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1041 lines
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16 page printout.
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INTERVIEWS
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Contents of this file page
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REPLY TO THE KANSAS CITY CLERGY. 1
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SWEARING AND AFFIRMING. 3
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REPLY TO A BUFFALO CRITIC. 4
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BLASPHEMY. 6
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POLITICS AND BRITISH COLUMBIA. 7
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INGERSOLL CATECHIZED. 9
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ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS. 15
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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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REPLY TO THE KANSAS CITY CLERGY.
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Question. Will you take any notice of Mr. Magrath's challenge?
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Answer. I do not think it worth while to discuss with Mr.
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Magrath. I do not say this in disparagement of his ability, as I do
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not know the gentleman. He may be one of the greatest of men. I
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think, however, that Mr. Magrath might better answer what I have
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already said. If he succeeds in that, then I will meet him in
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public discussion. Of course he is an eminent theologian or he
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would not think of discussing these questions with anybody. I have
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never heard of him, but for all that he may be the most intelligent
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of men.
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Question. How have the recently expressed opinions of our
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local clergy impressed you?
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Answer. I suppose you refer to the preachers who have given
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their opinion of me. In the first place I am obliged to them for
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acting as my agents. I think Mr. Hogan has been imposed upon.
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Tacitus is a poor witness -- about like Josephus. I say again that
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we have not a word about Christ written by any human being who
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lived in the time of Christ -- not a solitary word, and Mr. Hogan
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ought to know it.
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The Rev. Mr. Mathews is mistaken. If the Bible proves
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anything, it proves that the world was made in six days and that
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Adam and Eve were built on Saturday. The Bible gives the age of
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Adam when he died, and then gives the ages of others down to the
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flood. and then from that time at least to the return from the
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captivity. If the genealogy of the Bible is true it is about six
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thousand years since Adam was made, and the world is only five days
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older than Adam. It is nonsense to say the days were long periods
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of time. If that is so, away goes the idea of Sunday. The only
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reason for keeping Sunday given in the Bible is that God made the
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world in six days and rested on the seventh. "Mr. Mathews is not
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
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candid. He knows that he cannot answer the arguments I have urged
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against the Bible. He knows that the ancient Jews were barbarians,
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and that the Old Testament is a barbarous book. He knows that it
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upholds slavery and polygamy, and he probably feels ashamed of what
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he is compelled to preach.
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Mr. Jardine takes a very cheerful view of the subject. He
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expects the light to dawn on the unbelievers. He speaks as though
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he were the superior of all Infidels. He claims to be a student of
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the evidences of Christianity. There are no evidences, consequently
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Mr. Jardine is a student of nothing. It is amazing how dignified
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some people can get on a small capital.
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Mr. Haley has sense enough to tell the ministers not to
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attempt to answer me. That is good advice. The ministers had better
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keep still. It is the safer way. If they try to answer what I say,
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the "sheep" will see how foolish the "shepherds" are. The best way
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is for them to say, "that has been answered."
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Mr. Wells agrees with Mr. Haley. He, too, thinks that silence
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is the best weapon. I agree with him. Let the clergy keep still;
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that is the best way. It is better to say nothing than to talk
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absurdity. I am delighted to think that at last the ministers have
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concluded that they had better not answer Infidels.
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Mr. Woods is fearful only for the young. He is afraid that I
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will hurt the children. He thinks that the mother ought to stoop
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over the cradle and in the ears of the babe shout, Hell! So he
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thinks in all probability that the same word ought to be repeated
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at the grave as a consolation to mourners.
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I am glad that Mr. Mann thinks that I am doing neither good
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nor harm. This gives me great hope. If I do no harm, certainly I
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ought not to be eternally damned. It is very consoling to have an
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orthodox minister solemnly assert that I am doing no harm. I wish
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I could say as much for him.
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The truth is, all these ministers have kept back their real
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thoughts, They do not tell their doubts -- they know that orthodoxy
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is doomed -- they know that the old doctrine excites laughter and
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scorn. They know that the fires of hell are dying out; that the
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Bible is ceasing to be an authority; and that the pulpit is growing
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feebler and feebler every day, Poor parsons!
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Question. Would the Catholicism of General Sherman's family
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affect his chances for the presidency?
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Answer. I do not think the religion of the family should have
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any weight one way or the other. It would make no difference with
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me; although I hate Catholicism with all my heart, I do not hate
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Catholics, Some people might be so prejudiced that they would not
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vote for a man whose wife belongs to the Catholic Church; but such
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people are too narrow to be consulted. General Sherman says that he
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wants no office. In that he shows his good sense, He is a great man
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||
and a greater soldier, He has won laurels enough for one brow. He
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||
has the respect and admiration of the nation, and does not need the
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presidency to finish his career. He wishes to enjoy the honors he
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has won and the rest he deserves.
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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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||
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INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
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Question. What is your opinion of Matthew Arnold?
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Answer. He is a man of talent, well educated, a little fussy,
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somewhat sentimental, but he is not a genius. He is not creative.
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He is a critic: -- not an originator, He will not compare with
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Emerson. --
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The Journal, Kansas City, Missouri, February 23, 1884.
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**** ****
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SWEARING AND AFFIRMING.
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Question. What is the difference in the parliamentary oath of
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this country which saves us from such a squabble as they have had
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in England over the Bradlaugh case?
