846 lines
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846 lines
42 KiB
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13 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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Part 4 -- FIELD - INGERSOLL debate.
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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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1887
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My Dear Mr. Field:
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With great pleasure I have read your second letter, in which
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you seem to admit that men may differ even about religion without
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being responsible for that difference; that every man has the right
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to read the Bible for himself, state freely the conclusion at which
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he arrives, and that it is not only his privilege, but his duty to
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speak the truth; that Christians can hardly be happy in heaven,
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while those they loved on earth are suffering with the lost; that
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it is not a crime to investigate, to think, to reason, to observe,
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and to be governed by evidence; that credulity is not a virtue, and
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that the open mouth of ignorant wonder is not the only entrance to
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Paradise; that belief is not necessary to salvation, and that no
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man can justly be made to suffer eternal pain for having expressed
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an intellectual conviction.
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You seem to admit that no man can justly be held responsible
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for his thoughts; that the brain thinks without asking our consent,
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and that we believe or disbelieve without an effort of the will.
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I congratulate you upon the advance that you have made. You
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not only admit that we have the right to think, but that we have
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the right to express our honest thoughts. You admit that the
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Christian world no longer believes in the fagot, the dungeon, and
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the thumbscrew. Has the Christian world outgrown its God? Has man
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become more merciful than his maker? If man will not torture his
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fellow-man on account of a difference of opinion, will a God of
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infinite love torture one of his children for what is called the
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sin of unbelief? Has man outgrown the Inquisition, and will God
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forever be the warden of a penitentiary? The walls of the old
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dungeons have fallen, and light now visits the cell where brave men
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perished in darkness. Is Jehovah to keep the cells of perdition in
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repair forever, and are his children to be the eternal prisoners?
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It seems hard for you to appreciate the mental condition of
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one who regards all gods as substantially the same; that is to say,
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who thinks of them all as myths and phantoms born of the
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imagination, -- characters in the religious fictions of the race.
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To you it probably seems strange that a man should think far more
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of Jupiter than of Jehovah. Regarding them both as creations of the
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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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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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mind, I choose between them, and I prefer the God of the Greeks, on
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the same principle that I prefer Portia to Iago; and yet I regard
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them, one and all, as children of the imagination, as phantoms born
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of human fears and human hopes.
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Surely nothing was further from my mind than to hurt the
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feelings of any one by speaking of the Presbyterian God. I simply
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intended to speak of the God of the Presbyterians. Certainly the
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God of the Presbyterian is not the God of the Catholic, nor is he
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the God of the Mohammedan or Hindoo. He is a special creation
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suited only to certain minds. These minds have naturally come
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together, and they form what we call the Presbyterian Church. As a
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matter of fact, no two churches can by any possibility have
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precisely the same God; neither can any two human beings conceive
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of precisely the same Deity. In every man's God there is, to say
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the least, a part of that man. The lower the man, the lower his
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conception of God. The higher the man, the grander his Deity must
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be. The savage who adorns his body with a belt from which hang the
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scalps of enemies slain in battle, has no conception of a loving,
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of a forgiving God; his God, of necessity, must be as revengeful,
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as heartless, as infamous as the God of John Calvin.
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You do not exactly appreciate my feeling. I do not hate
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Presbyterians; I hate Presbyterianism. I hate with all my heart the
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creed of that church, and I most heartily despise the God described
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in the Confession of Faith. But some of the best friends I have in
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the world are afflicted with the mental malady known as
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Presbyterianism. They are the victims of the consolation growing
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out of the belief that a vast majority of their fellow-men are
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doomed to suffer eternal torment, to the end that their Creator may
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be eternally glorified. I have said many times, and I say again,
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that I do not despise a man because he has the rheumatism; I
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despise the rheumatism because it has a man.
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But I do insist that the Presbyterians have assumed to
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appropriate to themselves their Supreme Being, and that they have
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claimed, and that they do claim, to be the "special objects of his
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favor." They do claim to be the very elect, and they do insist that
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God looks upon them as the objects of his special care. They do
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claim that the light of Nature, without the torch of the
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Presbyterian creed, is insufficient to guide any soul to the gate
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of heaven. They do insist that even those who never heard of
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Christ, or never heard of the God of the Presbyterians, will be
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eternally lost; and they not only claim this, but that their fate
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will illustrate not only the justice but the mercy of God. Not only
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so, but they insist that the morality of an unbeliever is
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displeasing to God, and that the love of an unconverted mother for
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her helpless child is nothing less than sin.
