call Dr. Buckley names. I have good mental
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manners. The cause I represent (in part) is too great, too sacred,
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to be stained by an ignorant or a malicious personality.
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I know that men do as they must with the light they have, and
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so I say -- More light!
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**** ****
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REPLY TO
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REV. J.M. KING AND REV. THOMAS DIXON, JR.
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III.
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The Rev. James M. King -- who seems to have taken this
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occasion to become known -- finds fault because "blasphemous
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utterances concerning Christmas" were published in the Telegram,
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and were allowed "to greet the eyes of innocent children and pure
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women."
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How is it possible to blaspheme a day? One day is not, in and
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of itself, holier than another -- that is to say, two equal spaces
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of time are substantially alike. We call a day "good" or "bad"
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according to what happens in the day. A day filled with happiness,
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with kind words, with noble deeds, is a good day. A day filled with
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misfortunes and anger and misery we call a bad day. But how is it
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possible to blaspheme a day?
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A man may or may not believe that Christ was born on the 25th
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of December, and yet he may fill that day, so far as he is
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concerned, with good thoughts and words and deeds. Another may
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really believe that Christ was born on that day, and yet do his
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worst to make all his friends unhappy. But how can the rights of
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what are called "clean families" be violated by reading the honest
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opinions of others as to whether Christmas is kept in honor of the
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birth of Christ, or in honor of the triumph of the sun over the
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hosts of darkness? Are Christian families so weak intellectually
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that they cannot bear to hear the other side? Or is their case so
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weak that the slightest evidence overthrows it? Why do all these
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ministers insist that it is ill-bred to even raise a question as to
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the truth of the improbable, or as to the improbability of the
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impossible?
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|
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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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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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A minister says to me that I am going to hell -- that I am
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bound to be punished forever and ever -- and thereupon I say to
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him: "There is no hell; you are mistaken; your Bible is not
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inspired; no human being is to suffer agony forever;" and
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thereupon, with an injured look, he asks me this question: "Why do
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you hurt my feelings?" It does not occur to him that I have the
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slightest right to object to his sentence of eternal grief.
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Does the gentleman imagine that true men and pure women cannot
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differ with him? There are many thousands of people who love and
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honor the memory of Jesus Christ, who yet have not the slightest
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belief in his divine origin, and who do not for one moment imagine
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that he was other than a good and heroic man. And there are
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thousands of people who admire the character of Jesus Christ who do
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not believe that he ever existed -- who admire the character of
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Christ as they admire Imogen, or Perdita, not believing that any of
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the characters mentioned actually lived.
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And it may be well enough here to state that no human being
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hates any really good man or good woman -- that is, no human being
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hates a man known to be good -- a woman known to be pure and good.
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No human being hates a lovable character.
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It is perfectly easy for any one with the slightest
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imagination to understand how other people differ from him. I do
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not attribute a bad motive to a man simply because he disagrees
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with me. I do not say that a man is a Christian or a Mohammedan
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"for revenue only." I do not say that a man joins the Democratic
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party simply for office, or that he marches with the Republicans
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simply for position. I am willing to hear his reasons -- with his
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motives I have nothing to do.
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Mr. King imagines that I have denounced Christianity "for
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revenue only." Is he willing to admit that we have drifted so far
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from orthodox religion that the way to make money is to denounce
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Christianity? I can hardly believe, for joy, that liberty of
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thought has advanced so far. I regret exceedingly that there is not
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an absolute foundation for his remark. I am indeed sorry that it is
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possible in this world of ours for any human being to make a living
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out of the ignorance and fear of his fellow-men. Still, it gives me
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great hope for the future to read, even in this ignorant present,
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that there is one man, and that man myself, who advocates human
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liberty -- the absolute enfranchisement of the soul -- and does it
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"for revenue" -- because this charge is such a splendid compliment
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to my fellow-men.
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Possibly the remark of the Rev. Mr. King will be gratifying to
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the Telegram and will satisfy that brave and progressive sheet that
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it is in harmony with the intelligence of the age.
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My opinion is that the Telegram will receive the praise of
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enlightened and generous people.
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Personally I judge a man not so much by his theories as by his
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practice, and I would much rather meet on the desert -- were I
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about to perish for want of water -- a Mohammedan who would give me
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a drink than a Christian who would not; because, after all is said
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and done, we are compelled to judge people by their actions.
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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6
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A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
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I do not know what takes place in the invisible world called
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the brain, inhabited by the invisible something we call the mind.
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All that takes place there is invisible and soundless. This mind,
|
||
hidden in this brain, masked by flesh, remains forever unseen, and
|
||
the only evidence we can possibly have as to what occurs in that
|
||
world, we obtain from the actions of the man, of the woman. By
|
||
these actions we judge of the character, of the soul. So I make up
|
||
my mind as to whether a man is good or bad, not by his theories,
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||
but by his actions.
|
||
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Under no circumstances can the expression of an honest
|
||
opinion, couched in becoming language, amount to blasphemy. And
|
||
right here it may be well enough to inquire: What is blasphemy?
|
||
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||
A man who knowingly assaults the true, who knowingly endeavors
|
||
to stain the pure, who knowingly maligns the good and noble, is a
|
||
blasphemer. A man who deserts the truth because it is unpopular is
|
||
a blasphemer. He who runs with the hounds knowing that the hare is
|
||
in the right is a blasphemer.
|
||
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||
In the soul of every man, or in the temple inhabited by the
|
||
soul, there is one niche in which can be found the statue of the
|
||
ideal. In the presence of this statue the good man worships -- the
|
||
bad man blasphemes -- that is to say, he is not true to the ideal.
|
||
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||
A man who slanders a pure woman or an honest man is a
|
||
blasphemer. So, too, a man who does not give the honest transcript
|
||
of his mind is a blasphemer. If a man really thinks the character
|
||
of Jehovah, as portrayed in the Old Testament, is good, and he
|
||
denounces Jehovah as bad, he is a blasphemer. If he really believes
|
||
that the character of Jehovah, as portrayed in the Old Testament,
|
||
is bad, and he pronounces it good, he is a blasphemer and a coward.
|
||
|
||
All laws against "blasphemy" have been passed by the
|
||
numerically strong and intellectually weak. These laws have been
|
||
passed by those who, finding no help in logic, appealed to the
|
||
legislature.
|
||
|
||
Back of all these superstitions you will find some self-
|
||
interest. I do not say that this is true in every case, but I do
|
||
say that if priests had not been fond of mutton, lambs never would
|
||
have been sacrificed to God. Nothing was ever carried to the temple
|
||
that the priest could not use, and it always so happened that God
|
||
wanted what his agents liked.
|
||
|
||
Now, I will not say that all priests have been priests "for
|
||
revenue only," but I must say that the history of the world tends
|
||
to show that the sacerdotal class prefer revenue without religion
|
||
to religion without revenue.
|
||
|
||
I am much obliged to the Rev. Mr. King for admitting that an
|
||
infidel has a right to publish his views at his own expense, and
|
||
with the utmost cheerfulness I accord that right to a Christian.
|
||
The only thing I have ever objected to is the publication of his
|
||
views at the expense of others.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
I cannot admit, however, that the ideas contained in what is
|
||
known as the Christmas Sermon are "revolting to a vast majority of
|
||
the people who give character to the community in which we live."
|
||
I suppose that a very large majority of men and women who disagree
|
||
with me are perfectly satisfied that I have the right to disagree
|
||
with them, and that I do not disagree with them to any greater
|
||
degree than they disagree with me. And I also imagine that a very
|
||
large majority of intelligent people are perfectly willing to hear
|
||
the other side.
|
||
|
||
I do not regard religious opinions or political opinions as
|
||
exotics that have to be kept under glass, protected from the frosts
|
||
of common sense or the tyrannous north wind of logic. Such plants
|
||
are hardly worth preserving. They certainly ought to be hardy
|
||
enough to stand the climate of free discussion, and if they cannot,
|
||
the sooner they die the better.
|
||
|
||
I do not think there was anything blasphemous or impure in the
|
||
words published by the Telegram. The most that can possibly be said
|
||
against them, calculated to excite the prejudice of Christians, is
|
||
that they were true -- that they cannot be answered except by
|
||
abuse.
|
||
|
||
It is not possible, in this day and generation, to stay the
|
||
rising flood of intellectual freedom by keeping the names of
|
||
thinkers out of print. The church has had the field for eighteen
|
||
hundred years. For most of this time it has held the sword and
|
||
purse of the world. For many centuries it controlled colleges and
|
||
universities and schools. It had within its gift wealth and honor.
|
||
It held the keys, so far as this world is concerned, of heaven and
|
||
hell -- that is to say, of prosperity and misfortune. It pursued
|
||
its enemies even to the grave. It reddened the scaffold with the
|
||
best blood, and kept the sword of persecution wet for many
|
||
centuries. Thousands and thousands have died in its dungeons.
|
||
Millions of reputations have been blasted by its slanders. It has
|
||
made millions of widows and orphans, and it has not only ruled this
|
||
world, but it has pretended to hold the keys of eternity, and under
|
||
this pretence it has sentenced countless millions to eternal
|
||
flames.
|
||
|
||
At last the spirit of independence rose against its monstrous
|
||
assumptions. It has been growing somewhat weaker. It has been for
|
||
many years gradually losing its power. The sword of the state
|
||
belongs now to the people. The partnership between altar and throne
|
||
has in many countries been dissolved. The adulterous marriage of
|
||
church and state has ceased to exist. Men are beginning to express
|
||
their honest thoughts. In the arena where speech is free,
|
||
superstition is driven to the wall. Man relies more and more on the
|
||
facts in nature, and the real priest is the interpreter of nature.
|
||
The pulpit is losing its power. In a little while religion will
|
||
take its place with astrology, with the black art, and its
|
||
ministers will take rank with magicians and sleight-of-hand
|
||
performers.
|
||
|
||
With regard to the letter of the Rev. Thomas Nixon. Jr., I
|
||
have but little to say.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
I am glad that he believes in a free platform and a free press
|
||
-- that he, like Lucretia Mott, believes in "truth for authority,
|
||
and not authority for truth." At the same time I do not see how the
|
||
fact that I am not a scientist has the slightest bearing upon the
|
||
question; but if there is any fact that I have avoided or
|
||
misstated, then I wish that fact to be pointed out. I admit also,
|
||
that I am a "sentimentalist" -- that is, that I am governed, to a
|
||
certain extent, by sentiment -- that my mind is so that cruelty is
|
||
revolting and that mercy excites my love and admiration. I admit
|
||
that I am so much of "a sentimentalist" that I have no love for the
|
||
Jehovah of the Old Testament, and that it is impossible for me to
|
||
believe a creed that fills the prison house of hell with countless
|
||
billions of men, women and children.
|
||
|
||
I am also glad that the reverend gentleman admits that I have
|
||
"stabbed to the heart hundreds of superstitions and lies," and I
|
||
hope to stab many, many more, and if I succeed in stabbing all lies
|
||
to the heart there will be no foundation left for what I called
|
||
"orthodox" Christianity -- but goodness will survive, justice will
|
||
live, and the flower of mercy will shed its perfume forever.
|
||
|
||
When we take into consideration the fact that the Rev. Mr.
|
||
Dixon is a minister and believes that he is called upon to deliver
|
||
to the people a divine message, I do not wonder that he makes the
|
||
following assertion: "If God could choose Baalim's ass to speak a
|
||
divine message, I do not see why he could not utilize the Colonel."
|
||
It is natural for a man to justify himself and to defend his own
|
||
occupation. Mr. Dixon, however, will remember that the ass was much
|
||
superior to the prophet of God, and that the argument was all on
|
||
the side of the ass. And, furthermore, that the spiritual
|
||
discernment of the ass far exceeded that of the prophet. It was the
|
||
ass who saw the angel when the prophet's eye was dim. I suggest to
|
||
the Rev. Mr. Dixon that he read the account once more, and he will
|
||
find -- First. that the ass first saw the angel of the Lord;
|
||
second, that the prophet Baalim was cruel, unreasonable, and
|
||
brutal; third, that the prophet so lost his temper that he wanted
|
||
to kill the innocent ass, and the ass. not losing her temper,
|
||
reasoned with the prophet and demonstrated not only her
|
||
intellectual but her moral superiority. In addition to all this the
|
||
angel of the Lord had to open the eyes of the prophet -- in other
|
||
words, had to work a miracle -- in order to make the prophet equal
|
||
to the ass, and not only so, but rebuked him for his cruelty. And
|
||
this same angel admitted that without any miracle whatever the ass
|
||
saw him -- the angel -- showing that the spiritual discernment of
|
||
the ass in those days was far superior to that of the prophet.
|
||
|
||
I regret that the Rev. Mr. King loses his temper and that the
|
||
Rev. Mr. Dixon is not quite polite.
|
||
|
||
All of us should remember that passion clouds the judgment,
|
||
and that he who seeks for victory loses sight of the cause.
|
||
|
||
And there is another thing: He who has absolute confidence in
|
||
the justice of his position can afford to be good-natured. Strength
|
||
is the foundation of kindness; weakness is often malignant, and
|
||
when argument fails passion comes to the rescue.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Let us be good-natured. Let us have respect for the rights of
|
||
each other.
|
||
|
||
The course pursued by the Telegram is worthy of all praise. It
|
||
has not only been just to both sides, but it has been -- as is its
|
||
custom -- true to the public.
|
||
|
||
Robert G. Ingersoll.