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Answer. Our Constitution provides that a member of Congress
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may swear or affirm. The consequence is that we can have no such
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controversy as they have had in England, The framers of our
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Constitution wished forever to divorce church and state. They knew
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||
that it made no possible difference whether a man swore or
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affirmed, or whether he swore and affirmed to support the
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||
Constitution. All the Federal officers who went into the Rebellion
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||
had sworn or affirmed to support the Constitution, All that did no
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||
good. The entire oath business is a mistake. I think it would be a
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||
thousand times better to abolish all oaths in courts of justice.
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||
The oath allows a rascal to put on the garments of solemnity, the
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||
mask of piety, while he tells a lie. In other words, the oath
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||
allows the villain to give falsehood the appearance of truth. I
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||
think it would be far better to let each witness tell his story and
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||
leave his evidence to the intelligence of the jury and judge. The
|
||
trouble about the oath is that its tendency is to put all witnesses
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||
on an equality; the jury says, "Why, he swore to it." Now, if the
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||
oath were abolished, the jury would judge all testimony according
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to the witness, and then the evidence of one man of good reputation
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would outweigh the lies of thousands of nobodies.
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It was at one time believed that there was something
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miraculous in the oath, that it was a kind of thumbscrew that would
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||
torture the truth out of a rascal, and at one time they believed
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||
that if a man swore falsely he might be struck by lightning or
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paralyzed. But so many people have sworn to lies without having
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their health injured that the old superstition has very little
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weight with the average witness. I think it would be far better to
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||
let every man tell his story; let him be cross-examined, let the
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jury find out as much as they can of his character, of his standing
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||
among his neighbors -- then weigh his testimony in the scale of
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||
reason. The oath is born of superstition, and everything born of
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||
superstition is bad. The oath gives the lie currency; it gives it
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||
for the moment the ring of true metal, and the ordinary average
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juror is imposed upon and justice in many instances defeated.
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Nothing can he more absurd than the swearing of a man to support
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the Constitution. Let him do what he likes. If he does not support
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the Constitution, the probability is that his constituents will
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||
refuse to support him. Every man who swears to support the
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||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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3
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INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
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Constitution swears to support it as he understands it, and no two
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understand it exactly alike. Now, if the oath brightened a man's
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intellect or added to his information or increased his patriotism
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or gave him a little more honesty, it would be a good thing -- but
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it doesn't. And as a consequence it is a very useless and absurd
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proceeding. Nothing amuses me more in a court than to see one calf
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kissing the tanned skin of another. --
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The Courier, Buffalo, New York, May 19, 1884.
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**** ****
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REPLY TO A BUFFALO CRITIC.
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Question. What have you to say in reply to the letter in to-
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day's Times signed R.H.S.?
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Answer. I find that I am accused of "four flagrant wrongs,"
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and while I am not as yet suffering from the qualms of conscience,
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nor do I feel called upon to confess and be forgiven, yet I have
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something to say in self-defence.
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As to the first objection made by your correspondent, namely,
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that my doctrine deprives people of the hope that after this life
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is ended they will meet their fathers, mothers, sisters and
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brothers, long since passed away, in the land beyond the grave, and
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there enjoy their company forever. I have this to say: If
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||
Christianity is true we are not quite certain of meeting our
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relatives and friends where we can enjoy their company forever. If
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||
Christianity is true most of our friends will be in hell. The ones
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I love best and whose memory I cherish will certainly be among the
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lost. The trouble about Christianity is that it is infinitely
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selfish. Each man thinks that if he can save his own little,
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shriveled, microscopic soul, that is enough. No matter what becomes
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of the rest. Christianity has no consolation for a generous man. I
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||
do not wish to go to heaven if the ones who have given me joy are
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||
to be lost. I would much rather go with them. The only thing that
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makes life endurable in this world is human love, and yet,
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||
according to Christianity, that is the very thing we are not to
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have in the other world. We are to be so taken up with Jesus and
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the angels, that we shall care nothing about our brothers and
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sisters that have been damned. We shall be so carried away with the
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||
music of the harp that we shall not even hear the wail of father or
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mother. Such a religion is a disgrace to human nature.
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As to the second objection, -- that society cannot be held
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together in peace and good order without hell and a belief in
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eternal torment, I would ask why an infinitely wise and good God
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should make people of so poor and mean a character that society
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||
cannot be held together without searing them. Is it possible that
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God has so made the world that the threat of eternal punishment is
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||
necessary for the preservation of society?
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||
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||
The writer of the letter also says that it is necessary to
|
||
believe that if a man commits murder here he is destined to be
|
||
punished in hell for the offence. This is Christianity. Yet nearly
|
||
every murderer goes directly from the gallows to God. Nearly every
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||
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||
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||
Bank of Wisdom
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||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
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||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
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|
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murderer takes it upon himself to lecture the assembled multitude
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who have gathered to see him hanged, and invite them to meet him in
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heaven. When the rope is about his neck he feels the wings growing.
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||
That is the trouble with the Christian doctrine. Every murderer is
|
||
told he may repent and go to heaven, and have the happiness of
|
||
seeing his victim in hell. Should heaven at any time become dull,
|
||
the vein of pleasure can be re-thrilled by the sight of his victim
|
||
wriggling on the gridiron of God's justice. Really, Christianity
|
||
leads men to sin on credit. It sells rascality on time and tells
|
||
all the devils they can have the benefit of the gospel bankrupt
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||
act.
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||
The next point in the letter is that I do not preach for the
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||
benefit of mankind, but for the money which is the price of blood.
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Of course it makes no difference whether I preach for money or not.