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When I meet a man who really believes the Presbyterian creed,
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I think of the Laocoon. I feel as though looking upon a human being
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helpless in the coils of an immense and poisonous serpent. But I
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congratulate you with all my heart that you have repudiated this
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infamous, this savage creed; that you now admit that reason was
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given us to be exercised; that God will not torture any man for
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entertaining an honest doubt, and that in the world to come "every
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man will be judged according to the deeds done in the body."
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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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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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Let me quote your exact language: "I believe that in the
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future world every man will be judged according to the deeds done
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in the body." Do you not see that you have bidden farewell to the
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Presbyterian Church? In that sentence you have thrown away the
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atonement, you have denied the efficacy of the blood of Jesus
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Christ, and you have denied the necessity of belief. If we are to
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be judged by the deeds done in the body, that is the end of the
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Presbyterian scheme of salvation. I sincerely congratulate you for
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having repudiated the savagery of Calvinism.
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It also gave me great pleasure to find that you have thrown
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away, with a kind of glad shudder, that infamy of infamies, the
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dogma of eternal pain. I have denounced that inhuman belief; I have
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denounced every creed that had coiled within it that viper; I have
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denounced every man who preached it, the book that contains it, and
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with all my heart the God who threatens it; and at last I have the
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happiness of seeing the editor of the New York Evangelist admit
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that devout Christians do not believe that lie, and quote with
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approbation the words of a minister of the Church of England to the
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effect that all men will be finally recovered and made happy.
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Do you find this doctrine of hope in the Presbyterian creed?
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Is this star, that sheds light on every grave, found in your Bible?
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Did Christ have in his mind the shining truth that all the children
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of men will at last be filled with joy, when he uttered these
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comforting words: "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire
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prepared for the devil and his angels"? Do you find in this flame
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the bud of hope, or the flower of promise?
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You suggest that it is possible that "the incurably bad will
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be annihilated," and you say that such a fate can have no terrors
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for me, as I look upon annihilation as the common lot of all. Let
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us examine this position. Why should a God of infinite wisdom
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create men and women whom he knew would be "incurably bad"? What
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would you say of a mechanic who was forced to destroy his own
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productions on the ground that they were "incurably bad"? Would you
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say that he was an infinitely wise mechanic? Does infinite justice
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annihilate the work of infinite wisdom? Does God, like an ignorant
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doctor, bury his mistakes?
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Besides, what right have you to say that I "look upon
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annihilation as the common lot of all"? Was there any such thought
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in my Reply? Do you find it in any published words of mine? Do you
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find anything in what I have written tending to show that I believe
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in annihilation? Is it not true that I say now, and that I have
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always said, that I do not know? Does a lack of knowledge as to the
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fate of the human soul imply a belief in annihilation? Does it not
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equally imply a belief in immortality?
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You have been -- at least until recently -- a believer in the
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inspiration of the Bible and in the truth of its every word. What
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do you say to the following: "For that which befalleth the sons of
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men befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth them: as the one
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dieth, so dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath; so that
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a man hath no pre-eminence above a beast." You will see that the
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inspired writer is not satisfied with admitting that he does not
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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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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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know. "As the cloud is consumed and vanisheth away; so he that
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goeth down to the grave shall come up no more." Was it not cruel
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for an inspired man to attack a sacred belief?
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You seem surprised that I should speak of the doctrine of
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eternal pain as "the black thunder-cloud that darkens all the
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horizon, casting its mighty shadows over the life that now is and
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that which is to come." If that doctrine be true, what else is
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there worthy of engaging the attention of the human mind? It is the
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blackness that extinguishes every star. It is the abyss in which
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every hope must perish. It leaves a universe without justice and
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without mercy -- a future without one ray of light, and a present
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with nothing but fear. It makes heaven an impossibility, God an
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infinite monster, and man an eternal victim. Nothing can redeem a
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religion in which this dogma is found. Clustered about it are all
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the snakes of the Furies.
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But you have abandoned this infamy, and you have admitted that
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we are to be judged according to the deeds done in the body.
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Nothing can be nearer self-evident than the fact that a finite
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being cannot commit an infinite sin; neither can a finite being do
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an infinitely good deed. That is to say, no one can deserve for any
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act eternal pain, and no one for any deed can deserve eternal joy.
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If we are to be judged by the deeds done in the body, the old
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orthodox hell and heaven both become impossible.