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL AGAIN ANSWERS HIS CRITICS.
|
||
|
||
IV.
|
||
|
||
Some of the gentlemen who have given their ideas through the
|
||
columns of the Telegram have wandered from the questions under
|
||
discussion. It may be well enough to state what is really in
|
||
dispute.
|
||
|
||
I was called to account for having stated that Christianity
|
||
did not bring "tidings of great joy." but a message of eternal
|
||
grief -- that it filled the future with fear and flame -- made God
|
||
the keeper of an eternal penitentiary, in which most of the
|
||
children of men were to be imprisoned forever, and that, not
|
||
satisfied with that, it had deprived God of the pardoning power.
|
||
|
||
These statements were called "mountainous lies" by the Rev.
|
||
Dr. Buckley, and because the Telegram had published the "Christmas
|
||
Sermon" containing these statements, he insisted that such a paper
|
||
should not be allowed in the families of Christians or of Jews --
|
||
in other words, that the Telegram should be punished, and that good
|
||
people should refuse to allow that sheet to come into their homes.
|
||
|
||
It will probably be admitted by all fair-minded People that if
|
||
the orthodox creeds be true, then Christianity was and is the
|
||
bearer of a message of eternal grief, and a large majority of the
|
||
human race are to become eternal convicts, and God has deprived
|
||
himself of the pardoning power. According to those creeds, no word
|
||
of mercy to any of the lost can ever fall from the lips of the
|
||
Infinite.
|
||
|
||
The Universalists deny that such was or is the real message of
|
||
Christianity. They insist that all are finally to be saved. If that
|
||
doctrine be true, then I admit that Christianity came with "tidings
|
||
of great joy."
|
||
|
||
Personally I have no quarrel with the Universalist Church. I
|
||
have no quarrel with any creed that expresses hope for all of the
|
||
human race. I find fault with no one for filling the future with
|
||
joy, -- for dreaming splendid dreams and for uttering splendid
|
||
prophecies. I do not object to Christianity because it promises
|
||
heaven to a few, but because it threatens the many with perdition.
|
||
|
||
It does not seem possible to me that a God who loved men to
|
||
that degree that he died that they might be saved, abandons his
|
||
children the moment they are dead. It seems to me that an infinite
|
||
God might do something for a soul after it has reached the other
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that infinite wisdom can do no more than is
|
||
done for a majority of souls in this world? Think of the millions
|
||
born in ignorance and filth, raised in poverty and crime. Think of
|
||
the millions who are only partially developed in this world. Think
|
||
of the weakness of the will, of the power of passion. Think of the
|
||
temptations innumerable. Think, too, of the tyranny of man, of the
|
||
arrogance of wealth and position, of the sufferings of the weak --
|
||
and can we then say that an infinite God has done, in this world,
|
||
all that could be done for the salvation of his children? Is it not
|
||
barely possible that something may be done in another world? Is
|
||
there nothing left for God to do for a poor, ignorant, criminal
|
||
human soul after it leaves this world? Can God do nothing except to
|
||
pronounce the sentence of eternal pain?
|
||
|
||
I insist that if the orthodox creed be true, Christianity did
|
||
not come with "tidings of great joy," but that its message was and
|
||
is one of eternal grief. If the orthodox creed be true, the
|
||
universe is a vast blunder -- an infinite crime. Better, a thousand
|
||
times, that every pulse of life should cease -- better that all the
|
||
gods should fall palsied from their thrones, than that the creed of
|
||
Christendom should be true.
|
||
|
||
There is another question and that involves the freedom of the
|
||
press.
|
||
|
||
The Telegram has acted with the utmost fairness and with the
|
||
highest courage. After all, the American people admire the man who
|
||
takes his stand and bravely meets all comers. To be an
|
||
instrumentality of progress, the press must be free. Only the free
|
||
can carry a torch. Liberty sheds light.
|
||
|
||
The editor or manager of a newspaper occupies a public
|
||
position, and he must not treat his patrons as though they were
|
||
weak and ignorant children. He must not, in the supposed interest
|
||
of any ism, suppress the truth -- neither must he be dictated to by
|
||
any church or any society of believers or unbelievers. The
|
||
Telegram, by its course, has given a certificate of its manliness,
|
||
and the public, by its course, has certified that it appreciates
|
||
true courage.
|
||
|
||
All Christians should remember that facts are not sectarian,
|
||
and that the sciences are not bound by the creeds. We should
|
||
remember that there are no such things as Methodist mathematics, or
|
||
Baptist botany, or Catholic chemistry. The sciences are secular.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Peters seems to have mistaken the issues -- and
|
||
yet, in some things, I agree with him. He is certainly right when
|
||
he says that "Mr. Buckley's cry to boycott the Telegram is unmanly
|
||
and un-American," but I am not certain that he is right when he
|
||
says that it is un-Christian.
|
||
|
||
The church has not been in the habit of pursuing enemies with
|
||
kind words and charitable deeds. To tell the truth. it has always
|
||
been rather relentless. It has preached forgiveness, but it has
|
||
never forgiven. There is in the history of Christendom no instance
|
||
where the church has extended the hand of friendship to a man who
|
||
denied the truth of its creed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
There is in the church no spirit -- no climate -- of
|
||
compromise. In the nature of things there can be none, because the
|
||
church claims that it is absolutely right -- that there is only one
|
||
road leading to heaven. It demands unconditional surrender. It will
|
||
not bear contradiction. It claims to have the absolute truth. For
|
||
these reasons it cannot consistently compromise, any more than a
|
||
mathematician could change the multiplication table to meet the
|
||
view of some one who should deny that five times five are
|
||
twenty-five.
|
||
|
||
The church does not give its opinion -- it claims to know --
|
||
it demands belief. Honesty, industry, generosity count for nothing
|
||
in the absence of belief. It has taught and still teaches that no
|
||
man can reach heaven simply through good and honest deeds. It
|
||
believes and teaches that the man who relies upon himself will be
|
||
eternally punished -- and why should the church forgive a man whom
|
||
it thinks its God is waiting somewhat impatiently to damn?
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Peters asks -- and probably honestly thinks that
|
||
the questions are pertinent to the issues involved -- "What has
|
||
infidelity done for the world? What colleges, hospitals, and
|
||
schools has it founded? What has it done for the elevation of
|
||
public morals?" And he inquires what science or art has been
|
||
originated by infidelity. He asks how many slaves it has liberated,
|
||
how many inebriates it has reclaimed; how many fallen women it has
|
||
restored, and what it did for the relief of the wounded and dying
|
||
soldiers: and concludes by asking what life it ever assisted to
|
||
higher holiness, and what death it has ever cheered.
|
||
|
||
Although these questions have nothing whatever to do with the
|
||
matters under discussion, still it may be well enough to answer
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
It is cheerfully admitted that hospitals and asylums have been
|
||
built by Christians in Christian countries, and it is also admitted
|
||
that hospitals and asylums have been built in countries not
|
||
Christian; that there were such institutions in China thousands of
|
||
years before Christ was born, and that many centuries before the
|
||
establishment of any orthodox church there were asylums on the
|
||
banks of the Nile -- asylums for the old, the poor, the infirm --
|
||
asylums for the blind and for the insane. and that the Egyptians,
|
||
even of those days. endeavored to cure insanity with kindness and
|
||
affection. The same is true of India and probably of most ancient
|
||
nations.
|
||
|
||
There has always been more or less humanity in man -- more or
|
||
less goodness in the human heart. So far as we know, mothers have
|
||
always loved their children. There must always have been more good
|
||
than evil, otherwise the human race would have perished. The best
|
||
things in the Christian religion came from the heart of man. Pagan
|
||
lips uttered the sublimest of truths. and all ages have been
|
||
redeemed by honesty, heroism, and love.
|
||
|
||
But let me answer these questions in their order.
|
||
|
||
First -- As to the schools.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
It is most cheerfully admitted that the Catholic have always
|
||
been in favor of education -- that is to say, of education enough
|
||
to make a Catholic out of a heathen. It is also admitted that
|
||
Protestants have always been in favor of enough education to make
|
||
a Protestant out of a Catholic. Many schools and many colleges have
|
||
been established for the spread of what is called the Gospel and
|
||
for the education of the clergy. Presbyterians have founded schools
|
||
for the benefit of their creed. The Methodists have established
|
||
colleges for the purpose of making Methodists. The same is true of
|
||
nearly all the sects. As a matter of fact, these schools have in
|
||
many important directions hindered rather than helped the cause of
|
||
real education. The pupils were not taught to investigate for
|
||
themselves. They were not allowed to think. They were told that
|
||
thought is dangerous. They were stuffed and crammed with creeds --
|
||
with the ideas of others. Their credulity was applauded and their
|
||
curiosity condemned. If all the people had been educated in these
|
||
sectarian schools, all the people would have been far more ignorant
|
||
than they are. These schools have been, and most of them still are,
|
||
the enemies of higher education, and just to the extent that they
|
||
are under the control of theologians they are hindrances, and just
|
||
to the extent that they have become secularized they have been and
|
||
are a benefit.
|
||
|
||
Our public school system is not Christian. It is secular. Yet
|
||
I admit that it never could nave been established without the
|
||
assistance of Christians -- neither could it have been supported
|
||
without the assistance of others. But such is the value placed upon
|
||
education that people of nearly all denominations, and of nearly
|
||
all religions, and of nearly all opinions, for the most part agree
|
||
that the children of a nation should be educated by the nation.
|
||
Some religious people are opposed to these schools because they are
|
||
not religious -- because they do not teach some creed -- but a
|
||
large majority of the people stand by the public schools as they
|
||
are. These schools are growing better and better, simply because
|
||
they are growing less and less theological more and more secular.
|
||
|
||
Infidelity, or agnosticism, or freethought, has insisted that
|
||
only that should be taught in schools which somebody knows or has
|
||
good reason to believe.
|
||
|
||
The greatest professors in our colleges to-day are those who
|
||
have the least confidence in the supernatural, and the schools that
|
||
stand highest in the estimation of the most intelligent are those
|
||
that have drifted farthest from the orthodox creeds. Freethought
|
||
has always been and ever must be the friend of education. Without
|
||
freethought there can be no such thing -- in the highest sense --
|
||
as a school. Unless the mind is free, there are no teachers and
|
||
there are no pupils, in any just and splendid sense.
|
||
|
||
The church has been and still is the enemy of education,
|
||
because it has been in favor of intellectual slavery, and the
|
||
theological schools have been, and still are, what might be called
|
||
the deformatories of the human mind.
|
||
|
||
For instance: A man is graduated from an orthodox university.
|
||
In this university he has studied astronomy, and yet he believes
|
||
that Joshua stopped the sun. He has studied geology, and yet he
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
asserts the truth of the Mosaic cosmogony. He has studied
|
||
chemistry, and yet believes that water was turned into wine. He has
|
||
been taught the ordinary theory of cause and effect, and at the
|
||
same time he thoroughly believes in the miraculous multiplication
|
||
of loaves and fishes. Can such an institution, with any propriety,
|
||
be called a seat of learning? Can we not say of such a university
|
||
what Bruno said of Oxford: "Learning is dead and Oxford is its
|
||
widow."