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That is to say, it makes no difference to the preached. The
|
||
arguments I advance are either good or bad. If they are bad they
|
||
can easily be answered by argument. If they are not they cannot be
|
||
answered by personalities or by ascribing to me selfish motives. It
|
||
is not a personal matter. It is a matter of logic, of sense -- not
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||
a matter of slander, vituperation or hatred. The writer of the
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letter, R.H.S., may be an exceedingly good person, yet that will
|
||
add no weight to his or her argument. He or she may be a very bad
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person, but that would not weaken the logic of the letter, if it
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had any logic to begin with. It is not for me to say what my
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motives are in what I do or say; it must be left to the judgment of
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mankind. I presume I am about as bad as most folks, and as good as
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some, but my goodness or badness has nothing to do with the
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question. I may have committed every crime in the world, yet that
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does not make the story of the flood reasonable, nor does it even
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tend to show that the three gentlemen in the furnace were not
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scorched. I may be the best man in the world, yet that does not go
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to prove that Jonah was swallowed by the whale. Let me say right
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here that if there is another world I believe that every soul who
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finds the way to that shore will have an Everlasting opportunity to
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do right -- of reforming. My objection to Christianity is that it
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is infinitely cruel, infinitely selfish, and I might add infinitely
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absurd. I deprive no one of any hope unless you call the
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expectation of eternal pain a hope.
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Question. Have you read the Rev, Father Lambert's "Notes on
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Ingersoll," and if so, what have you to say of them or in reply to
|
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them?
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Answer. I have read a few pages or paragraphs of that
|
||
pamphlet, and do not feel called upon to say anything. Mr. Lambert
|
||
has the same right to publish his ideas that I have, and the
|
||
readers must judge. People who believe his way will probably think
|
||
that he has succeeded in answering me. After all, he must leave the
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public to decide. I have no anxiety about the decision. Day by day
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the people are advancing, and in a little while the sacred
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superstitions of to-day will be cast aside with the foolish myths
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and fables of the pagan world.
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As a matter of fact there can be no argument in favor of the
|
||
supernatural. Suppose you should ask if I had read the work of that
|
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gentleman who says that twice two are five. I should answer you
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||
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||
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||
Bank of Wisdom
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||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
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INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
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that no gentleman can prove that twice two are five; and yet this
|
||
is exactly as easy as to prove the existence of the supernatural.
|
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There are no arguments in favor of the supernatural. There are
|
||
theories and fears and mistakes and prejudices and guesses, but no
|
||
arguments -- plenty of faith, but no facts; plenty of divine
|
||
revelation, but no demonstration. The supernatural, in my judgment,
|
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is a mistake. I believe in the natural. --
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The Times, Buffalo, New York, May 19, 1884.
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**** ****
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BLASPHEMY.
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|
||
["If Robert G. Ingersoll indulges in blasphemy to-night in his
|
||
lecture, as he has in other places and in this city before, he will
|
||
be arrested before he leaves the city." So spoke Rev. Irwin H.
|
||
Torrence, General Secretary of the Pennsylvania Bible Society,
|
||
Yesterday afternoon to a "Press" reporter. "We have consulted
|
||
counsel: the law is with us, and Ingersoll has but to do what he
|
||
has done before, to find himself in a cell. Here is the act of
|
||
March 31, 1860:"
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||
|
||
"If any person shall willfully, premeditatedly and
|
||
despitefully blaspheme or speak loosely and profanely of Almighty
|
||
God, Christ Jesus, the Holy Spirit, or the Scriptures of Truth,
|
||
such person, on conviction thereof, shall be sentenced to pay a
|
||
fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, and undergo an imprisonment
|
||
not exceeding three months, or either, at the discretion of the
|
||
court."
|
||
|
||
Last evening Colonel Ingersoll sat in the dining room at Guy's
|
||
Hotel, just in from New York City. When told of the plans of Mr.
|
||
Torrence and his friends, he laughed and said:]
|
||
|
||
I did not suppose that anybody was idiotic enough to want me
|
||
arrested for blasphemy. It seems to me that an infinite Being can
|
||
take care of himself without the aid of any agent of a Bible
|
||
society. Perhaps it is wrong for me to be here while the Methodist
|
||
Conference is in session. Of course no one who differs from the
|
||
Methodist ministers should ever visit Philadelphia while they are
|
||
here. I most humbly hope to be forgiven.
|
||
|
||
Question. What do you think of the law of 1860?
|
||
|
||
Answer. It is exceedingly foolish. Surely, there is no need
|
||
for the Legislature of Pennsylvania to protect an infinite God, and
|
||
why should the Bible be protected by law? The most ignorant priest
|
||
can hold Darwin up to orthodox scorn. This talk of the Rev. Mr.
|
||
Irwin H. Torreice shows that my lectures are needed; that religious
|
||
people do not know what real liberty is. I presume that the law of
|
||
1860 is an old one re-enacted. It is a survival of ancient
|
||
ignorance and bigotry, and no one in the Legislature thought it
|
||
worth while to fight it. It is the same as the law against
|
||
swearing, both are dead letters and amount to nothing. They are not
|
||
enforced and should not be. Public opinion will regulate such
|
||
matters. If all who take the name of God in vain were imprisoned
|
||
there would not he room in the jails to hold the ministers. They
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
speak of God in the most flippant and snap-your-fingers way that
|
||
can be conceived of. They speak to him as though he were an
|
||
intimate chum, and metaphorically slap him on the back in the most
|
||
familiar manner possible.