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So, too, you have recognized the great and splendid truth that
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sin cannot be predicated of an intellectual conviction. This is the
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first great step toward the liberty of soul. You admit that there
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is no morality and no immorality in belief -- that is to say, in
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the simple operation of the mind in weighing evidence, in observing
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facts, and in drawing conclusions. You admit that these things are
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without sin and without guilt. Had all men so believed there never
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could have been religious persecution -- the Inquisition could not
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have been built, and the idea of eternal pain never could have
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polluted the human heart.
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You have been driven to the passions for the purpose of
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finding what you are pleased to call "sin" and "responsibility";
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and you say, speaking of a human being, "but if he is warped by
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passion so that he cannot see things truly, then is he
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responsible." One would suppose that the use of the word "cannot"
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is inconsistent with the idea of responsibility. What is passion?
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There are certain desires, swift, thrilling, that quicken the
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action of the heart -- desires that fill the brain with blood, with
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fire and flame -- desires that bear the same relation to judgment
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that storms and waves bear to the compass on a ship. Is passion
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necessarily produced? Is there an adequate cause for every effect?
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Can you by any possibility think of an effect without a cause, and
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can you by any possibility think of an effect that is not a cause,
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or can you think of a cause that is not an effect? Is not the
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history of real civilization the slow and gradual emancipation of
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the intellect, of the judgment, from the mastery of passion? Is not
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that man civilized whose reason sits the crowned monarch of his
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brain -- whose passions are his servants?
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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Who knows the strength of the temptation to another? Who knows
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how little has been resisted by those who stand, how much has been
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resisted by those who fall? Who knows whether the victor or the
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victim made the braver and the more gallant fight? In judging of
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our fellow-men we must take into consideration the circumstances of
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ancestry, of race, of nationality, of employment, of opportunity,
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of education, and of the thousand influences that tend to mold or
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mar the character of man. Such a view is the mother of charity, and
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makes the God of the Presbyterians impossible.
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At last you have seen the impossibility of forgiveness. That
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is to say, you perceive that after forgiveness the crime remains,
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and its children, called consequences, still live. You recognize
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the lack of philosophy in that doctrine. You still believe in what
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you call "the forgiveness of sins," but you admit that forgiveness
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cannot reverse the course of nature, and cannot prevent the
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operation of natural law. You also admit that if a man lives after
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death, he preserves his personal identity, his memory, and that the
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consequences of his actions will follow him through all the eternal
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years. You admit that consequences are immortal. After making this
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admission, of what use is the old idea of the forgiveness of sins?
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How can the criminal be washed clean and pure in the blood of
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another? In spite of this forgiveness, in spite of this blood, you
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have taken the ground that consequences, like the dogs of Actreon,
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follow even a Presbyterian, even one of the elect, within the
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heavenly gates. If you wish to be logical, you must also admit that
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the consequences of good deeds, like winged angels, follow even the
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atheist within the gates of hell.
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You have had the courage of your convictions, and you have
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said that we are to be judged according to the deeds done in the
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body. By that judgment I am willing to abide. But, whether willing
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or not, I must abide, because there is no power, no God that can
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step between me and the consequences of my acts. I wish no heaven
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that I have not earned, no happiness to which I am not entitled. I
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do not wish to become an immortal pauper; neither am I willing to
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extend unworthy hands for alms.
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My dear Mr. Field, you have outgrown your creed -- as every
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Presbyterian must who grows at all. You are far better than the
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spirit of the Old Testament; far better, in my judgment, even than
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the spirit of the New. The creed that you have left behind, that
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you have repudiated, teaches that a man may be guilty of every
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crime -- that he may have driven his wife to insanity, that his
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example may have led his children to the penitentiary, or to the
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gallows, and that yet, at the eleventh hour, he may, by what is
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called "repentance," be washed absolutely pure by the blood of
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another and receive and wear upon his brow the laurels of eternal
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peace. Not only so, but that creed has taught that this wretch in
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heaven could look back on the poor earth and see the wife, whom he
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swore to love and cherish, in the mad-house, surrounded by
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imaginary serpents, struggling in the darkness of night, made
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insane by his heartlessness -- that creed has taught and teaches
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that he could look back and see his children in prison cells, or on
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the scaffold with the noose about their necks, and that these
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visions would not bring a shade of sadness to his redeemed and
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happy face. It is this doctrine, it is this dogma -- so bestial, so
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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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LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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savage as to beggar all the languages of men -- that I have
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denounced. All the words of hatred, loathing and contempt, found in
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all the dialects and tongues of men, are not sufficient to express
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my hatred, my contempt, and my loathing of this creed.