|
||
|
||
Year after year the religious colleges are improving -- simply
|
||
because they are becoming more and more secular, less and less
|
||
theological. Whether in fidelity has founded universities or not,
|
||
it can truthfully be said that the spirit of investigation, the
|
||
spirit of freethought, the attitude of mental independence,
|
||
contended for by those who are called infidels, have made schools
|
||
useful instead of hurtful.
|
||
|
||
Can it be shown that any infidel has ever raise his voice
|
||
against education? Can there be found in the literature of
|
||
freethought one line against the enlightenment of the human race?
|
||
Has freethought ever endeavored to hide or distort a fact? Has it
|
||
not always appealed to the senses -- to demonstration? It has not
|
||
said, "He that hath ears to hear, let him hear;" but it has said,
|
||
"He that hath brains to think let him think."
|
||
|
||
The object of a school should be to ascertain truth in every
|
||
direction, to the end that man may know the conditions of happiness
|
||
-- and every school should be absolutely free. No teacher should be
|
||
bound by anything except a perceived fact. He should not be the
|
||
slave of a creed, engaged in the business of enslaving others.
|
||
|
||
So much for schools.
|
||
|
||
Second -- As to public morals.
|
||
|
||
Christianity teaches that all offenses can be forgiven. Every
|
||
church unconsciously allows people to commit crimes on a credit. I
|
||
do not mean by this that any church consciously advocates
|
||
immorality. I most cheerfully admit that thousands and thousand of
|
||
ministers are endeavoring to do good -- that they are pure,
|
||
self-denying men, trying to make this world better. But there is a
|
||
frightful defect in their philosophy. They say to the bank cashier:
|
||
You must not steal, you must not take a dollar -- larceny is wrong,
|
||
it is contrary to all law, human and divine -- but if you do steal
|
||
every cent in the bank, God will as gladly, quickly forgive you in
|
||
Canada as he will in the United States. On the other hand, what is
|
||
called infidelity says: There is no being in the universe who
|
||
rewards, and there is no being who punishes -- every act has its
|
||
consequences. If the act is good, the consequences are good; if the
|
||
act is bad, the consequences are bad; and these consequences must
|
||
be borne by the actor. It says to every human being: You must reap
|
||
what you sow. There is no reward, there is no punishment, but there
|
||
are consequences, and these consequences are the invisible and
|
||
implacable police of nature. They cannot be avoided. They cannot be
|
||
bribed. No power can awe them, and there is not gold enough in the
|
||
world to make them pause. Even a God cannot induce them to release
|
||
for one instant their victim.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
This great truth is, in my judgment, the gospel of morality.
|
||
If all men knew that they must inevitably bear the consequences of
|
||
their own actions -- if they absolutely knew that they could not
|
||
injure another without injuring themselves, the world, in my
|
||
judgment, would be far better than it is.
|
||
|
||
Freethought has attacked the morality of what is called the
|
||
atonement. The innocent should not suffer for the guilty, and if
|
||
the innocent does suffer for the guilty, that cannot by any
|
||
possibility justify the guilty. The reason a thing is wrong is
|
||
because it, in some way, causes the innocent to suffer. This being
|
||
the very essence of wrong, how can the suffering of innocence
|
||
justify. the guilty? If there be a world of joy, he who is worthy
|
||
to enter that world must be willing to carry his own burdens in
|
||
this.
|
||
|
||
So much for morality.
|
||
|
||
Third -- As to sciences and art.
|
||
|
||
I do not believe that we are indebted to Christianity for any
|
||
science. I do not remember that one science is mentioned in the New
|
||
Testament. There is not one word, so far as I remember, about
|
||
education -- nothing about any science, nothing about art. The
|
||
writers of the New Testament seem to have thought that the world
|
||
was about coming to an end. This world was to be sacrificed
|
||
absolutely to the next. The affairs of this life were not worth
|
||
speaking of. all people were exhorted to prepare at once for the
|
||
other life.
|
||
|
||
The sciences have advanced in the proportion that they did not
|
||
interfere with orthodox theology. To the extent that they were
|
||
supposed to interfere with theology they have been obstructed and
|
||
denounced. Astronomy was found to be inconsistent with the
|
||
Scriptures, and the astronomers were imprisoned and despised.
|
||
Geology contradicted the Mosaic account, and the geologists were
|
||
denounced and persecuted. Every step taken in astronomy was taken
|
||
in spite of the church, and every fact in geology had to fight its
|
||
way. The same is true as to the science of medicine. The church
|
||
wished to cure disease by necromancy, by charm and prayer. and with
|
||
the bones of the saints. The church wished man to rely entirely
|
||
upon God -- that is to say, upon the church -- and not upon
|
||
himself. The physician interfered with the power and prosperity of
|
||
the priest, and those who appealed to physicians were denounced as
|
||
lacking faith in God. This state of things existed even in the Old
|
||
Testament times. A king failed to send for the prophets, but sent
|
||
for a physician, and then comes this piece of grim humor: "And Asa
|
||
slept with his fathers."
|
||
|
||
The great names in science are not those of recognized saints.
|
||
|
||
BRUNO -- one of the greatest and bravest of men -- greatest of
|
||
all martyrs -- perished at the stake, because he insisted on the
|
||
existence of other worlds and taught the astronomy of Galileo.
|
||
|
||
HUMBOLDT -- in some respects the wisest man known to the
|
||
scientific world -- denied the existence of the supernatural and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
"the truths of revealed religion," and yet he revolutionized the
|
||
thought of his day and left a legacy of intellectual glory to the
|
||
race.
|
||
|
||
DARWIN -- greatest of scientists -- so great that our time
|
||
will probably be known as "Darwin's Century" -- had not the
|
||
slightest confidence in any possible phase of the so-called
|
||
supernatural. This great man left the creed of Christendom without
|
||
a foundation. He brought as witnesses against the inspiration of
|
||
the Scriptures such a multitude of facts, such an overwhelming
|
||
amount of testimony, that it seems impossible to me that any
|
||
unprejudiced man can, after hearing the testimony, remain a
|
||
believer in evangelical religion. He accomplished more than all the
|
||
schools, colleges, and universities that Christianity has founded.
|
||
He revolutionized the philosophy of the civilized world.
|
||
|
||
The writers who have done most for science have been the most
|
||
bitterly opposed by the church. There is hardly a valuable book in
|
||
the libraries of the world that cannot be found on the "Index
|
||
Expurgatorius." Kant and Fichte and Spinoza were far above and
|
||
beyond the orthodox world. Voltaire did more for freedom than any
|
||
other man, and yet the church denounced him with a fury amounting
|
||
to insanity -- called him an atheist, although he believed not only
|
||
in God, but in special providence. He was opposed to the church --
|
||
that is to say, opposed to slavery, and for that reason he was
|
||
despised.
|
||
|
||
And what shall I say of D'Holbach, of Hume, of Buckle, of
|
||
Draper, of Haeckel, of Buchner, of Tyndall and Huxley. of Auguste
|
||
Comte, and hundreds and thousands of others who have filled the
|
||
scientific world with light and the heart of man with love and
|
||
kindness?
|
||
|
||
It may be well enough, in regard to art, to say that
|
||
Christianity is indebted to Greece and Rome for its highest
|
||
conceptions, and it may be well to add that for many centuries
|
||
Christianity did the best it could to destroy the priceless marbles
|
||
of Greece and Rome. A few were buried, and in that way were saved
|
||
from Christian fury.
|
||
|
||
The same is true of the literature of the classic world. A few
|
||
fragments were rescued, and these became the seeds of modern
|
||
literature. A few statues were preserved, and they are to-day
|
||
models for all the world.
|
||
|
||
Of course it will be admitted that there is much art in
|
||
Christian lands. because, in spite of the creeds, Christians, so-
|
||
called, have turned their attention to this world. They have
|
||
beautified their homes, they have endeavored to clothe themselves
|
||
in purple and fine linen. They have been forced from banquets or
|
||
from luxury by the difficulty of camels going through the eyes of
|
||
needles or the impossibility of carrying water to the rich man.
|
||
They have cultivated this world, and the arts have lived. Did they
|
||
obey the precepts that they find in their sacred writings there
|
||
would be no art, they would "take no thought for the morrow," they
|
||
would "consider the lilies of the field."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Fourth -- As to the liberation of slaves.
|
||
|
||
It was exceedingly unfortunate for the Rev. Mr. Peters that he
|
||
spoke of slavery. The Bible upholds human slavery -- white slavery.
|
||
The Bible was quoted by all slave-holders and slave-traders. The
|
||
man who went to Africa to steal women and children took the Bible
|
||
with him. He planted himself firmly on the Word of God. As Whittier
|
||
says of Whitefield:
|
||
|
||
"He bade the slave ship speed from coast to coast,
|
||
Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost."
|
||
|
||
So when the poor wretches were sold to the planters, the
|
||
planters defended their action by reading the Bible. When a poor
|
||
woman was sold, her children torn from her breast, the auction
|
||
block on which she stood was the Bible; the auctioneer who sold her
|
||
quoted the Scriptures; the man who bought her repeated the
|
||
quotations, and the ministers from the pulpit said to the weeping
|
||
woman, as her child was carried away: "Servants, be obedient unto
|
||
your masters."
|
||
|
||
Freethinkers in all ages have been opposed to slavery. Thomas
|
||
Paine did more for human liberty than any other man who ever stood
|
||
upon the western world. The first article he ever wrote in this
|
||
country was one against the institution of slavery. Freethinkers
|
||
have also been in favor of free bodies. Freethinkers have always
|
||
said "free hands," and the infidels, the wide world over, have been
|
||
friends of freedom.
|
||
|
||
Fifth -- As to the reclamation of inebriates.
|
||
|
||
Much has been said, and for many years, on the subject of
|
||
temperance -- much has been uttered by priests and laymen -- and
|
||
yet there seems to be a subtle relation between rum and religion.
|
||
Scotland is extremely orthodox, yet it is not extremely temperate.
|
||
England is nothing if not religious, and London is, par excellence,
|
||
the Christian city of the world, and yet it is the most
|
||
intemperate. The Mohammedans -- followers of a false prophet -- do
|
||
not drink.
|
||
|
||
Sixth -- As to the humanity of infidelity.
|
||
|
||
Can it be said that people have cared for the wounded and
|
||
dying only because they were orthodox?
|
||
|
||
Is it not true that religion. in its efforts to propagate the
|
||
creed of forgiveness by the sword, has caused the death of more
|
||
than one hundred and fifty millions of human beings? Is it not true
|
||
that where the church has cared for one orphan it has created
|
||
hundreds? Can Christianity afford to speak of war?
|
||
|
||
The Christian nations of the world to-day are armed against
|
||
each other. In Europe, all that can be gathered by taxation -- all
|
||
that can be borrowed by pledging the prosperity of the future --
|
||
the labor of those yet unborn -- is used for the purpose of keeping
|
||
Christians in the field, to the end that they may destroy other
|
||
Christians, or at least prevent other Christians from destroying
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
them. Europe is covered with churches and fortifications, with
|
||
temples and with forts -- hundreds of thousands of priests,
|
||
millions of soldiers, countless Bibles and countless bayonets --
|
||
and that whole country is oppressed and impoverished for the
|
||
purpose of carrying on war. The people have become deformed by
|
||
labor, and yet Christianity boasts of peace.
|
||
|
||
Seventh -- "And what death has infidelity ever cheered?"
|
||
|
||
Is it possible for the orthodox Christian to cheer the dying
|
||
when the dying is told that there is a world of eternal pain, and
|
||
that he, unless he has been forgiven, is to be an eternal convict?
|
||
Will it cheer him to know that, even if he is to be saved,
|
||
countless millions are to be lost? Is it possible for the Christian
|
||
religion to put a smile upon the face of death?