|
||
|
||
Question. Have you ever had any similar experience before?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Oh yes -- threats have been made, but I never was
|
||
arrested. When Mr. Torrence gets cool he will see that he has made
|
||
a mistake. People in Philadelphia have been in the habit of calling
|
||
the citizens of Boston bigots -- but there is more real freedom of
|
||
thought and expression in Boston than in almost any other city in
|
||
the world. I think that as I am to suffer in hell forever, Mr.
|
||
Torrence ought to be satisfied and let me have a good time here. He
|
||
can amuse himself through all eternity by seeing me in hell, and
|
||
that ought to be enough to satisfy, not only an agent, but the
|
||
whole Bible society. I never expected any trouble in this State,
|
||
and most sincerely hope that Mr. Torrence will not trouble me and
|
||
make the city a laughing stock.
|
||
|
||
Philadelphia has no time to waste in such foolish things. Let
|
||
the Bible take its chances with other books. Let everybody feel
|
||
that he has the right freely to express his opinions, provided he
|
||
is decent and kind about it. Certainly the Christians now ought to
|
||
treat infidels as well as Penn did Indians.
|
||
|
||
Nothing could he more perfectly idiotic than in this day and
|
||
generation to prosecute any man for giving his conclusions upon any
|
||
religious subject. Mr. Torrence would have had Huxley and Haeckel
|
||
and Tyndall arrested; would have had Humboldt and John Stuart Mill
|
||
and Harriet Martineau and George Eliot locked up in the city jail.
|
||
Mr. Torrence is a fossil from the old red sandstone of a mistake.
|
||
Let him rest. To hear these people talk you would suppose that God
|
||
is some petty king, some lilliputian prince, who was about to be
|
||
dethroned, and who was nearly wild for recruits.
|
||
|
||
Question. But what would you do if they should make an attempt
|
||
to arrest you?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Nothing, except to defend myself in court. --
|
||
|
||
Philadelphia Press, May 24, 1884.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
POLITICS AND BRITISH COLUMBIA.
|
||
|
||
Question. I understand that there was some trouble in
|
||
connection with your lecture in Victoria, B.C. What are the facts?
|
||
|
||
Answer. The published accounts, as circulated by the
|
||
Associated Press, were greatly exaggerated. The affair was simply
|
||
this: The authorities endeavored to prevent the lecture. They
|
||
refused the license, on the ground that the theater was unsafe,
|
||
although it was on the ground floor, had many exits and entrances,
|
||
not counting the windows. The theater was changed to meet the
|
||
objections of the fire commissioner, and the authorities expressed
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
their satisfaction and issued the license. Afterward further
|
||
objection was raised, and on the night of the lecture, when the
|
||
building was about two-thirds full, the police appeared and said
|
||
that the lecture would not be allowed to be delivered, because the
|
||
house was unsafe. After a good deal of talk, the policeman in
|
||
authority said that there should be another door, whereupon, my
|
||
friends, in a few minutes, made another door with an ax and saw,
|
||
the crowd was admitted and the lecture was delivered. The audience
|
||
was well-behaved, intelligent and appreciative. Beyond some talking
|
||
in the hall, and the natural indignation of those who had purchased
|
||
tickets and were refused admittance, there was no disturbance. I
|
||
understand that those who opposed the lecture are now headily
|
||
ashamed of the course pursued.
|
||
|
||
Question. Are you going to take any part in the campaign?
|
||
|
||
Answer. It is not my intention to make any political speeches.
|
||
I have made a good many in the past, and, in my judgment, have done
|
||
my part. I have no other interest in politics than every citizen
|
||
should have. I want that party to triumph which, in my judgment,
|
||
represents the best interests of the country. I have no doubt about
|
||
the issue of the election. I believe that Mr, Blaine will be the
|
||
next President. But there are plenty of talkers, and I really think
|
||
that I have earned a vacation.
|
||
|
||
Question. What do you think Cleveland's chances are in New
|
||
York?
|
||
|
||
Answer. At this distance it is hard to say. The recent action
|
||
of Tammany complicates matters somewhat, But my opinion is that
|
||
Blaine will carry the State. I had a letter yesterday from that
|
||
State, giving the opinion of a gentleman well informed, that Blaine
|
||
would carry New York by no less than fifty thousand majority.
|
||
|
||
Question. What figure will Butler cut in the campaign?
|
||
|
||
Answer. I hardly think that Butler will have many followers on
|
||
the 4th of November. His forces will gradually go to one side or
|
||
the other. It is only when some great principle is at stake that
|
||
thousands of men are willing to vote with a known minority.
|
||
|
||
Question. But what about the Prohibitionists?
|
||
|
||
Answer. They have a very large following. They are fighting
|
||
for something they believe to be of almost infinite consequence,
|
||
and I can readily understand how a Prohibitionist is willing to be
|
||
in the minority. It may be well enough for me to say here, that my
|
||
course politically is not determined by my likes or dislikes of
|
||
individuals. I want to be governed by principles, not persons. If
|
||
I really thought that in this campaign a real principle was at
|
||
stake, I should take part. The only, great question now is
|
||
protection, and I am satisfied that it is in no possible danger.
|
||
|
||
Question. Not even in the case of a Democratic victory?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Not even in the event of a Democratic victory. No
|
||
State in the Union is for free trade. Every free trader has an
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
exception. These exceptions combined, control the tariff
|
||
legislation of this country, and if the Democrats were in power
|
||
to-day, with the control of the House and Senate and Executive, the
|
||
exceptions would combine and protect protection. As long as the
|
||
Federal Government collects taxes or revenue on imports, just so
|
||
long these revenues will be arranged to protect home manufacturers.