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You say that it is impossible for you not to believe in the
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existence of God. With this statement, I find no fault. Your mind
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is so that a belief in the existence of a Supreme Being gives
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satisfaction and content. Of course, you are entitled to no credit
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for this belief, as you ought not to be rewarded for believing that
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which you cannot help believing; neither should I be punished for
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failing to believe that which I cannot believe.
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You believe because you see in the world around you such an
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adaptation of means to ends that you are satisfied there is design.
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I admit that when Robinson Crusoe saw in the sand the print of a
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human foot, like and yet unlike his own, he was justified in
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drawing the conclusion that a human being had been there. The
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inference was drawn from his own experience, and was within the
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scope of his own mind. But I do not agree with you that he "knew"
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a human being had been there; he had only sufficient evidence upon
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which to found a belief. He did not know the footsteps of all
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animals; he could not have known that no animal except man could
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have made that footprint. In order to have known that it was the
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foot of man, he must have known that no other animal was capable of
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making it, and he must have known that no other being had produced
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in the sand the likeness of this human foot.
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You see what you call evidences of intelligence, in the
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universe, and you draw the conclusion that there must be an
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infinite intelligence. Your conclusion is far wider than your
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premise. Let us suppose, as Mr. Hume supposed, that there is a pair
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of scales, one end of which is in darkness, and you find that a
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pound weight, or a ten-pound weight, placed upon that end of the
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scale in the light is raised; have you the right to say that there
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is an infinite weight on the end in darkness, or are you compelled
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to say only that there is weight enough on the end in darkness to
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raise the weight on the end in light?
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It is illogical to say, because of the existence of this earth
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and of what you can see in and about it, that there must be an
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infinite intelligence. You do not know that even the creation of
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this world, and of all planets discovered, required an infinite
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power, or infinite wisdom. I admit that it is impossible for me to
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look at a watch and draw the inference that there was no design in
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its construction, or that it only happened. I could not regard it
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as a product of some freak of nature, neither could I imagine that
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its various parts were brought together and set in motion by
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chance. I am not a believer in chance. But there is a vast
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difference between what man has made and the materials of which he
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has constructed the things he has made. You find a watch, and you
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say that it exhibits, or shows design. You insist that it is so
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wonderful it must have had a designer -- in other words, that it is
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too wonderful not to have been constructed. You then find the
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watchmaker, and you say with regard to him that he too must have
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had a designer, for he is more wonderful than the watch. In
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imagination you go from the watchmaker to the being you call God,
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
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||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
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||
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and you say he designed the watchmaker, but he himself was not
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designed because he is too wonderful to have been designed. And yet
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in the case of the watch and of the watchmaker, it was the wonder
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that suggested design, while in the case of the maker of the
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watchmaker the wonder denied a designer. Do you not see that this
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argument devours itself? If wonder suggests a designer, can it go
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on increasing until it denies that which it suggested?
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You must remember, too, that the argument of design is
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applicable to all. You are not at liberty to stop at sunrise and
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sunset and growing corn and all that adds to the happiness of man;
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you must go further. You must admit that an infinitely wise and
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merciful God designed the Fangs of serpents, the machinery by which
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the poison is distilled, the ducts by which it is carried to the
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fang, and that the same intelligence impressed this serpent with a
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desire to deposit this deadly virus in the flesh of man. You must
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believe that an infinitely wise God so constructed this world, that
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in the process of cooling, earthquakes would be caused --
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earthquakes that devour and overwhelm cities and states. Do you see
|
||
any design in the volcano that sends it:s rivers of lava over the
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fields and the homes of men? Do you really think that a perfectly
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good being designed the invisible parasites that infest the air,
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that inhabit the water, and that finally attack and destroy the
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health and life of man? Do you see the same design in cancers that
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you do in wheat and corn? Did God invent tumors for the brain? Was
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it his ingenuity that so designed the human race that millions of
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people should be born deaf and dumb, that millions should be
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idiotic? Did he knowingly plant in the blood or brain the seeds of
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insanity? Did he cultivate those seeds? Do you see any design in
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this?
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Man calls that good which increases his happiness, and that
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evil which gives him pain. In the olden time, back of the good he
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placed a God; back of the evil a devil; but now the orthodox world
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is driven to admit that the God is the author of all.