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, what is called infidelity says to the
|
||
dying: What happens to you will happen to all. If there be another
|
||
world of joy, it is for all. If there is another life, every human
|
||
being will have the eternal opportunity of doing right -- the
|
||
eternal opportunity to live, to reform, to enjoy. There is no
|
||
monster in the sky. There is no Moloch who delights in the agony of
|
||
his children. These frightful things are savage dreams.
|
||
|
||
Infidelity puts out the fires of hell with the tears of pity.
|
||
|
||
Infidelity puts the seven-hued arch of Hope over every grave.
|
||
|
||
Let us then, gentlemen, come back to the real questions under
|
||
discussion. Let us not wander away.
|
||
|
||
Robert G. Ingersoll.
|
||
Jan'y 9, 1891.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL CONTINUES THE BATTLE.
|
||
|
||
V.
|
||
|
||
No one objects to the morality of Christianity. The
|
||
industrious people of the world -- those who have anything -- are,
|
||
as a rule, opposed to larceny; a very large majority of people
|
||
object to being murdered, and so we have laws against larceny and
|
||
murder. A large majority of people believe in what they call, or
|
||
what they understand to be, justice -- at least as between others.
|
||
There is no very great difference of opinion among civilized people
|
||
as to what is or is not moral.
|
||
|
||
It cannot truthfully be said that the man who attacks Buddhism
|
||
attacks all morality. He does not attack goodness, justice, mercy,
|
||
or anything that tends in his judgment to the welfare of mankind;
|
||
but he attacks Buddhism. So one attacking what is called
|
||
Christianity does not attack kindness, charity. or any virtue. He
|
||
attacks something that has been added to the virtues. He does not
|
||
attack the flower, but what he believes to be the parasite.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
If people, when they speak of Christianity, include the
|
||
virtues common to all religions, they should not give Christianity
|
||
credit for all the good that has been done. There were millions of
|
||
virtuous men and women, millions of heroic and self-denying souls
|
||
before Christianity was known.
|
||
|
||
It does not seen possible to me that love, kindness, justice,
|
||
or charity ever caused any one who possessed and practiced these
|
||
virtues to persecute his fellow-man on account of a difference of
|
||
belief If Christianity has persecuted, some reason must exist
|
||
outside of the virtue it has inculcated. If this reason -- this
|
||
cause -- is inherent in that something else, which has been added
|
||
to the ordinary virtues, then Christianity can properly be held
|
||
accountable for the persecution. Of course back of Christianity is
|
||
the nature of man, and, primarily, it may be responsible.
|
||
|
||
Is there anything in Christianity that will account for such
|
||
persecutions -- for the Inquisition? It certainly was taught by the
|
||
church that belief was necessary to salvation. and it was thought
|
||
at the same time that the fate of man was eternal punishment; that
|
||
the state of man was that of depravity, and that there was but one
|
||
way by which he could be saved, and that was through belief --
|
||
through faith. As long as this was honestly believed, Christians
|
||
would not allow heretics or infidels to preach a doctrine to their
|
||
wives, to their children, or to themselves which, in their
|
||
judgment, would result in the damnation of souls.
|
||
|
||
The law gives a father the right to kill one who is about to
|
||
do great bodily harm to his son. Now, if a father has the right to
|
||
take the life of a man simply because he is attacking the body of
|
||
his son, how much more would he have the right to take the life of
|
||
one who was about to assassinate the soul of his son!
|
||
|
||
Christians reasoned in this way. In addition to this, they
|
||
felt that God would hold the community responsible if the community
|
||
allowed a blasphemer to attack the true religion. Therefore they
|
||
killed the freethinker, or rather the free talker, in self-defence.
|
||
|
||
At the bottom of religious persecution is the doctrine of
|
||
self-defence; that is to say, the defence of the soul. If the
|
||
founder of Christianity had plainly said: "It is not necessary to
|
||
believe in order to be saved; it is only necessary to do, and he
|
||
who really loves his fellow-men, who is kind, honest, just and
|
||
charitable, is to be forever blest" -- if he had only said that,
|
||
there would probably have been but little persecution.
|
||
|
||
If he had added to this: "You must not persecute in my name.
|
||
The religion I teach is the Religion of Love -- not the Religion of
|
||
Force and Hatred. You must not imprison your fellow-men. You must
|
||
not stretch them upon racks, or crush their bones in iron boots.
|
||
You must not flay them alive. You must not cut off their eyelids,
|
||
or pour molten lead into their ears. You must treat all with
|
||
absolute kindness. If you cannot convert your neighbor by example,
|
||
persuasion, argument, that is the end. You must never resort to
|
||
force, and, whether he believes as you do or not, treat him always
|
||
with kindness" -- his followers then would not have murdered their
|
||
fellows in his name.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
If Christ was in fact God, he knew the persecutions that would
|
||
be carried on in his name; he knew the millions that would suffer
|
||
death through torture; and yet he died without saying one word to
|
||
prevent what he must have known, if he were God, would happen.
|
||
|
||
All that Christianity has added to morality is worthless and
|
||
useless. Not only so -- it has been hurtful. Take Christianity from
|
||
morality and the useful is left, but take morality from
|
||
Christianity and the useless remains.
|
||
|
||
Now, falling back on the old assertion, "By its fruits we may
|
||
know Christianity," then I think we are justified in saying that,
|
||
as Christianity consists of a mixture of morality and something
|
||
else and as morality never has persecuted a human being, and as
|
||
Christianity has persecuted millions, the cause of the persecution
|
||
must be the something else that was added to morality.
|
||
|
||
I cannot agree with the reverend gentleman when he says that
|
||
"Christianity has taught mankind the priceless value and dignity of
|
||
human nature." On the other hand, Christianity has taught that the
|
||
whole human race is by nature depraved, and that if God should act
|
||
in accordance with his sense of justice, all the sons of men would
|
||
be doomed to eternal pain. Human nature has been derided, has been
|
||
held up to contempt and scorn, all our desires and passions
|
||
denounced as wicked and filthy.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Da Costa asserts that Christianity has taught mankind the
|
||
value of freedom. It certainly has not been the advocate of free
|
||
thought; and what is freedom worth if the mind is to be enslaved?
|
||
|
||
Dr. Da Costs knows that millions have been sacrificed in their
|
||
efforts to be free; that is, millions have been sacrificed for
|
||
exercising their freedom as against the church.
|
||
|
||
It is not true that the church "has taught and established the
|
||
fact of human brotherhood." This has been the result of a
|
||
civilization to which Christianity itself has been hostile.
|
||
|
||
Can we prove that "the church established human brotherhood"
|
||
by banishing the Jews from Spain; by driving out the Moors; by the
|
||
tortures of the Inquisition; by butchering the Covenanters of
|
||
Scotland; by the burning of Bruno and Servetus; by the persecution
|
||
of the Irish; by whipping and hanging Quakers in New England; by
|
||
the slave trade; and by the hundreds of wars waged in the name of
|
||
Christ?
|
||
|
||
We all know that the Bible upholds slavery in its very worst
|
||
and most cruel form; and how it can be said that a religion founded
|
||
upon a Bible that upholds the institution of slavery has taught and
|
||
established the fact of human brotherhood, is beyond my imagination
|
||
to conceive.
|
||
|
||
Neither do I think it true that "we are indebted to
|
||
Christianity for the advancement of science, art, philosophy,
|
||
letters and learning."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
I cheerfully admit that we are indebted to Christianity for
|
||
some learning, and that the human mind has been developed by the
|
||
discussion of the absurdities of superstition. Certainly millions
|
||
and millions have had what might be called mental exercise, and
|
||
their minds may have been somewhat broadened by the examination,
|
||
even, of these absurdities, contradictions, and impossibilities.
|
||
The church was not the friend of science or learning when it burned
|
||
Vanini for writing his "Dialogues Concerning Nature." What shall we
|
||
say of the "Index Expurgatorius"? For hundreds of years all books
|
||
of any particular value were placed on the "Index," and good
|
||
Catholics forbidden to read them. Was this in favor of science and
|
||
learning?
|
||
|
||
That we are indebted to Christianity for the advancement of
|
||
science seems absurd. What science? Christianity was certainly the
|
||
enemy of astronomy, and I believe that it was Mr. Draper who said
|
||
that astronomy took her revenge, so that not a star that glitters
|
||
in all the heavens bears a Christian name.
|
||
|
||
Can it be said that the church has been the friend of geology,
|
||
or of any true philosophy? Let me show how this is impossible.
|
||
|
||
The church accepts the Bible as an inspired book. Then the
|
||
only object is to find its meaning, and if that meaning is opposed
|
||
to any result that the human mind may have reached, the meaning
|
||
stands and the result reached by the mind must be abandoned. For
|
||
hundreds of years the Bible was the standard, and whenever anything
|
||
was asserted in any science contrary to the Bible, the church
|
||
immediately denounced the scientist. I admit the standard has been
|
||
changed, and ministers are very busy, not trying to show that
|
||
science does not agree with the Bible, but that the Bible agrees
|
||
with science.
|
||
|
||
Certainly Christianity has done little for art. The early
|
||
Christians destroyed all the marbles of Greece and Rome upon which
|
||
they could lay their violent hands; and nothing has been produced
|
||
by the Christian world equal to the fragments that were
|
||
accidentally preserved. There have been many artists who were
|
||
Christians; but they were not artists because they were Christians;
|
||
because there have been many Christians who were not artists. It
|
||
cannot be said that art is born of any creed. The mode of
|
||
expression may be determined, and probably is to a certain degree,
|
||
by the belief of the artist; but not his artistic perception and
|
||
feeling.
|
||
|
||
So, Galileo did not make his discoveries because he was a
|
||
Christian, but in spite of it. His Bible was the other way, and so
|
||
was his creed. Consequently, they could not by any possibility have
|
||
assisted him. Kepler did not discover or announce what are known as
|
||
the "Three Laws" because he was a Christian; but, as I said about
|
||
Galileo, in spite of his creed.
|
||
|
||
Every Christian who has really found out and demonstrated and
|
||
clung to a fact inconsistent with the absolute inspiration of the
|
||
Scriptures, has done so certainly without the assistance of his
|
||
creed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Let me illustrate this: When our ancestors were burning each
|
||
other to please God; when they were ready to destroy a man with
|
||
sword and flame for teaching the rotundity of the world, the Moors
|
||
in Spain were teaching geography to their children with brass
|
||
globes. So, too, they had observatories and knew something of the
|
||
orbits of the stars.
|
||
|
||
They did not find out these things because they were
|
||
Mohammedans, or on account of their belief in the impossible. They
|
||
were far beyond the Christians, intellectually. and it has been
|
||
very poetically said by Mrs. Browning. that "Science was thrust
|
||
into the brain of Europe on the point of a Moorish lance."
|
||
|
||
From the Arabs we got our numerals, making mathematics of the
|
||
higher branches practical. We also got from them the art of making
|
||
cotton paper, which is almost at the foundation of modern
|
||
intelligence. We learned from them to make cotton cloth, making
|
||
cleanliness possible in Christendom.
|
||
|
||
So from among people of different religions we have learned
|
||
many useful things; but they did not discover them on account of
|
||
their religion.
|
||
|
||
It will not do to say that the religion of Greece was true
|
||
because the Greeks were the greatest sculptors. Neither is it an
|
||
argument in favor of monarchy that Shakespeare, the greatest of
|
||
men, was born and lived in a monarchy.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Da Costa takes one of the effects of a general cause, or
|
||
of a vast number of causes, and makes it the cause, not only of
|
||
other effects, but of the general cause. He seems to think that all
|
||
events for many centuries, and especially all the good ones, were
|
||
caused by Christianity.
|
||
|
||
As a matter of fact, the civilization of our time is the
|
||
result of countless causes with which Christianity had little to
|
||
do, except by way of hindrance.
|
||
|
||
Does the Doctor think that the material progress of the world
|
||
was caused by this passage: "Take no thought for the morrow"?
|
||
|
||
Does he seriously insist that the wealth of Christendom rests
|
||
on this inspired declaration: "It is easier for a camel to pass
|
||
through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the
|
||
kingdom of heaven"?
|
||
|
||
The Rev, Mr. Peters, in answer, takes the ground that the
|
||
Bible has produced the richest and most varied literature the world
|
||
has ever seen.
|
||
|
||
This, I think, is hardly true. Has not most of modern
|
||
literature been produced in spite of the Bible? Did not Christians,
|
||
for many generations, take the ground that the Bible was the only
|
||
important book, and that books differing from the Bible should be
|
||
destroyed?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
If Christianity -- Catholic and Protestant -- could have had
|
||
its way, the works of Voltaire, Spinoza, Hume, Paine, Humboldt,
|
||
Darwin, Haeckel, Spencer, Comte, Huxley. Tyndall, Draper, Goethe,
|
||
Gibbon, Buckle and Buchner would not have been published. In short,
|
||
the philosophy that enlightens and the fiction that enriches the
|
||
brain would not exist.