|
||
|
||
Question. you said that if there were a great principle at
|
||
stake, you would take part in the campaign. You think, then, that
|
||
there is no great principle involved?
|
||
|
||
Answer. If it were a matter of personal liberty, I should take
|
||
part. If the Republican party had stood by the Civil Rights Bill,
|
||
I should have taken part in the present campaign.
|
||
|
||
Question. Still, I suppose we can count on you as a
|
||
Republican?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Certainly, I am a Republican. --
|
||
|
||
Evening Post, San Francisco, California, September 16, 1884.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL CATECHIZED.
|
||
|
||
Question. Does Christianity advance or retard civilization?
|
||
|
||
Answer. If by Christianity you mean the orthodox church, then
|
||
I unhesitatingly answer that it does retard civilization, always
|
||
has retarded it, and always will. I can imagine no man who can be
|
||
benefitted by being made a Catholic or a Presbyterian or a Baptist
|
||
or a Methodist -- or, in other words, by being made an orthodox
|
||
Christian. But by Christianity I do not mean morality, kindness,
|
||
forgiveness, justice. Those virtues are nor distinctively
|
||
Christian. They are claimed by Mohammedans and Buddhists, by
|
||
Infidels and Atheists -- and practiced by some of all classes.
|
||
Christianity consists in the miraculous, the marvelous, and the
|
||
impossible.
|
||
|
||
The one thing that I most seriously object to in Christianity
|
||
is the doctrine of eternal punishment. That doctrine subverts every
|
||
idea of justice. It teaches the infinite absurdity that a finite
|
||
offence can be justly visited by eternal punishment. Another
|
||
serious objection I have, is, that Christianity endeavors to
|
||
destroy intellectual liberty. Nothing is better calculated to
|
||
retard civilization than to subvert the idea of justice. Nothing is
|
||
better calculated to retain barbarism than to deny to every human
|
||
being the right to think. Justice and Liberty are the two wings
|
||
that bear man forward. The church, for a thousand years, did all
|
||
within its power to prevent the expression of honest thought; and
|
||
when the church had power, there was in this world no civilization.
|
||
We have advanced just in the proportion that Christianity has lost
|
||
power. Those nations in which the church is still powerful are
|
||
still almost savage -- Portugal, Spain, and many others I might
|
||
name. Probably no country is more completely under the control of
|
||
the religious idea than Russia. The Czar is the direct
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
representative of God. He is the head of the church, as well as of
|
||
the state. In Russia every mouth is a bastille, and every tongue a
|
||
convict. This Russian pope, this representative of God, has on
|
||
earth his hell 'Siberia', and he imitates the orthodox God to the
|
||
extent of his health and strength.
|
||
|
||
Everywhere man advances as the church loses power. In my
|
||
judgment, Ireland can never succeed until it ceases to be Catholic;
|
||
and there can be no successful uprising while the confessional
|
||
exists. At one time in New England the church had complete power.
|
||
There was then no religious liberty. And so we might make a tour of
|
||
the world, and find that superstition always has been, "and forever
|
||
will be, inconsistent with human advancement.
|
||
|
||
Question. Do not the evidences of design in the universe prove
|
||
a Creator?
|
||
|
||
Answer. If there were any evidences of design in the universe,
|
||
certainly they would tend to prove a designer, but they would not
|
||
prove a Creator. Design does not prove creation. A man makes a
|
||
machine. That does not prove that he made the material out of which
|
||
the machine is constructed. You find the planets arranged in
|
||
accordance with what you call a plan. That does not prove that they
|
||
were created. It may prove that they are governed, but it certainly
|
||
does not prove that they were created. Is it consistent to say that
|
||
a design cannot exist without a designer, but that a designer can?
|
||
Does not a designer need a design as much as a design needs a
|
||
designer? Does not a Creator need a Creator as much as the thing we
|
||
think has been created? In other words, is not this simply a circle
|
||
of human ignorance? Why not say that the universe has existed from
|
||
eternity, as well as to say that a Creator has existed from
|
||
eternity? And do you not thus avoid at least one absurdity by
|
||
saying that the universe has existed from eternity, instead of
|
||
saying that it was created by a Creator who existed from eternity?
|
||
Because if your Creator existed from eternity, and created the
|
||
universe, there was a time when he commenced; and back of that,
|
||
according to Shelley, is "an eternity of idleness."
|
||
|
||
Some people say that God existed from eternity, and has
|
||
created eternity. It is impossible to conceive of an act co-equal
|
||
with eternity. If you say that God has existed forever, and has
|
||
always acted, then you make the universe eternal, and you make the
|
||
universe as old as God; and if the universe be as old as God, he
|
||
certainly did not create it.
|
||
|
||
These questions of origin and destiny -- of infinite gods --
|
||
are beyond the powers of the human mind. They cannot be solved. We
|
||
might as well try to travel fast enough to get beyond the horizon.
|
||
It is like a man trying to run away from his girdle. Consequently,
|
||
I believe in turning our attention to things of importance -- to
|
||
questions that may by some possibility be solved. It is of no
|
||
importance to me whether God exists or not. I exist, and it is
|
||
important to me to be happy while I exist. Therefore I had better
|
||
turn my attention to finding out the secret of happiness, instead
|
||
of trying to ascertain the secret of the universe.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
I say with regard to God, I do not know; and therefore I am
|
||
accused of being arrogant and egotistic. Religious papers say that
|
||
I do know, because Webster told me. They use Webster as a witness
|
||
to prove the divinity of Christ, They say that Webster was on the
|
||
God side, and therefore I ought to be. I can hardly afford to take
|
||
Webster's ideas of another world, when his ideas about this were so
|
||
bad. When bloodhounds were pursuing a woman through the tangled
|
||
swamps of the South -- she hungry for liberty -- Webster took the
|
||
side of the bloodhounds. Such a man is no authority for me. Bacon
|
||
denied the Copernican system of astronomy; he is an unsafe guide.