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|
||
For my part, I see no goodness in the pestilence -- no mercy
|
||
in the bolt that leaps from the cloud and leaves the mark of death
|
||
on the breast of a loving mother. I see no generosity in famine, no
|
||
goodness in disease, no mercy in want and agony. And yet you say
|
||
that the being who created parasites that live only by inflicting
|
||
pain -- the being responsible for all the sufferings of mankind --
|
||
you say that he has "a tenderness compared to which all human love
|
||
is faint and cold." Yet according to the doctrine of the orthodox
|
||
world, this being of infinite love and tenderness so created nature
|
||
that its light misleads, and left a vast majority of the human race
|
||
to blindly grope their way to endless pain.
|
||
|
||
You insist that a knowledge of God -- a belief in God -- is
|
||
the foundation of social order; and yet this God of infinite
|
||
tenderness has left for thousands and thousands of years nearly all
|
||
of his children without a revelation. Why should infinite goodness
|
||
leave the existence of God in doubt? Why should he see millions in
|
||
savagery destroying the lives of each other, eating the flesh of
|
||
each other, and keep his existence a secret from man? Why did he
|
||
allow the savages to depend on sunrise and sunset and clouds? Why
|
||
did he leave this great truth to a few half-crazed prophets, or to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
a cruel, heartless and ignorant church? The sentence "There is a
|
||
God" could have been imprinted on every blade of grass, on every
|
||
leaf, on every star. An infinite God has no excuse for leaving his
|
||
children in doubt and darkness.
|
||
|
||
There is still another point. You know that for thousands of
|
||
ages men worshiped wild beasts as God. You know that for countless
|
||
generations they knelt by coiled serpents, believing those serpents
|
||
to be gods. Why did the real God secrete himself and allow his
|
||
poor, ignorant, savage children to imagine that he was a beast, a
|
||
serpent? Why did this God allow mothers to sacrifice their babes?
|
||
Why did he not emerge from the darkness? Why did he not say to the
|
||
poor mother, Do not sacrifice your babe; keep it in your arms;
|
||
press it to your bosom; let it be the solace of your declining
|
||
years. I take no delight in the death of children; I am not what
|
||
you suppose me to be; I am not a beast; I am not a serpent; I am
|
||
full of love and kindness and mercy, and I want my children to be
|
||
happy in this world"? Did the God who allowed a mother to sacrifice
|
||
her babe through the mistaken idea that he, the God, demanded the
|
||
sacrifice, feel a tenderness toward that mother "compared to which
|
||
all human love is faint and cold"? Would a good father allow some
|
||
of his children to kill others of his children to please him?
|
||
|
||
There is still another question. Why should God, a being of
|
||
infinite tenderness, leave the question of immortality in doubt?
|
||
How is it that there is nothing in the Old Testament on this
|
||
subject? Why is it that he who made all the constellations did not
|
||
put in his heaven the star of hope? How do you account for the fact
|
||
that you do not find in the Old Testament, from the first mistake
|
||
in Genesis, to the last curse in Malachi, a funeral service? Is it
|
||
not strange that some one in the Old Testament did not stand by an
|
||
open grave of father or mother and say: "We shall meet again"? Was
|
||
it because the divinely inspired men did not know?
|
||
|
||
You taunt me by saying that I know no more of the immortality
|
||
of the soul than Cicero knew. I admit it. I know no more than the
|
||
lowest savage, no more than a doctor of divinity -- that is to say,
|
||
nothing.
|
||
|
||
Is it not, however, a curious fact that there is less belief
|
||
in the immortality of the soul in Christian countries than in
|
||
heathen lands -- that the belief in immortality, in an orthodox
|
||
church, is faint and cold and speculative, compared with that
|
||
belief in India, in China, or in the Pacific Isles? Compare the
|
||
belief in immortality in America, of Christians, with that of the
|
||
followers of Mohammed. Do not Christians weep above their dead?