|
||
|
||
The greatest literature the world has ever seen is, in my
|
||
judgment, the poetic -- the dramatic; that is to say, the
|
||
literature of fiction in its widest sense. Certainly if the church
|
||
could have had control, the plays of Shakespeare never would have
|
||
been written; the literature of the stage could not have existed;
|
||
most works of fiction, and nearly all poetry, would have perished
|
||
in the brain. So I think it hardly fair to say that "the Bible has
|
||
produced the richest and most varied literature the world has ever
|
||
seen."
|
||
|
||
Thousands of theological books have been written on thousands
|
||
of questions of no possible importance. Libraries have been printed
|
||
on subjects not worth discussing -- not worth thinking about -- and
|
||
that will, in a few years, be regarded as puerile by the whole
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Peters, in his enthusiasm, asks this question:
|
||
|
||
"Who raised our great institutions of learning? Infidels never
|
||
a stone of them!"
|
||
|
||
Stephen Girard founded the best institution of learning, the
|
||
best charity, the noblest ever founded in this or any other land;
|
||
and under the roof built by his wisdom and his wealth many
|
||
thousands of orphans have been reared, clothed, fed and educated,
|
||
not only in books, but in avocations, and become happy and useful
|
||
citizens. Under his will there has been distributed to the poor,
|
||
fuel to the value of more than $500,000; and this distribution goes
|
||
on year after year.
|
||
|
||
One of the best observatories in the world was built by the
|
||
generosity of James Lick, an infidel. I call attention to these two
|
||
cases simply to show that the gentleman is mistaken, and that he
|
||
was somewhat carried away by his zeal.
|
||
|
||
So, too, Mr. Peters takes the ground that "we are indebted to
|
||
Christianity for our chronology."
|
||
|
||
According to Christianity this world has been peopled about
|
||
six thousand years. Christian chronology gives the age of the first
|
||
man, and then gives the line from father to son down to the flood,
|
||
and from the flood down to the coming of Christ, showing that men
|
||
have been upon the earth only about six thousand years. This
|
||
chronology is infinitely absurd, and I do not believe that there is
|
||
an intelligent, well-educated Christian in the world, having
|
||
examined the subject, who will say that the Christian chronology is
|
||
correct.
|
||
|
||
Neither can it, I think, truthfully be said that "we are
|
||
indebted to Christianity for the continuation of history." The best
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
modern historians of whom I have any knowledge are Voltaire, Hume,
|
||
Gibbon, Buckle and Draper.
|
||
|
||
Neither can I admit that "we are indebted to Christianity for
|
||
natural philosophy."
|
||
|
||
I do not deny that some natural philosophers have also been
|
||
Christians, or, rather, that some Christians have been natural
|
||
philosophers to the extent that their Christianity permitted. But
|
||
Lamarck and Humboldt and Darwin and Spencer and Haeckel and Huxley
|
||
and Tyndall have done far more for natural philosophy than they
|
||
have for orthodox religion.
|
||
|
||
Whoever believes in the miraculous must be the enemy of
|
||
natural philosophy. To him there is something above nature, liable
|
||
to interfere with nature. Such a man has two classes of ideas in
|
||
his mind, each inconsistent with the other. To the extent that he
|
||
believes in the supernatural he is incapacitated for dealing with
|
||
the natural, and to that extent fails to be a philosopher.
|
||
Philosophy does not include the caprice of the Infinite. It is
|
||
founded on the absolute integrity and invariability of nature.
|
||
|
||
Neither do I agree with the reverend gentleman when he says
|
||
that "we are indebted to Christianity for our knowledge of
|
||
philology."
|
||
|
||
The church taught for a long time that Hebrew was the first
|
||
language, and that other languages had been derived from that; and
|
||
for hundreds and hundreds of years the efforts of philologists were
|
||
arrested simply because they started with that absurd assumption
|
||
and believed in the Tower of Babel.
|
||
|
||
Christianity cannot now take the credit for "metaphysical
|
||
research." It has always been the enemy of metaphysical research.
|
||
It never has said to any human being, "Think!" It has always said,
|
||
"Hear!" It does not ask anybody to investigate. It lays down
|
||
certain doctrines as absolutely true, and, instead of asking
|
||
investigation, it threatens every investigator with eternal pain.
|
||
Metaphysical research is destroying what has been called
|
||
Christianity, and Christians have always feared it.
|
||
|
||
This gentleman makes another mistake, and a very common one.
|
||
This is his argument: Christian countries are the most intelligent;
|
||
therefore they owe that intelligence to Christianity. Then the next
|
||
step is taken. Christianity, being the best, having produced these
|
||
results, must have been of divine origin.
|
||
|
||
Let us see what this proves. There was a time when Egypt was
|
||
the first nation in the world. Could not an Egyptian, at that time
|
||
have used the same arguments that Mr. Peters uses now, to prove
|
||
that the religion of Egypt was divine? Could he not then have said:
|
||
"Egypt is the most intelligent, the most civilized and the richest
|
||
of all nations; it has been made so by its religion; its religion
|
||
is, therefore, divine"?
|
||
|
||
So there was a time when a Hindoo could have made the same
|
||
argument. Certainly this argument could have been made by a Greek.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
It could have been repeated by a Roman. And yet Mr. Peters will not
|
||
admit that the religion of Egypt was divine, or that the mythology
|
||
of Greece was true, or that Jupiter was in fact a god.
|
||
|
||
Is it not evident to all that if the churches in Europe had
|
||
been institutions of learning; if the domes of cathedrals had been
|
||
observatories; if priests had been teachers of the facts in nature,
|
||
the world would have been far in advance of what it is to-day?
|
||
|
||
Countries depend on something besides their religion for
|
||
progress. Nations with a good soil can get along quite well with an
|
||
exceedingly poor religion; and no religion yet has been good enough
|
||
to give wealth or happiness to human beings where the climate and
|
||
soil were bad and barren.
|
||
|
||
Religion supports nobody. It has to be supported. It produces
|
||
no wheat, no corn; it ploughs no land; it fells no forests. It is
|
||
a perpetual mendicant. It lives on the labor of others, and then
|
||
has the arrogance to pretend that it supports the giver.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Peters makes this exceedingly strange statement: "Every
|
||
discovery in science, invention and art has been the work of
|
||
Christian men. Infidels have contributed their share, but never one
|
||
of them has reached the grandeur of originality."
|
||
|
||
This, I think, so far as invention is concerned, can be
|
||
answered with one name -- John Ericsson, one of the profoundest
|
||
agnostics I ever met.
|
||
|
||
I am almost certain that Humboldt and Goethe were original.
|
||
Darwin was certainly regarded as such.
|
||
|
||
I do not wish to differ unnecessarily with Mr. Peters, but I
|
||
have some doubts about Morse having been the inventor of the
|
||
telegraph.
|
||
|
||
Neither can I admit that Christianity abolished slavery. Many
|
||
of the abolitionists in this country were infidels; many of them
|
||
were Christians. But the church itself did not stand for liberty.
|
||
The Quakers, I admit, were, as a rule, on the side of freedom. But
|
||
the Christians of New England persecuted these Quakers, whipped
|
||
them from town to town, lacerated their naked backs, and maimed
|
||
their bodies, not only, but took their lives.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Peters asks: "What name is there among the world's
|
||
emancipators after which you cannot write the name 'Christian?'"
|
||
Well, let me give him a few -- Voltaire, Jefferson, Paine,
|
||
Franklin, Lincoln, Darwin.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Peters asks: "Why is it that in Christian countries you
|
||
find the greatest amount of physical and intellectual liberty, the
|
||
greatest freedom of thought. speech, and action?"
|
||
|
||
Is this true of all? How about Spain and Portugal? There is
|
||
more infidelity in France than in Spain, and there is far more
|
||
liberty in France than in Spain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
There is far more infidelity in England today than there was
|
||
a century ago, and there is far more liberty than there was a
|
||
century ago. There is far more infidelity in the United States than
|
||
there was fifty years ago, and a hundred infidels to-day where
|
||
there was one fifty years ago; and there is far more intellectual
|
||
liberty, far greater freedom of speech and action, than ever
|
||
before.
|
||
|
||
A few years ago Italy was a Christian country to the fullest
|
||
extent. Now there are a thousand times more liberty and a thousand
|
||
times less religion.
|
||
|
||
Orthodoxy is dying; Liberty is growing.
|
||
|
||
Mr.Ballou, a grandson, or grand-nephew, of Hosea Ballou, seems
|
||
to have wandered from the faith. As a rule, Christians insist that
|
||
when one denies the religion of Christian parents he is an
|
||
exceedingly bad man, but when he denies the religion of parents not
|
||
Christians, and becomes a Christian, that he is a very faithful,
|
||
good and loving son.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Ballou insists that God has the same right to punish us
|
||
that Nature has, or that the State has. I do not think he
|
||
understands what I have said. The State ought not to punish for the
|
||
sake of punishment. The State may imprison, or inflict what is
|
||
called punishment, first, for its own protection, and, secondly,
|
||
for the reformation of the punished. If no one could do the State
|
||
any injury, certainly the State would have no right to punish under
|
||
the plea of protection; and if no human being could by any
|
||
possibility be reformed, then the excuse of reformation could not
|
||
be given.
|
||
|
||
Let us apply this: If God be infinite, no one can injure him.
|
||
Therefore he need not punish anybody or damn anybody or burn
|
||
anybody for his protection.
|
||
|
||
Let us take another step. Punishment being justified only on
|
||
two grounds -- that is, the protection of society and the
|
||
reformation of the punished -- how can eternal punishment be
|
||
justified? In the first place, God does not punish to protect
|
||
himself, and, in the second place, if the punishment is to be
|
||
forever, he does not punish to reform the punished. What excuse
|
||
then is left?
|
||
|
||
Let us take still another step. If instead of punishment, we
|
||
say "consequences," and that every good man has the right to reap
|
||
the good consequences of good actions, and that every bad man must
|
||
bear the consequences of bad actions, then you must say to the
|
||
good: If you stop doing good you will lose the harvest. You must
|
||
say to the bad: If you stop doing bad you need not increase your
|
||
burdens. And if it be a fact in Nature that all must reap what they
|
||
sow, there is neither mercy nor cruelty in this fact, and I hold no
|
||
God responsible for it. The trouble with the Christian creed is
|
||
that God is described as the one who gives rewards and the one who
|
||
inflicts eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
There is still another trouble. This God, if infinite, must
|
||
have known when he created man, exactly who would be eternally
|
||
damned. What right had he to create men, knowing that they were to
|
||
be damned?
|
||
|
||
So much for Mr. Ballou.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Dr. Hillier seems to reason in a kind of circle. He
|
||
takes the ground, in the first place, that "infidelity,
|
||
Christianity, science, and experience all agree, without the
|
||
slightest tremor of uncertainty, in the inexorable law that
|
||
whatsoever a man sows that shall he also reap." He then takes the
|
||
ground that, "if we wish to be rid of the harvest, we must not sow
|
||
the seed; if we would avoid the result, we must remove the cause;
|
||
the only way to be rid of hell is to stop doing evil; that this,
|
||
and this only, is the way to abolish an eternal penitentiary."
|
||
|
||
Very good; but that is not the point. The real thing under
|
||
discussion is this: Is this life a state of probation, and if a man
|
||
fails to live a good life here, will he have no opportunity for
|
||
reformation in another world, if there be one? Can he cease to do
|
||
evil in the eternal penitentiary? and if he does, can he be
|
||
pardoned -- can he be released?
|
||
|
||
It is admitted that man must bear the consequences of his
|
||
acts. If the consequences are good, then the acts are good. If the
|
||
consequences are bad, the acts are bad. Through experience we find
|
||
that certain acts tend to unhappiness and others to happiness.
|
||
|
||
Now, the only question is whether we have wisdom enough to
|
||
live in harmony with our conditions here; and if we fail here, will
|
||
we have an opportunity of reforming in another world? If not, then
|
||
the few years that we live here determine whether we shall be
|
||
angels or devils forever.
|
||
|
||
It seems to me, if there be another life, that in that life
|
||
men may do good, and men may do evil; and if they may do good it
|
||
seems to me that they may reform.
|
||
|
||
I do not see why God, if there be one, should lose all
|
||
interest in his children, simply because they leave this world and
|
||
go where he is. Is it possible that an infinite God does all for
|
||
his children here, in this poor ignorant world, that it is possible
|
||
for him to do, and that if he fails to reform them here, nothing is
|
||
left to do except to make them eternal convicts?