|
||
Wesley believed in witches; I cannot follow him. No man should
|
||
quote a name instead of an argument; no man should bring forward a
|
||
person instead of a principle, unless he is willing to accept all
|
||
the ideas of that person.
|
||
|
||
Question. Is not a pleasant illusion preferable to dreary
|
||
truth -- a future life being in question?
|
||
|
||
Answer. I think it is. I think that a pleasing illusion is
|
||
better than a terrible truth, so far as its immediate results are
|
||
concerned. I would rather think the one I love living, than to
|
||
think her dead. I would rather think that I had a large balance in
|
||
bank than that my account was overdrawn. I would rather think I was
|
||
healthy than to know that I bad a cancer. But if we have an
|
||
illusion, let us have it pleasing. The orthodox illusion is the
|
||
worst that can possibly be conceived. Take hell out of that
|
||
illusion, take eternal pain away from that dream, and say that the
|
||
whole world is to be happy forever -- then you might have an excuse
|
||
for calling it a pleasant illusion; but it is, in fact, a nightmare
|
||
a perpetual horror -- a cross, on which the happiness of man has
|
||
been crucified.
|
||
|
||
Question. Are not religion and morals inseparable?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Religion and morality have nothing in common, and yet
|
||
there is no religion except the practice of morality. But what you
|
||
call religion is simply superstition. Religion as it is now taught
|
||
teaches our duties toward God -- our obligations to the Infinite,
|
||
and the results of a failure to discharge those obligations. I
|
||
believe that we are under no obligations to the Infinite; that we
|
||
cannot be. All our obligations are to each other, and to sentient
|
||
beings. "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
|
||
saved," has nothing to do with morality. "Do unto others as ye
|
||
would that others should do unto you" has nothing to do with
|
||
believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. Baptism has nothing to do with
|
||
morality. "Pay your honest debts." That has nothing to do with
|
||
baptism. What is called religion is simple superstition, with which
|
||
morality has nothing to do.
|
||
|
||
The churches do not prevent people from committing natural
|
||
offenses, but restrain them from committing artificial ones. As for
|
||
instance, the Catholic Church can prevent one of its members from
|
||
eating meat on Friday, but not from whipping his wife. The
|
||
Episcopal Church can prevent dancing, it may be, in Lent, but not
|
||
slander. The Presbyterian can keep a man from working on Sunday,
|
||
but not from practicing deceit on Monday. And so I might go through
|
||
the churches. They lay the greater stress upon the artificial
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
offenses. Those countries that are the most religious are the most
|
||
immoral. When the world was under the control of the Catholic
|
||
Church, it reached the very pit of immorality, and nations have
|
||
advanced in morals just in proportion that they have lost
|
||
Christianity.
|
||
|
||
Question. It is frequently asserted that there is nothing new
|
||
in your objections against Christianity. What is your reply to such
|
||
assertions?
|
||
|
||
Answer. Of course, the editors of religious papers will say
|
||
this; Christians will say this. In my opinion, an argument is new
|
||
until it has been answered. An argument is absolutely fresh, and
|
||
has upon its leaves the dew of morning, until it has been refuted.
|
||
All men have experienced, it may be, in some degree, what we call
|
||
love. Millions of men have written about it. The subject of course
|
||
is old. It is only the presentation that can be new. Thousands of
|
||
men have attacked superstition. The subject is old, but the manner
|
||
in which the facts are handled, the arguments grouped -- these may
|
||
be forever new. Millions of men have preached Christianity.
|
||
Certainly there is nothing new in the original ideas. Nothing can
|
||
be new except the presentation, the grouping. The ideas may be old,
|
||
but they may be clothed in new garments of passion; they may be
|
||
given additional human interest. A man takes a fact, or an old
|
||
subject, as a sculptor takes a rock; the rock is not new. Of this
|
||
rock he makes a statue; the statue is new. And yet some orthodox
|
||
man might say there is nothing new about that statue: "I know the
|
||
man that dug the rock; I know the owner of the quarry." Substance
|
||
is eternal; forms are new. So in the human mind certain ideas, or
|
||
in the human heart certain passions, are forever old; but genius
|
||
forever gives them new forms, new meanings; and this is the
|
||
perpetual originality of genius.
|
||
|
||
Question. Do you consider that churches are injurious to the
|
||
community?
|
||
|
||
Answer. In the exact proportion that churches teach falsehood;
|
||
in the exact proportion that they destroy liberty of thought, the
|
||
free action or the human mind; in the exact proportion that they
|
||
teach the doctrine of eternal pain, and convince people of its
|
||
truth -- they are injurious. In the proportion that they teach
|
||
morality and justice, and practice kindness and charity -- in that
|
||
proportion they are a benefit. Every church, therefore, is a mixed
|
||
problem -- part good and part bad. In one direction it leads toward
|
||
and sheds light; in the other direction its influence is entirely
|
||
bad.
|
||
|
||
Now, I would like to civilize the churches, so that they will
|
||
be able to do good deeds with our building bad creeds. In other
|
||
words, take out the superstitions and the miraculous, and leave the
|
||
human and the moral.