|
||
Does a belief in immortality keep back their tears? After all, the
|
||
promises are so far away, and the dead are so near -- the echoes of
|
||
words said to have been spoken more than eighteen centuries ago are
|
||
lost in the sounds of the clods that fall on the coffin. And yet,
|
||
compared with the orthodox hell, compared with the prison-house of
|
||
God, how ecstatic is the grave -- the grave without a sigh, without
|
||
a tear, without a dream, without a fear. Compared with the
|
||
immortality promised by the Presbyterian creed, how beautiful
|
||
annihilation seems. To be nothing -- how much better than to be a
|
||
convict forever. To be unconscious dust -- how much better than to
|
||
be a heartless angel.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
There is not, there never has been, there never will be, any
|
||
consolation in orthodox Christianity. It offers no consolation to
|
||
any good and loving man. I prefer the consolation of Nature, the
|
||
consolation of hope, the consolation springing from human
|
||
affection. I prefer the simple desire to live and love forever.
|
||
|
||
Of course, it would be a consolation to know that we have an
|
||
"Almighty Friend" in heaven; but an "Almighty Friend" who cares
|
||
nothing for us, who allows us to be stricken by his lightning,
|
||
frozen by his winter, starved by his famine, and at last imprisoned
|
||
in his hell, is a friend I do not care to have.
|
||
|
||
I remember "the poor slave mother who sat alone in her cabin,
|
||
having been robbed of her children;" and, my dear Mr. Field, I also
|
||
remember that the people who robbed her justified the robbery by
|
||
reading passages from the sacred Scriptures. I remember that while
|
||
the mother wept, the robbers, some of whom were Christians, read
|
||
this: "Buy of the heathen round about, and they shall be your
|
||
bondmen and bondwomen forever." I remember, too, that the robbers
|
||
read: "Servants be obedient unto your masters;" and they said, this
|
||
passage is the only message from the heart of God to the scarred
|
||
back of the slave. I remember this, and I remember, also, that the
|
||
poor slave mother upon her knees in wild and wailing accents called
|
||
on the "Almighty Friend," and I remember that her prayer was never
|
||
heard, and that her sobs died in the negligent air.
|
||
|
||
You ask me whether I would "rob this poor woman of such a
|
||
friend?" My answer is this: I would give her liberty; I would break
|
||
her chains. But let me ask you, did an "Almighty Friend" see the
|
||
woman he loved "with a tenderness compared to which all human love
|
||
is faint and cold," and the woman who loved him, robbed of her
|
||
children? What was the "Almighty Friend" worth to her? She
|
||
preferred her babe.
|
||
|
||
How could the "Almighty Friend" see his poor children pursued
|
||
by hounds -- his children whose only crime was the love of liberty
|
||
-- how could he see that, and take sides with the hounds? Do you
|
||
believe that the "Almighty Friend" then governed the world? Do you
|
||
really think that he
|
||
|
||
"Bade the slave-ship speed from coast to coast,
|
||
Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost"?
|
||
|
||
Do you believe that the "Almighty Friend" saw all of the
|
||
tragedies that were enacted in the jungles of Africa -- that he
|
||
watched the wretched slave-ships, saw the miseries of the middle
|
||
passage, heard the blows of all the whips, saw all the streams of
|
||
blood, all the agonized faces of women, all the tears that were
|
||
shed? Do you believe that he saw and knew all these things, and
|
||
that he, the "Almighty Friend," looked coldly down and stretched no
|
||
hand to save?
|
||
|
||
You persist, however, in endeavoring to account for the
|
||
miseries of the world by taking the ground that happiness is not
|
||
the end of life. You say that "the real end of life is character,
|
||
and that no discipline can be too severe which leads us to suffer
|
||
and be strong." Upon this subject you use the following language:
|
||
"If you could have your way you would make everybody happy; there
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
would be no more poverty, and no more sickness or pain." And this
|
||
you say, is a "child's picture, hardly worthy of a stalwart man."
|
||
Let me read you another "child's picture," which you will find in
|
||
the twenty-first chapter of Revelation, supposed to have been
|
||
written by St. john, the Divine: "And I heard a great voice out of
|
||
heaven saying, behold the tabernacle of God is with men, and he
|
||
will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself
|
||
shall be with them, and be their God; and God shall wipe away all
|
||
tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither
|
||
sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain."
|
||
|
||
If you visited some woman living in a tenement, supporting by
|
||
her poor labor a little family -- a poor woman on the edge of
|
||
famine, sewing, it may be, her eyes blinded by tears -- would you
|
||
tell her that "the world is not a playground in which men are to he
|
||
petted and indulged like children"? Would you tell her that to
|
||
think of a world without poverty, without tears, without pain, is
|
||
"a child's picture"? If she asked you for a little assistance,
|
||
would you refuse it on the ground that by being helped she might
|
||
lose character? Would you tell her: "God does not wish to have you
|
||
happy; happiness is a very foolish end; character is what you want,
|
||
and God has put you here with these helpless, starving babes, and
|
||
he has put this burden on your young life simply that you may
|
||
suffer and he strong. I would help you gladly, but I do not wish to
|
||
defeat the plans of your Almighty Friend"? You can reason one way,
|
||
but you would act the other.