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Haldeman mistakes my position. I do not admit
|
||
that "an infinite God, as revealed in Nature, has allowed men to
|
||
grow up under conditions which no ordinary mortal can look at in
|
||
all their concentrated agony and not break his heart."
|
||
|
||
I do not confess that God reveals himself in Nature as an
|
||
infinite God, without mercy. I do not admit that there is an
|
||
infinite Being anywhere responsible for the agonies and tears, for
|
||
the barbarities and horrors of this life. I cannot believe that
|
||
there is in the universe a Being with power to prevent these
|
||
things. I hold no God responsible. I attribute neither cruelty nor
|
||
mercy to Nature. Nature neither weeps nor rejoices. I cannot
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
believe that this world as it now is, as it has been, was created
|
||
by an infinitely wise, powerful, and benevolent God. But it is far
|
||
better that we should all go down "with souls unsatisned" to the
|
||
dreamless grave, to the tongueless silence of the voiceless dust,
|
||
than that countless millions of human souls should suffer forever.
|
||
|
||
Eternal sleep is better than eternal pain. Eternal punishment
|
||
is eternal revenge, and can be inflicted only by an eternal
|
||
monster.
|
||
|
||
Mr. George A. Locey endeavors to put his case in an extremely
|
||
small compass, and satisfies himself with really one question, and
|
||
that is: "If a man in good health is stricken with disease, is
|
||
assured that a physician can cure him, but refuses to take the
|
||
medicine and dies, ought there to be any escape?"
|
||
|
||
He concludes that the physician has done his duty; that the
|
||
patient was obdurate and suffered the penalty.
|
||
|
||
The application he makes is this:
|
||
|
||
"The Christian's 'tidings of great joy' is the message that
|
||
the Great Physician tendered freely. Its acceptance is a cure
|
||
certain, and a life of eternal happiness the reward. If the soul
|
||
accepts, are they not tidings of great joy; and if the soul
|
||
rejects, is it not unreasonable on the part of Colonel Ingersoll to
|
||
try and sneak out and throw the blame on God?"
|
||
|
||
The answer to this seems easy. The cases are not parallel. If
|
||
an infinite God created us all, he knew exactly what we would do.
|
||
If he gave us free will it does not change the result, because he
|
||
knew how we would use the free will.
|
||
|
||
Now, if he knew that billions upon billions would refuse to
|
||
take the remedy, and consequently would suffer eternal pain, why
|
||
create them? There would have been much less misery in the world
|
||
had he left them dust.
|
||
|
||
What right has a God to make a failure? Why should he change
|
||
dust into a sentient being, knowing that that being was to be the
|
||
heir of endless agony?
|
||
|
||
If the supposed physician had created the patient who refused
|
||
to take the medicine, and had so created him that he knew he would
|
||
refuse to take it, the cases might be parallel.
|
||
|
||
According to the orthodox creed, millions are to be damned who
|
||
never heard of the medicine or of the "Great Physician."
|
||
|
||
There is one thing said by the Rev. Mr. Talmage that I hardly
|
||
think he could have intended. Possibly there has been a misprint.
|
||
It is the following paragraph:
|
||
|
||
"Who" (speaking of Jesus) "has such an eye to our need; such
|
||
a lip to kiss away our sorrow; such a hand to snatch us out of the
|
||
fire; such a foot to trample our enemies; such a heart to embrace
|
||
all our necessities?"
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
What does the reverend gentleman mean by "such a foot to
|
||
trample our enemies"?
|
||
|
||
This, to me, is a terrible line. But it is in accordance with
|
||
the history of the church. In the name of its founder it has
|
||
"trampled on its enemies," and beneath its cruel feet have perished
|
||
the noblest of the world.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. J. Benson Hamilton, of Brooklyn, comes into this
|
||
discussion with a great deal of heat and considerable fury. He
|
||
states that "Infidelity is the creed of prosperity. but when
|
||
sickness or trouble or sorrow comes he" (meaning the infidel) "does
|
||
not paw nor mock nor cry 'Ha! ha!' He sneaks and cringes like a
|
||
whipped cur, and trembles and whines and howls."
|
||
|
||
The spirit of Mr. Hamilton is not altogether admirable. He
|
||
seems to think that a man establishes the truth of his religion by
|
||
being brave, or demonstrates its falsity by trembling in the
|
||
presence of death.
|
||
|
||
Thousands of people have died for false religions and in honor
|
||
of false gods. Their heroism did not prove the truth of the
|
||
religion, but it did prove the sincerity of their convictions.
|
||
|
||
A great many murderers have been hanged who exhibited on the
|
||
scaffold the utmost contempt of death; and yet this courage
|
||
exhibited by dying murderers has never been appealed to in
|
||
justification of murder.
|
||
|
||
The reverend gentleman tells again the story of the agonies
|
||
endured by Thomas Paine when dying; tells us that he then said that
|
||
he wished his work had been thrown into the fire, and that if the
|
||
devil ever had any agency in any work he had in the writing of that
|
||
book (meaning "The Age of Reason,"' and that he frequently asked
|
||
the Lord Jesus to have mercy upon him.
|
||
|
||
Of course there is not a word of truth in this story. Its
|
||
falsity has been demonstrated thousands and thousands of times, and
|
||
yet ministers of the Gospel go right on repeating it just the same.
|
||
|
||
So this gentleman tells us that Voltaire was accustomed to
|
||
close his letters with the words, "Crush the wretch!" (meaning
|
||
Christ). This is not so. He referred to superstition, to religion,
|
||
not to Christ.
|
||
|
||
This gentleman also says that "Voltaire was the prey of
|
||
anguish and dread, alternately supplicating and blaspheming God;
|
||
that he complained that he was abandoned by God; that when he died
|
||
his friends fled from the room, declaring the sight too terrible to
|
||
be endured."
|
||
|
||
There is not one word of truth in this. Everybody who has read
|
||
the life of Voltaire knows that he died with the utmost serenity.
|
||
|
||
Let me tell you how Voltaire died.
|
||
|
||
He was an old man of eighty-four. He had been surrounded by
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
the comforts of life. He was a man of wealth -- of genius. Among
|
||
the literary men of the world he stood first. God had allowed him
|
||
to have the appearance of success. His last years were filled with
|
||
the intoxication of flattery. He stood at the summit of his age.
|
||
The priests became anxious. They began to fear that God would
|
||
forget, in a multiplicity of business, to make a terrible example
|
||
of Voltaire.
|
||
|
||
Toward the last of May, 1788, it was whispered in Paris that
|
||
Voltaire was dying. Upon the fences of expectation gathered the
|
||
unclean birds of superstition, impatiently waiting for their prey.
|
||
|
||
"Two days before his death his nephew went to seek the Cure of
|
||
St. Sulpice and the Abbe Gautier, and brought them into his uncle's
|
||
sick-chamber, who was informed that they were there.
|
||
|
||
"'Ah, well,' said Voltaire; 'give them my compliments and my
|
||
thanks.'
|
||
|
||
"The abbe spoke some words to Voltaire, exhorting him to
|
||
patience. The Cure of St. Sulpice then came forward, having
|
||
announced himself, and asked Voltaire, lifting his voice, if he
|
||
acknowledged the divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ. The sick man
|
||
pushed one of his hands against the cure's coif shoving him back,
|
||
and cried, turning abruptly to the other side:
|
||
|
||
"'Let me die in peace!'
|
||
|
||
"The cure seemingly considered his person soiled and his coif
|
||
dishonored by the touch of the philosopher. He made the nurse give
|
||
him a little brushing and went out with the Abbe Gautier.
|
||
|
||
"He expired," says Wagniere, "on the 30th of May, 1788, at
|
||
about a quarter past eleven at night, with the most perfect
|
||
tranquillity.
|
||
|
||
"Ten minutes before his last breath he took the hand of
|
||
Morand, his valet-de-chambre, who was watching by him, pressed it
|
||
and said: 'Adieu, my dear Morand. I am gone!'
|
||
|
||
"These were his last words."
|
||
|
||
From this death, so simple and serene, so natural and peaceful
|
||
-- from these words so utterly destitute of cant or dramatic touch
|
||
-- all the frightful pictures, all the despairing utterances have
|
||
been drawn and made. From these materials, and from these alone,
|
||
have been constructed all the shameless calumnies about the death
|
||
of this great and wonderful man.
|
||
|
||
Voltaire was the intellectual autocrat of his time. From his
|
||
throne at the foot of the Alps he pointed the finger of scorn at
|
||
every hypocrite in Europe. He was the pioneer of his century. He
|
||
was the assassin of superstition. Through the shadows of faith and
|
||
fable; through the darkness of myth and miracle; through the
|
||
midnight of Christianity; through the blackness of bigotry; past
|
||
cathedral and dungeon; past rack and stake; past altar and throne,
|
||
he carried, with chivalric hands, the sacred torch of Reason.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Let me also tell you about the death of Thomas Paine. After
|
||
the publication of his "Rights of Man" and "The Age of Reason",
|
||
every falsehood that malignity could coin and malice pass, was
|
||
given to the world. On his return to America, although Thomas
|
||
Jefferson, another infidel, was President, it was hardly safe for
|
||
Paine to appear in the public streets.
|
||
|
||
Under the very flag he had helped to put in heaven, his rights
|
||
were not respected. Under the Constitution that he had first
|
||
suggested, his life was insecure. He had helped to give liberty to
|
||
more than three millions of his fellow-citizens, and they were
|
||
willing to deny it unto him.
|
||
|
||
He was deserted, ostracized, shunned, maligned and cursed. But
|
||
he maintained his integrity. He stood by the convictions of his
|
||
mind, and never for one moment did he hesitate or waver. He died
|
||
almost alone.
|
||
|
||
The moment he died the pious commenced manufacturing horrors
|
||
for his death-bed. They had his chamber filled with devils rattling
|
||
chains, and these ancient falsehoods are certified to by the clergy
|
||
even of the present day.
|
||
|
||
The truth is that Thomas Paine died as he had lived. Some
|
||
ministers were impolite enough to visit him against his will.
|
||
Several of them he ordered from his room. A couple of Catholic
|
||
priests, in all the meekness of arrogance, called that they might
|
||
enjoy the agonies of the dying friend of man. Thomas Paine, rising
|
||
in his bed, the few moments of expiring life fanned into flame by
|
||
the breath of indignation, had the goodness to curse them both.
|
||
|
||
His physician, who seems to have been a meddling fool, just as
|
||
the cold hand of Death was touching the Patriot's heart, whispered
|
||
in the dulled ear of the dying man: "Do you believe, or do you wish
|
||
to believe, that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?"
|
||
|
||
And the reply was: "I have no wish to believe on that
|
||
subject."
|
||
|
||
These were the last remembered words of Thomas Paine. He died
|
||
as serenely as ever mortal passed away. He died in the full
|
||
possession of his mind, and on the brink and edge of death
|
||
proclaimed the doctrines of his life.
|
||
|
||
Every philanthropist, every believer in human liberty, every
|
||
lover of the great Republic, should feel under obligation to Thomas
|
||
Paine for the splendid services rendered by him in the darkest days
|
||
of the American Revolution. In the midnight of Valley Forge, "The
|
||
Crisis" was the first star that glittered in the wide horizon of
|
||
despair.
|
||
|
||
We should remember that Thomas Paine was the first man to
|
||
write these words: "The United States of America."
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Hamilton seems to take a kind of joy in imagining
|
||
what infidels will suffer when they come to die, and he writes as
|
||
though he would like to be present.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
For my part I hope that all the sons and daughters of men will
|
||
die in peace; that they will pass away as causally as twilight
|
||
fades to night.
|
||
|
||
Of course when I said that "Christianity did not bring tidings
|
||
of great joy, but a message of eternal grief," I meant orthodox
|
||
Christianity; and when I said that "Christianity fills the future
|
||
with fire and flame, and made God the keeper of an eternal
|
||
penitentiary, in which most of the children of men were to be
|
||
imprisoned forever," I was giving what I understood to be the
|
||
Evangelical belief on that subject.
|
||
|
||
If the churches have given up the doctrine of eternal
|
||
punishment, then for one I am delighted, and I shall feel that what
|
||
little I have done toward that end has not been done in vain.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Hamilton, enjoying my dying agony in imagination,
|
||
says: "Let the world wait but for a few years at the most, when
|
||
Death's icy fingers feel for thee heartstrings of the boaster, and,
|
||
as most of his like who have gone before him have done, he will
|
||
sing another strain."
|
||
|
||
How shall I characterize the spirit that could prompt the
|
||
writing of such a sentence?
|
||
|
||
The reverend gentleman "loves his enemies," and yet he is
|
||
filled with glee when he thinks of the agonies I shall endure when
|
||
Death's icy fingers feel for the strings of my heart! Yet I have
|
||
done him no harm.
|
||
|
||
He then quotes, as being applicable to me, a passage from the
|
||
prophet Isaiah, commencing: "The vile person will speak villainy."
|
||
|
||
Is this passage applicable only to me?