|
||
|
||
Question. Why do you not respond to the occasional clergyman
|
||
who replies to your lectures?
|
||
|
||
Answer. In the first place, no clergyman has ever replied to
|
||
my lectures. In the second place, no clergyman ever will reply to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
my lectures. He does not answer my arguments -- he attacks me; and
|
||
the replies that I have seen are not worth answering. They are far
|
||
below the dignity of the question under discussion. Most of them
|
||
are ill-mannered, as abusive as illogical, and as malicious as
|
||
weak. I cannot reply without feeling humiliated. I cannot use their
|
||
weapons, and my weapons they do not understand. I attack
|
||
Christianity because it is cruel, and they account for all my
|
||
actions by putting behind them base motives. They make it at once
|
||
a personal question. They imagine that epithets are good enough
|
||
arguments with which to answer an Infidel. A few years ago they
|
||
would have imprisoned me. A few years before that they would have
|
||
burned me. We have advanced. Now they only slander and I
|
||
congratulate myself on the fact that even that is not believed.
|
||
Ministers do not believe each other about each other. The truth has
|
||
never yet been ascertained in any trial by a church. The longer the
|
||
trial lasts, the obscurer is the truth. They will not believe each
|
||
other, even on oath; and one of the most celebrated ministers of
|
||
this country has publicly announced that there is no use in
|
||
answering a lie started by his own church; that if he does answer
|
||
it -- if he does kill it -- forty more lies will come to the
|
||
funeral.
|
||
|
||
In this connection we must remember that the priests of one
|
||
religion never credit the miracles of another religion. Is this
|
||
because priests instinctively know priests? Now, when a Christian
|
||
tells a Buddhist some of the miracles of the Testament, the
|
||
Buddhist smiles. When a Buddhist tells a Christen the miracles
|
||
performed by Buddha, the Christian laughs. This reminds me of an
|
||
incident. A man told a most wonderful story, Everybody present
|
||
expressed surprise and astonishment, except one man. He said
|
||
nothing; he did not even change countenance, One who noticed that
|
||
the story had no effect on this man, said to him: "You do not seem
|
||
to be astonished in the least at this marvelous tale." The man
|
||
replied, "No; I am a liar myself."
|
||
|
||
You see, I am not trying to answer individual ministers. I am
|
||
attacking the whole body of superstition. I am trying to kill the
|
||
entire dog, and I do not feel like wasting any time killing fleas
|
||
on that dog. When the dog dies, the fleas will be out of
|
||
provisions, and in that way we shall answer them all at once.
|
||
|
||
So, I do not bother myself answering religious newspapers. In
|
||
the first place, they are not worth answering; and in the second
|
||
place, to answer would only produce a new crop of falsehoods. You
|
||
know, the editor of a religious newspaper, as a rule, is one who
|
||
has failed in the pulpit; and you can imagine the brains necessary
|
||
to edit a religious weekly from this fact. I have known some good
|
||
religious editors. By some I mean one. I do not say that there are
|
||
not others, but I do say I do not know them. I might add, here,
|
||
that the one I did know is dead.
|
||
|
||
Since I have been in this city there have been some "replies"
|
||
to me. They have been almost idiotic. A Catholic priest asked me
|
||
how I had the impudence to differ with Newton. Newton, he says,
|
||
believed in a God; and I ask this Catholic priest how he has the
|
||
impudence to differ with Newton. Newton was a Protestant. This
|
||
simply shows the absurdity of using men's names for arguments, This
|
||
same priest proves the existence of God by a pagan orator. Is it
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
possible that God's last witness died with Cicero? If it is
|
||
necessary to believe in a God now, the witnesses ought to be on
|
||
hand now.
|
||
|
||
Another man, pretending to answer me, quotes Le Conte, a
|
||
geologist; and according to this geologist we are "getting very
|
||
near to the splendors of the great white throne." Where is the
|
||
great white throne? Can any one, by studying geology, find the
|
||
locality of the great white throne? To what stratum docs it belong?
|
||
In what geologic period was the great white throne formed? What on
|
||
earth has geology to do with the throne of God?
|
||
|
||
The truth is, there can be no reply to the argument that man
|
||
should be governed by his reason; that he should depend upon
|
||
observation and experience; that he should use the faculties he has
|
||
for his own benefit, and the benefit of his fellow-men. There is no
|
||
answer. It is not within the power of man to substantiate the
|
||
supernatural. It is beyond the power of evidence.
|
||
|
||
Question. Why do the theological seminaries find it difficult
|
||
to get students?
|
||
|
||
Answer. I was told last spring, at New Haven, that the
|
||
"theologs," as they call the young men there being fitted for the
|
||
ministry, were not regarded as intellectual by all the other
|
||
students. The orthodox pulpit has no rewards for genius. It has
|
||
rewards only for stupidity, for belief -- not for investigation,
|
||
not for thought; and the consequence is that young men of talent
|
||
avoid the pulpit. I think I heard the other day that of all the
|
||
students at Harvard only nine are preparing for the ministry. The
|
||
truth is, the ministry is not regarded as an intellectual
|
||
occupation. The average church now consists of women and children.
|
||
Men go to please their wives, or stay at home and subscribe to
|
||
please their wives; and the wives are beginning to think, and many
|
||
of them are staying at home. Many of them now prefer the theater or
|
||
the opera or the Park or the seashore or the forest or the
|
||
companionship of their husbands and children at home.
|
||
|
||
Question. How does the religious state of California compare
|
||
with the rest of the Union?