|
||
|
||
I agree with you that work is good, that struggle is
|
||
essential; that men are made manly by contending with each other
|
||
and with the forces of nature; but there is a point beyond which
|
||
struggle does not make character; there is a point at which
|
||
struggle becomes failure.
|
||
|
||
Can you conceive of an "Almighty Friend" deforming his
|
||
children because he loves them? Did he allow the innocent to
|
||
languish in dungeons because he was their friend? Did he allow the
|
||
noble to perish upon the scaffold, the great and the self-denying
|
||
to be burned at the stake, because he had the power to save? Was he
|
||
restrained by love? Did this "Almighty Friend" allow millions of
|
||
his children to he enslaved to the end that the "splendor of virtue
|
||
might have a dark background" You insist that "suffering patiently
|
||
borne, is a means of the greatest elevation of character, and in
|
||
the end of the highest enjoyment." Do you not then see that your
|
||
"Almighty Friend" has been unjust to the happy -- that he is cruel
|
||
to those whom we call the fortunate -- that he is indifferent to
|
||
the men who do not suffer -- that he leaves all the happy and
|
||
prosperous and joyous without character, and that in the end,
|
||
according to your doctrine, they are the losers?
|
||
|
||
But, after all, there is no need of arguing this question
|
||
further. There is one fact that destroys forever your theory -- and
|
||
that is the fact that millions upon millions die in infancy. Where
|
||
do they get "elevation of character"? What opportunity is given to
|
||
them to "suffer and be strong"? Let us admit that we do not know.
|
||
Let us say that the mysteries of life, of good and evil, of joy and
|
||
pain, have never been explained. Is character of no importance in
|
||
heaven? How is it possible for angels, living in "a child's
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
picture," to "suffer and be strong"? Do you not see that, according
|
||
to your philosophy, only the damned can grow great -- only the lost
|
||
can become sublime?
|
||
|
||
You do not seem to understand what I say with regard to what
|
||
I call the higher philosophy. When that philosophy is accepted, of
|
||
course there will be good in the world, there will be evil, there
|
||
will still be right and wrong. What is good? That which tends to
|
||
the happiness of sentient beings. What is evil? That which tends to
|
||
the misery, or tends to lessen the happiness of sentient beings.
|
||
What is right? The best thing to be done under the circumstances --
|
||
that is to say, the thing that will increase or preserve the
|
||
happiness of man. What is wrong? That which tends to the misery of
|
||
man.
|
||
|
||
What you call liberty, choice, morality, responsibility, have
|
||
nothing whatever to do with this. There is no difference between
|
||
necessity and liberty. He who is free, acts from choice. What is
|
||
the foundation of his choice? What we really mean by liberty is
|
||
freedom from personal dictation -- we do not wish to be controlled
|
||
by the will of others. To us the nature of things does not seem to
|
||
be a master -- Nature has no will.
|
||
|
||
Society has the right to protect itself by imprisoning those
|
||
who prey upon its interests; but it has no right to punish. It may
|
||
have the right to destroy the life of one dangerous to the
|
||
community; but what has freedom to do with this? Do you kill the
|
||
poisonous serpent because he knew better than to bite? Do you chain
|
||
a wild beast because he is morally responsible? Do you not think
|
||
that the criminal deserves the pity of the virtuous?
|
||
|
||
I was looking forward to the time when the individual might
|
||
feel justified -- when the convict who had worn the garment of
|
||
disgrace might know and feel that he had acted as he must.
|
||
|
||
There is an old Hindoo prayer to which I call your attention:
|
||
"Have mercy, God, upon the vicious; Thou hast already had mercy
|
||
upon the just by making them just."
|
||
|
||
Is it not possible that we may find that everything has been
|
||
necessarily produced? This, of course, would end in the
|
||
justification of men. Is not that a desirable thing? Is it not
|
||
possible that intelligence may at last raise the human race to that
|
||
sublime and philosophic height?