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Holloway is not satisfied with the "Christmas
|
||
Sermon." For his benefit I repeat, in another form, what the
|
||
"Christmas Sermon" contains:
|
||
|
||
If orthodox Christianity teaches that this life is a period of
|
||
probation, that we settle here our eternal destiny, and that all
|
||
who have heard the Gospel and who have failed to believe it are to
|
||
be eternally lost, then I say that Christianity did not "bring
|
||
tidings of great joy," but a Message of Eternal Grief. And if the
|
||
orthodox churches are still preaching the doctrine of Endless Pain,
|
||
then I say it would be far better if every church crumbled into
|
||
dust than that such preaching and such teaching should be
|
||
continued.
|
||
|
||
It would be far better yet, however, if the ministers could be
|
||
converted and their congregations enlightened.
|
||
|
||
I admit that the orthodox churches preach some things beside
|
||
hell; but if they do not believe in the eternity of punishment they
|
||
ought publicly to change their creeds.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
I admit, also, that the average minister advises his
|
||
congregation to be honest and to treat all with kindness, and I
|
||
admit that many of these ministers fail to follow their own advice
|
||
when they make what they call "replies" to me.
|
||
|
||
Of course there are many good things about the church. To the
|
||
extent that it is charitable, or rather to the extent that it
|
||
causes charity, it is good. To the extent that it causes men and
|
||
women to lead moral lives it is good. But to the extent that it
|
||
fills the future with fear it is bad. To the extent that it
|
||
convinces any human being that there is any God who not only can,
|
||
but will, inflict eternal torments on his own children, it is bad.
|
||
|
||
And such teaching does tend to blight humanity. Such teaching
|
||
does pollute the imagination of childhood. Such teaching does
|
||
furrow the cheeks of the best and tenderest with tears. Such
|
||
teaching does rob old age of all its joy, and covers every cradle
|
||
with a curse!
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Mr. Holloway seems to be extremely familiar with God.
|
||
He says: "God seems to have delayed his advent through all the ages
|
||
to give unto the world the fullest opportunity to do all that the
|
||
human mind could suggest for the weal of the race."
|
||
|
||
According to this gentleman, God just delayed his advent for
|
||
the purpose of seeing what the world would do, knowing all the time
|
||
exactly what would be done.
|
||
|
||
Let us make a suggestion: If the orthodox creed be true, then
|
||
all people became tainted or corrupted or depraved, or in some way
|
||
spoiled by what is known as "Original Sin."
|
||
|
||
According to the Old Testament, these people kept getting
|
||
worse and worse. It does not seem that Jehovah made any effort to
|
||
improve them, but he patiently waited for about fifteen hundred
|
||
years without having established any church, without having given
|
||
them a Bible, and then he drowned all but eight persons.
|
||
|
||
Now, those eight persons were also depraved. The taint of
|
||
"Original Sin" was also in their blood.
|
||
|
||
It seems to me that Jehovah made a mistake. He should also
|
||
have killed the remaining eight, and started new, kept the serpent
|
||
out of his garden, and furnished the first pair with a Bible and
|
||
the Presbyterian Confession of Faith.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Dr. Tyler takes it for granted that all charity and
|
||
goodness are the children of Christianity. This is a mistake. All
|
||
the virtues were in the world long before Christ came. Probably Mr.
|
||
Tyler will be convinced by the words of Christ himself. He will
|
||
probably remember the story of the Good Samaritan, and if he does
|
||
he will see that it is exactly in point. The Good Samaritan was not
|
||
a Hebrew. He was not one of "the chosen people." He was a poor,
|
||
"miserable heathen," who knew nothing about the Jehovah of the Old
|
||
Testament, and who had never heard of the "scheme of salvation."
|
||
And yet, according to Christ, he was far more charitable than the
|
||
Levites -- the priests of Jehovah, the highest of "the chosen
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
people." Is it not perfectly plain from this story that charity was
|
||
in the world before Christianity was established?
|
||
|
||
A great deal has been said about asylums and hospitals, as
|
||
though the Christians are entitled to great credit on that score.
|
||
If Dr. Tyler will read what is said in the British Encyclopedia,
|
||
under the head of "Mental Diseases," he will find that the
|
||
Egyptians treated the insane with the utmost kindness, and that
|
||
they called reason back to its throne by the voice of music; that
|
||
the temples were resorted to by crowds of the insane; and that
|
||
"whatever gifts of nature or productions of art were calculated to
|
||
impress the imagination were there united. Games and recreations
|
||
were instituted in the temples. Groves and gardens surrounded these
|
||
holy retreats. Gaily decorated boats sometimes transported patients
|
||
to breathe the pure breezes of the Nile."
|
||
|
||
So in ancient Greece it is said that "from the hands of the
|
||
priest the cure of the disordered mind first passed into the domain
|
||
of medicine, with the philosophers. Pythagoras is said to have
|
||
employed music for the cure of mental diseases. The order of the
|
||
day for his disciples exhibits a profound knowledge of the
|
||
relations of body and mind. The early morning was divided between
|
||
gentle exercise, conversation and music. Then came conversation,
|
||
followed by gymnastic exercise and a temperate diet. Afterward, a
|
||
bath and supper with a sparing allowance of wine; then reading,
|
||
music and conversation concluded the day."
|
||
|
||
So "Asclupiades was celebrated for his treatment of mental
|
||
disorders. He recommended that bodily restraint should be avoided
|
||
as much as possible." It is also stated that "the philosophy and
|
||
arts of Greece spread to Rome, and the first special treatise on
|
||
insanity is that of Celsus, which distinguishes varieties of
|
||
insanity and their proper treatment."
|
||
|
||
"Over the arts and sciences of Greece and Rome the errors and
|
||
ignorance of the Middle Ages gradually crept, until they enveloped
|
||
them in a cloud worse than Egyptian darkness. The insane were again
|
||
consigned to the miracle-working ordinances of priests or else
|
||
totally neglected. Idiots and imbeciles were permitted to go
|
||
clotheless and homeless. The frantic and furious were chained in
|
||
lonesome dungeons and exhibited for money, like wild beasts. The
|
||
monomaniacs became, according to circumstance, the objects of
|
||
superstitious horror or reverence. They were regarded as possessed
|
||
with demons and subjected either to priestly exorcism, or cruelly
|
||
destroyed as wizards and witches. This cruel treatment of the
|
||
insane continued with little or no alleviation down to the end of
|
||
the last century in all the civilized countries of Europe."
|
||
|
||
Let me quote a description of these Christian asylums.
|
||
|
||
"Public asylums indeed existed in most of the metropolitan
|
||
cities of Europe, but the insane were more generally, if at all
|
||
troublesome, confined in jails, where they were chained in the
|
||
lowest dungeons or made the butts and menials of the most debased
|
||
criminals. In public asylums the inmates were confined in cellars,
|
||
isolated in cages, chained to floors or walls. These poor victims
|
||
were exhibited to the public like wild beasts. They were often
|
||
killed by the ignorance and brutality of their keepers."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
I call particular attention to the following paragraph: "Such
|
||
was the state of the insane generally throughout Europe at the
|
||
commencement of this century. Such it continued to be in England so
|
||
late as 1815 and in Ireland as 1817, as revealed by the inquiries
|
||
of parliamentary commissions in those years respectively."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Tyler is entirely welcome to all the comfort these facts
|
||
can give.
|
||
|
||
Not only were the Greeks and Romans and Egyptians far in
|
||
advance of the Christians in the treatment of the mentally
|
||
diseased, but even the Mohammedans were in advance of the
|
||
Christians about 700 years, and in addition to this they treated
|
||
their lunatics with great kindness.
|
||
|
||
The temple of Diana of Ephesus was a refuge for insolvent
|
||
debtors, and the Thesium was a refuge for slaves.
|
||
|
||
Again, I say that hundreds of years before the establishment
|
||
of Christianity there were in India not only hospitals and asylums
|
||
for people, but even for animals. The great mistake of the
|
||
Christian clergy is that they attribute all goodness to
|
||
Christianity. They have always been engaged in maligning human
|
||
nature -- in attacking the human heart -- in efforts to destroy all
|
||
natural passions.
|
||
|
||
Perfect maxims for the conduct of life were uttered and
|
||
repeated in India and China hundreds and hundreds of years before
|
||
the Christian era. Every virtue was lauded and every vice
|
||
denounced. All the good that Christianity has in it came from the
|
||
human heart. Everything in that system of religion came from this
|
||
world; and in it you will find not only the goodness of man, but
|
||
the imperfections of man -- not only the love of man, but the
|
||
malice of man.
|
||
|
||
Let me tell you why the Christians for so many centuries
|
||
neglected or abused the insane. They believed the New Testament,
|
||
and honestly supposed that the insane were filled with devils.
|
||
|
||
In regard to the contest between Dr. Buckley, who, as I
|
||
understand it, is a doctor of theology -- and I should think such
|
||
theology stood in need of a doctor -- and the Telegram, I have
|
||
nothing to say. There is only one side to that contest; and so far
|
||
as the Doctor heretofore criticized what is known as the "Christmas
|
||
Sermon," I have answered him. leaving but very little to which I
|
||
care to reply in his last article.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Buckley, like many others, brings forward names instead of
|
||
reasons -- instead of arguments. Milton, Pascal, Elizabeth Fry,
|
||
John Howard, and Michael Faraday are not arguments. They are only
|
||
names; and, instead of giving the names, Dr. Buckley should give
|
||
the reasons advanced by those whose names he pronounces.
|
||
|
||
Jonathan Edwards may have been a good man, but certainly his
|
||
theology was infamous. So Father Mathew was a good man, but it was
|
||
impossible for him to be good enough to convince Dr. Buckley of the
|
||
doctrine of the "Real Presence."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
35
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Milton was a very good man, and he described God as a kind of
|
||
brigadier-general, put the angels in uniform and had regular
|
||
battles; but Milton's goodness can by no possibility establish the
|
||
truth of his poetical and absurd vagaries.
|
||
|
||
All the self-denial and goodness in the world do not even tend
|
||
to prove the existence of the supernatural or of the miraculous.
|
||
Millions and millions of the most devoted men could not, by their
|
||
devotion, substantiate the inspiration of the Scriptures.
|
||
|
||
There are, however, some misstatements in Dr. Buckley's
|
||
article that ought not to be passed over in silence.
|
||
|
||
The first is to the effect that I was invited to write an
|
||
article for the North American Review, Judge Jeremiah Black to
|
||
reply, and that Judge Black was improperly treated.
|
||
|
||
Now, it is true that I was invited to write an article, and
|
||
did write one; but I did not know at the time who was to reply. It
|
||
is also true that Judge Black did reply, and that my article and
|
||
his reply appeared in the same number of the Review.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Buckley alleges that the North American Review gave me an
|
||
opportunity to review the Judge, but denied to Judge Black an
|
||
opportunity to respond. This is without the slightest foundation in
|
||
fact. Mr. Metcalf, who at that time was manager of the Review, is
|
||
still living and will tell the facts. Personally I had nothing to
|
||
do with it, one way or the other. I did not regard Judge Black's
|
||
reply as formidable, and was not only willing that he should be
|
||
heard again, but anxious that he should.
|
||
|
||
So much for that.
|
||
|
||
As to the debate, with Dr. Field and Mr. Gladstone, I leave
|
||
them to say whether they were or were not fairly treated. Dr.
|
||
Field, by his candor, by his fairness, and by the manly spirit he
|
||
exhibited won my respect and love.
|
||
|
||
Most ministers imagine that any man who differs from them is
|
||
a blasphemer. This word seems to leap unconsciously from their
|
||
lips. They cannot imagine that another man loves liberty as much
|
||
and with as sincere devotion as they love God. They cannot imagine
|
||
that another prizes liberty above all gods, even if gods exist.