|
||
|
||
Answer. I find that sensible people everywhere are about the
|
||
same, and the proportion of Freethinkers depends on the proportion
|
||
of sensible folks. I think that California has her full share of
|
||
sensible people. I find everywhere the best people and the
|
||
brightest people -- the people with the most heart and the best
|
||
brain -- all tending toward free thought. Of course, a man of brain
|
||
cannot believe the miracles of the Old and New Testaments. A man of
|
||
heart cannot believe in the doctrine of eternal pain. We have found
|
||
that other religions are like ours with precisely the same basis,
|
||
the same idiotic miracles the same martyrs, the same early fathers,
|
||
and, as a rule, the same Christ or Savior. It will hardly do to say
|
||
that all others like ours are false, and ours the only true one,
|
||
when others substantially like it are thousands of years older. We
|
||
have at last found that a religion is simply an effort on the part
|
||
of man to account for what he sees, what he experiences, what he
|
||
feels, what he fears, and what he hopes. Every savage has his
|
||
philosophy. That is his religion and his science.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
INTERVIEWS - FIFTH SERIES
|
||
|
||
The religions of to-day are the sciences of the past; and it
|
||
may be that the sciences of to-day will be the religions of the
|
||
future, and that other sciences will be as far beyond them as the
|
||
science of to-day is beyond the religion of to-day. As a rule,
|
||
religion is a sanctified mistake, and heresy a slandered fact. In
|
||
other words, the human mind grows -- and as it grows it abandons
|
||
the old, and the old gets it revenge by maligning the new. --
|
||
|
||
The San Franciscan, San Francisco, October 4, 1884.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS.
|
||
|
||
MY family and I regard Christmas as a holiday -- that is to
|
||
say, a day of rest and pleasure -- a day to get acquainted with
|
||
each other, a day to recall old memories, and for the cultivation
|
||
of social amenities. The festival now called Christmas is far older
|
||
than Christianity. It was known and celebrated for thousands of
|
||
years before the establishment of what is known as our religion. It
|
||
is a relic of sun-worship. It is the day on which the sun triumphs
|
||
over the hosts of darkness, and thousands of years before the New
|
||
Testament was written, thousands of years before the republic of
|
||
Rome existed, before one stone of Athens was laid, before the
|
||
Pharaohs ruled in Egypt, before the religion of Brahma, before
|
||
Sanskrit was spoken, men and women crawled out of their caves,
|
||
pushed the matted hair from their eyes, and greeted the triumph of
|
||
the sun over the powers of the night.
|
||
|
||
There are many relics of this worship -- among which is the
|
||
shaving of the priest's head, leaving the spot shaven surrounded by
|
||
hair, in imitation of the rays of the sun. There is still another
|
||
relic -- the ministers of our day close their eyes in prayer. When
|
||
men worshiped the sun-when they looked at that luminary and
|
||
implored its assistance -- they shut their eyes as a matter of
|
||
necessity. Afterward the priests looking at their idols glittering
|
||
with gems, shut their eyes in flattery, pretending that they could
|
||
not bear the effulgence of the presence; and to-day, thousands of
|
||
years after the old ideas have passed away, the modern parson,
|
||
without knowing the origin of the custom, closes his eyes when he
|
||
prays.
|
||
|
||
There are many other relics and souvenirs of the dead worship
|
||
of the sun, and this festival was adopted by Egyptians, Greeks,
|
||
Romans, and by Christians. As a matter of fact, Christianity
|
||
furnished new steam for an old engine, infused a new spirit into an
|
||
old religion, and, as a matter of course, the old festival
|
||
remained.
|
||
|
||
For all of our festivals you will find corresponding pagan
|
||
festivals. For instance, take the eucharist, the communion, where
|
||
persons partake of the body and blood of the Deity. This is an
|
||
exceedingly old custom. Among the ancients they ate cakes made of
|
||
corn, in honor of Ceres and they called these cakes the flesh of
|
||
the goddess, and they drank wine in honor of Bacchus, and called
|
||
this the blood of their god. And so I could go on giving the pagan
|
||
origin of every Christian ceremony and custom. The probability is
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS.
|
||
|
||
that the worship of the sun was once substantially universal, and
|
||
consequently the festival of Christ was equally wide spread.
|
||
|
||
As other religions have been produced, the old customs have
|
||
been adopted and continued, so that the result is, this festival of
|
||
Christmas is almost world-wide. It is popular because it is a
|
||
holiday. Overworked people are glad of days that bring rest and
|
||
recreation and allow them to meet their families and their friends.
|
||
They are glad of days when they give and receive gifts -- evidences
|
||
of friendship, of remembrance and love. It is popular because it is
|
||
really human, and because it is interwoven with our customs,
|
||
habits, literature, and thought.
|
||
|
||
For my part I am willing to have two or three a year -- the
|
||
more holidays the better. Many people have an idea that I am
|
||
opposed to Sunday. I am perfectly willing to have two a week. All
|
||
I insist on is that these days shall be for the benefit of the
|
||
people, and that they shall be kept not in a way to make folks
|
||
miserable or sad or hungry, but in a way to make people happy, and
|
||
to add a little to the joy of life. Of course, I am in favor of
|
||
everybody keeping holidays to suit himself, provided he does not
|
||
interfere with others, and I am perfectly willing that everybody
|
||
should go to church on that day, provided he is willing that I
|
||
should go somewhere else. --
|
||
|
||
The Tribune, New York, December, 1889.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
16
|
||
|