|
||
|
||
You insist, however, that this is Calvinism. I take it for
|
||
granted that you understand Calvinism -- but let me tell you what
|
||
it is. Calvinism asserts that man does as he must, and that,
|
||
notwithstanding this fact, he is responsible for what he does --
|
||
that is to say, for what he is compelled to do -- that is to say,
|
||
for what God does with him; and that, for doing that which he must,
|
||
an infinite God, who compelled him to do it, is justified in
|
||
punishing the man in eternal fire; this, not because the man ought
|
||
to be damned, but simply for the glory of God.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
Starting from the same declaration, that man does as he must,
|
||
I reach the conclusion that we shall finally perceive in this fact
|
||
justification for every individual. And yet you see no difference
|
||
between my doctrine and Calvinism. You insist that damnation and
|
||
justification are substantially the same; and yet the difference is
|
||
as great as human language can express. You call the justification
|
||
of all the world "the Gospel of Despair," and the damnation of
|
||
nearly all the human race the "Consolation of Religion."
|
||
|
||
After all, my dear friend. do you not see that when you come
|
||
to speak of that which is really good, you are compelled to
|
||
describe your ideal human being? It is the human in Christ, and
|
||
only the human, that you by any possibility can understand. You
|
||
speak of one who was born among the poor, who went about doing
|
||
good, who sympathized with those who suffered. You have described,
|
||
not only one, but many millions of the human race, Millions of
|
||
others have carried light to those sitting in darkness; millions
|
||
and millions have taken children in their arms; millions have wept
|
||
that those they love might smile. No language can express the
|
||
goodness, the heroism, the patience and self-denial of the many
|
||
millions, dead and living, who have preserved in the family of man
|
||
the jewels of the heart. You have clad one being in all the virtues
|
||
of the race, in all the attributes of gentleness, patience,
|
||
goodness, and love, and yet that being, according to the New
|
||
Testament, had to his character another side. True, he said, "Come
|
||
unto me and I will give you rest;" but what did he say to those who
|
||
failed to come? You pour our your whole heart in thankfulness to
|
||
this one man who suffered for the right, while I thank not only
|
||
this one, but all the rest. My heart goes out to all the great, the
|
||
self-denying and the good, -- to the founders of nations, singers
|
||
of songs, builders of homes; to the inventors, to the artists who
|
||
have filled the world with beauty, to the composers of music, to
|
||
the soldiers of the right, to the makers of mirth, to honest men,
|
||
and to all the loving mothers of the race.
|
||
|
||
Compare, for one moment, all that the Savior did, all the pain
|
||
and suffering that he relieved, -- compare all this with the
|
||
discovery of anaesthetic. Compare your prophets with the inventors,
|
||
your Apostles with the Keplers, the Humboldts and the Darwins.
|
||
|
||
I belong to the great church that holds the world within its
|
||
starlit aisles; that claims the great and good of every race and
|
||
clime; that finds with joy the grain of gold in every creed, and
|
||
floods with light and love the germs of good in every soul.
|
||
|
||
Most men are provincial, narrow, one sided, only partially
|
||
developed. In a new country we often see a little patch of land, a
|
||
clearing in which the pioneer has built his cabin. This little
|
||
clearing is just large enough to support a family, and the
|
||
remainder of the farm is still forest, in which snakes crawl and
|
||
wild beasts occasionally crouch. It is thus with the brain of the
|
||
average man. There is a little clearing, a little patch, just large
|
||
enough to practice medicine with, or sell goods, or practice law;
|
||
or preach with, or do some kind of business, sufficient to obtain
|
||
bread and food and shelter for a family, while all the rest of the
|
||
brain is covered with primeval forest, in which lie coiled the
|
||
serpents of superstition and from which spring the wild beasts of
|
||
orthodox religion.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
LETTER TO DR. FIELD.
|
||
|
||
Neither in the interest of truth, nor for the benefit of man,
|
||
is it necessary to assert what we do not know. No cause is great
|
||
enough to demand a sacrifice of candor. The mysteries of life and
|
||
death, of good and evil, have never yet been solved.
|
||
|
||
I combat those only who, knowing nothing of the future,
|
||
prophesy an eternity of pain -- those only who sow the seeds of
|
||
fear in the hearts of men -- those only who poison all the springs
|
||
of life, and seat a skeleton at every feast.
|
||
|
||
Let us banish the shriveled hags of superstition; let us
|
||
welcome the beautiful daughters of truth and joy.
|
||
|
||
Robert G. Ingersoll.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
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, Inc. (C) 1990
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|