|
||
They cannot imagine that any mind is so that it places Justice
|
||
above all persons. a mind that cannot conceive even of a God who is
|
||
not bound to do justice.
|
||
|
||
If God exists, above him, in eternal calm, is the figure of
|
||
Justice.
|
||
|
||
Neither can some ministers understand a man who regards
|
||
Jehovah and Jupiter as substantially the same, with this exception
|
||
-- that he thinks far more of Jupiter, because Jupiter had at least
|
||
some human feelings.
|
||
|
||
I do not understand that a man can be guilty of blasphemy who
|
||
states his honest thoughts in proper language, his object being,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
36
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
not to torture the feelings of others, but simply to give his
|
||
thought -- to find and establish the truth.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Buckley makes a charge that he ought to have known to be
|
||
without foundation, Speaking of myself, he said: "In him the laws
|
||
to prevent the circulation of obscene publications through the
|
||
mails have found their most vigorous opponent."
|
||
|
||
It is hardly necessary for me to say that this is untrue. The
|
||
facts are that an effort was made to classify obscene literature
|
||
with what the pious call "blasphemous and immoral works." A
|
||
petition was forwarded to Congress to amend the law so that the
|
||
literature of Freethought could not be thrown from the mails,
|
||
asking that, if no separation could be made, the law should be
|
||
repealed.
|
||
|
||
It was said that I had signed this petition, and I certainly
|
||
should have done so had it been presented to me. The petition was
|
||
absolutely proper.
|
||
|
||
A few years ago I found the petition, and discovered that
|
||
while it bore my name it had never been signed by me. But for the
|
||
purposes of this answer I am perfectly willing that the signature
|
||
should be regarded as genuine, as there is nothing in the petition
|
||
that should not have been granted.
|
||
|
||
The law as it stood was opposed by the Liberal League -- but
|
||
not a member of that society was in favor of the circulation of
|
||
obscene literature; but they did think that the privacy of the
|
||
mails had been violated, and that it was of the utmost importance
|
||
to maintain the inviolability of the postal service.
|
||
|
||
I disagreed with these people, and favored the destruction of
|
||
obscene literature not only, but that it be made a criminal offence
|
||
to send it through the mails. As a matter of fact I drew up
|
||
resolutions to that effect that were passed. Afterward they were
|
||
changed, or some others were passed, and I resigned from the League
|
||
on that account.
|
||
|
||
Nothing can be more absurd than that I was, directly or
|
||
indirectly, or could have been, interested in the circulation of
|
||
obscene publications through the mails; and I will pay a premium of
|
||
$1,000 a word for each and every word I ever said or wrote in favor
|
||
of sending obscene publications through the mails.
|
||
|
||
I might use much stronger language. I might follow the example
|
||
of Dr. Buckley himself. But I think I have said enough to satisfy
|
||
all unprejudiced people that the charge is absurdly false.
|
||
|
||
Now, as to the eulogy of whiskey. It gives me a certain
|
||
pleasure to read that even now, and I believe the readers of the
|
||
Telegram would like to read it once more; so here it is:
|
||
|
||
"I send you some of the most wonderful whiskey that ever drove
|
||
the skeleton from a feast or painted landscapes in the brain of
|
||
man. It is the mingled souls of wheat and corn. In it you will find
|
||
the sunshine and the shadow that chased each other over the billowy
|
||
fields; the breath of June; the carol of the lark; the dews of
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
37
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
night; the wealth of summer and autumn's rich content, all golden
|
||
with imprisoned light. Drink it and you will hear the voices of men
|
||
and maidens singing the 'Harvest Home,' mingled with the laughter
|
||
of children. Drink it and you will feel within your blood the
|
||
star-lit dawns, the dreamy, tawny dusks of many perfect days. For
|
||
forty years this liquid joy has been within the happy staves of
|
||
oak, longing to touch the lips of men."
|
||
|
||
I re-quote this for the reason that Dr. Buckley, who is not
|
||
very accurate, made some mistakes in his version.
|
||
|
||
Now, in order to show the depth of degradation to which I have
|
||
sunk in this direction. I will confess that I also wrote a eulogy
|
||
of tobacco, and here it is:
|
||
|
||
"Nearly four centuries ago Columbus, the adventurous, in the
|
||
blessed island of Cuba, saw happy people with rolled leaves between
|
||
their lips. Above their heads were little clouds of smoke. Their
|
||
faces were serene, and in their eyes was the autumnal heaven of
|
||
content. These people were kind, innocent, gentle and loving.
|
||
|
||
"The climate of Cuba is the friendship of the earth and air,
|
||
and of this climate the sacred leaves were born -- the leaves that
|
||
breed in the mind of him who uses them the cloudless, happy days in
|
||
which they grew.
|
||
|
||
"These leaves make friends, and celebrate with gentle rites
|
||
the vows of peace. They have given consolation to the world. They
|
||
are the companions of the lonely -- the friends of the imprisoned,
|
||
of the exile, of workers in mines, of fellers of forests, of
|
||
sailors on the desolate seas. They are the givers of strength and
|
||
calm to the vexed and wearied minds of those who build with thought
|
||
and dream the temples of the soul.
|
||
|
||
"They tell of hope and rest. They smooth the wrinkled brows of
|
||
pain -- drive fears and strange misshapen dreads from out the mind
|
||
and fill the heart with rest and peace. Within their magic warp and
|
||
woof some potent gracious spell imprisoned lies, that, when
|
||
released by fire, doth softly steal within the fortress of the
|
||
brain and bind in sleep the captured sentinels of care and grief.
|
||
|
||
"These leaves are the friends of the fireside, and their
|
||
smoke, like incense, rises from myriads of happy homes. Cuba is the
|
||
smile of the sea."
|
||
|
||
There are some people so constituted that there is no room in
|
||
the heaven of their minds for the butterflies and moths of fancy to
|
||
spread their wings. Everything is taken in solemn and stupid
|
||
earnest. Such men would hold Shakespeare responsible for what
|
||
Falstaff said about "sack," and for Mrs. Quickly's notions of
|
||
propriety.
|
||
|
||
There is an old Greek saying which is applicable here: "the
|
||
presence of human stupidity, even the gods stand helpless."
|
||
|
||
John Wesley, founder of the Methodist Church, lacked all sense
|
||
of humor. He preached a sermon on "The Cause and Cure of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
38
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
Earthquakes." He insisted that they were caused by the wickedness
|
||
of man, and that the only way to cure them was to believe on the
|
||
Lord Jesus Christ.
|
||
|
||
The man who does not carry the torch of Humor is always in
|
||
danger of falling into the pit of Absurdity.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Chades Deems, pastor of the Church of the Strangers,
|
||
contributes his part to the discussion.
|
||
|
||
He took a text from John, as follows: "He that committeth sin
|
||
is of the devil, for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this
|
||
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the
|
||
works of the devil."
|
||
|
||
According to the orthodox creed of the Rev. Dr. Deems all have
|
||
committed sin, and consequently all are of the devil. The Doctor is
|
||
not a metaphysician. He does not care to play at sleight of hand
|
||
with words. He stands on bed-rock, and he asserts that the devil is
|
||
no Persian myth, but a personality, who works unhindered by the
|
||
limitations of a physical body, and gets human personalities to aid
|
||
him in his works.
|
||
|
||
According to the text, it seems that the devil was a sinner
|
||
from the beginning. I suppose that must mean from his beginning, or
|
||
from the beginning of things. According to Dr. Deems' creed, his
|
||
God is the Creator of all things, and consequently must have been
|
||
the Creator of the devil. According to the Scriptures the devil is
|
||
the father of lies, and Dr. Deems' God is the father of the devil
|
||
-- that is to say, the grandfather of lies. This strikes me as
|
||
almost "blasphemous."
|
||
|
||
The Doctor also tells us "that Jesus believed as much in the
|
||
personality of the devil as in that of Herod or Pilate or John or
|
||
Peter."
|
||
|
||
That I admit. There is not the slightest doubt, if the New
|
||
Testament be true, that Christ believed in a personal devil -- a
|
||
devil with whom he had conversations; a devil who took him to the
|
||
pinnacle of the Temple and endeavored to induce him to leap to the
|
||
earth below.
|
||
|
||
Of course he believed in a personal devil. Not only so; he
|
||
believed in thousands of personal devils. He cast seven devils out
|
||
of Mary Magdalene. He cast a legion of devils out of the man in the
|
||
tombs. or, rather, made a bargain with these last-mentioned devils
|
||
that they might go into a drove or herd of swine, if they would
|
||
leave the man.
|
||
|
||
I not only admit that Christ believed in devils, but he
|
||
believed that some devils were deaf and dumb, and so declared.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Deems is right, and I hope he will defend against all
|
||
comers the integrity of the New Testament.
|
||
|
||
The Doctor, however, not satisfied exactly with what he finds
|
||
in the New Testament, draws a little on his own imagination. He
|
||
says:
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
39
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
"The devil is an organizing, imperial intellect, vindictive,
|
||
sharp, shrewd, persevering, the aim of whose works is to overthrow
|
||
the authority of God's law."
|
||
|
||
How does the Doctor know that the devil has an organizing,
|
||
imperial intellect? How does he know that he is vindictive and
|
||
sharp and shrewd and persevering?
|
||
|
||
If the devil has an "imperial intellect," why does he attempt
|
||
the impossible?
|
||
|
||
Robert Burns shocked Scotland by saying of the devil, or,
|
||
rather, to the devil, that he was sorry for him, and hoped he would
|
||
take a thought and mend.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Deems has gone far in advance of Burns. For a clergyman he
|
||
seems to be exceedingly polite. Speaking of the "Arch Enemy of God"
|
||
-- of that "organizing, imperial intellect who is seeking to
|
||
undermine the church" -- the Doctor says:
|
||
|
||
"The devil may be conceded to be sincere."
|
||
|
||
It has been said:
|
||
|
||
"An honest God is the noblest work of man," and it may now be
|
||
added: A sincere devil is the noblest work of Dr. Deems.
|
||
|
||
But, with all the devils smartness, sharpness, and shrewdness,
|
||
the Doctor says that he "cannot write a book; that he cannot
|
||
deliver lectures "(like myself, I suppose), "edit a newspaper"
|
||
(like the editor of the Telegram) or make after-dinner speeches;
|
||
but he can get his servants to do these things for him."
|
||
|
||
There is one thing in the Doctor's address that I feel like
|
||
correcting (I quote from the Telegram's report):
|
||
|
||
"Dr. Deems showed at length how the Son of God, the Christ of
|
||
the Bible -- not the Christ of the lecture platform caricatures --
|
||
operating to overcome all these works."
|
||
|
||
I take it for granted that he refers to what he supposes I
|
||
have said about Christ, and, for fear that he may not have read it,
|
||
I give it here:
|
||
|
||
"And let me say here, once for all, that for the man Christ I
|
||
have infinite respect. Let me say, once for all, that the place
|
||
where man has died for man is holy ground. And let me say, once for
|
||
all, that to that great and serene man I gladly pay, the tribute of
|
||
my admiration and my tears. He was a reformer in his day. He was an
|
||
infidel in his time. He was regarded as a blasphemer, and his life
|
||
was destroyed by hypocrites, who have, in all ages, done what they
|
||
could to trample freedom and manhood out of the human mind. Had I
|
||
lived at that time I would have been his friend, and should he come
|
||
again he will not find a better friend than I will be. That is for
|
||
the man. For the theological creation I have a different feeling."
|
||
|
||
I have not answered each one who has attacked by name. Neither
|
||
have I mentioned those who have agreed with me. But I do take this
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
40
|
||
|
||
A CHRISTMAS SERMON.
|
||
|
||
occasion to thank all, irrespective of their creeds, who have
|
||
manfully advocated the right of free speech, and who have upheld
|
||
the Telegram in the course it has taken.
|
||
|
||
I thank all who have said a kind word for me, and I also feel
|
||
quite grateful to those who have failed to say unkind words.
|
||
Epithets are not arguments. To abuse is not to convince. Anger is
|
||
stupid and malice illogical.
|
||
|
||
And, after all that has appeared by way of reply, I still
|
||
insist that orthodox Christianity did not come with "tidings of
|
||
great joy," but with a message of eternal grief.
|
||
|
||
Robert G. Ingersoll.
|
||
|
||
New York, February 5, 1892.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
41
|
||
|