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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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BIG BLUE BOOK NO. B-7
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Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
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STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
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HALDEMAN-JULIUS COMPANY
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GIRARD, KANSAS
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**** ****
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STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
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THE ORDEAL OF INGERSOLL
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A LIE can travel halfway around the world, said Mark Twain,
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while the truth is getting its clothes on. Robert G. Ingersoll, who
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began each day with an answer to a lie, put it this way: "It is
|
||
almost impossible to overtake, and kill, and bury a lie. If you do,
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||
some one will erect a monument over the grave, and the lie is born
|
||
again as an epitaph." We cannot at once point to a man who was more
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||
a victim of the ubiquitous, irrepressible lie than was Ingersoll:
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and, while Ingersoll was too big a man to be destroyed by the
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liars, the latter were not dismayed but kept up their foolish,
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||
hateful gabble in the face of the strongest words of truth. A
|
||
slight review of the trail of falsehood that wound itself crazily
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||
across the career of the agnostic orator reminds us forcibly that
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||
nothing can equal the recklessness and the hardihood of religions
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lying: nothing, unless it be the patriotic lying that is so
|
||
notorious an instrument of Christian warfare. It is true that men
|
||
will lie more contemptibly and more conscientiously -- with less
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||
restraint of common honesty and a greater abandon of virtue -- for
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||
God or country than for any other cause.
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||
|
||
The lie for God or country is unique in the low demand of
|
||
plausibility: really, any sort of lie will pass, and it appears
|
||
indeed that the silliest and crudest lies are the most popular. The
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||
patriot is guarded carefully from contact with the lies of the
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||
enemy and is restricted, quite simply, to the home product of
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||
falsehood. God's own liars have the advantage that their opponents,
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||
on the whole, do not try to retaliate with false weapons. For
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||
example, Ingersoll, although he was pursued and pestered all of his
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||
active life by liars and their lies, never stooped to lie in
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||
return. Of course, there was another reason for this than the fact
|
||
that Ingersoll was naturally a truthful man. It was not simply
|
||
forbearance that prevented him from trying to out-lie the religious
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||
liars. He had, in the long run, better weapons. He had wit,
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||
eloquence, intelligence, charm and force of personality far beyond
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||
those who spread the calumnies about him.
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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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STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
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The ordeal of falsehood, tireless and unrestrained, through
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||
which Ingersoll passed is full of interest; and it is peculiarly
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||
interesting in that it reflects at its extreme the willingness of
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man to lie, as he persuades himself, for God. The facts of
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Ingersoll's character and life were ill-suited to the aims of those
|
||
who wished to attack him personally. The truth absolutely would not
|
||
serve to oppose the man. He was beyond the reproach, as he was
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||
generally beyond the record, of the most righteous in honesty,
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honor, humanity -- in his daily mode of life, public and private.
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He was a better man, every day and in every way, than most of the
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preachers who fulminated against him, who delighted to stick a coat
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of holy blacking upon his name, and who envied "Royal Bob" his
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power and fortune. We know that Ingersoll's opinions would have
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||
been no less true if his character had been less good: as the rain
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||
falls upon the just and the unjust, so is truth open to all men
|
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without regard to their morals. It happened, however, that the
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||
limit of truth which could be urged against Ingersoll was what a
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village gossip said about a neighbor: "He was a bad man, who
|
||
deceived everybody by leading a good life."
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||
|
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On the other hand, had Ingersoll been a reprobate, a fool, and
|
||
a hypocrite of the worst type, it is doubtful if the mere record of
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||
truth could have outrun the inventions of slander. There was no
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||
accusation so bad or so ridiculous that the pious haters of
|
||
Ingersoll would falter in its utterance. The bigger the lie, the
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||
bolder was the assertion of it. It is remarkable how busy Ingersoll
|
||
was, nearly his whole life, in answering the liars. He was like a
|
||
giant fighting a swarm of vicious insects. The man could hardly
|
||
turn around without running against a new or a vigorously repeated
|
||
old lie. Friends were constantly defending him. Almost the chief
|
||
task of the propagandists of rationalism was to deny, in season and
|
||
out, that Ingersoll was a false-hearted, wicked man. The 'Daily
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||
Transcript' of Peoria, Ill., and John Warner, for a number of years
|
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mayor of that city, where Ingersoll was long a distinguished
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citizen, were more than once called upon to deny the most far-
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fetched tales of Ingersoll's depravity.
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It was common for preachers to devote long sermons to ranting,
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||
rancorous attacks upon Ingersoll. A fair example is the tirade of
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a South Dakota pulpit-pounder, who declared that the famous
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||
agnostic was profane in a large degree, vicious and depraved." He
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was, in the bitter words of this follower of Jesus, a drunkard, a
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mixer in saloon brawls, "a drinking character." As a young man he
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||
had been so unfortunately entangled in a saloon fight as to have
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||
received a cut on the forehead from a beer glass "in the hands of
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||
some man as low as himself." He had once, in a very abandon of
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||
blasphemous immorality, mockingly baptized a little child with a
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||
glassful of beer. Often he had been so drunk that he could not
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||
lecture. His daughters had imbibed so liberally of wine at the
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||
Ingersoll family table that they had needed a guiding hand to lead
|
||
them from the room. Again, as the last word in damnation, it was
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||
alleged that Ingersoll was not respected by his old neighbors in
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||
the city of Peoria. Yet, comically enough, the preachers resented
|
||
a word by Ingersoll in behalf of temperance. A bit of oratory on
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||
the evils of excessive drinking, which Ingersoll used in a legal
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||
role, was attacked far and wide as being a plagiarism. The truth
|
||
was that a lesser light stole Ingersoll's words, adding to them
|
||
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
2
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||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
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|
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with clumsy flights of piety, in which liquor was branded as "God's
|
||
worst enemy." Yet again, when Ingersoll presented a bottle of
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||
whiskey to a sick friend, with a poetic eulogy of the "imprisoned
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||
light," this was denounced as a vile encouragement to Demon Rum.
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||
Ingersoll was neither a puritan nor a sot. He was equally opposed
|
||
to prohibition and drunkenness. He believed, quite sensibly, in a
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temperate use of the joys of life. Ingersoll drank, but he was not
|
||
a worse man for that. The preachers who spat venom at him would, no
|
||
doubt, have been more honest and genial if they had now and then
|
||
felt a little the glow of alcohol. Ingersoll was not a whiskey
|
||
drunkard: and, better still, he was not in the habit of getting
|
||
drunk on hatred and superstition -- a kind of intoxication from
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||
which ecclesiastics who berated him were seldom free.
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||
|
||
Stories of the picturesque sinfulness of Ingersoll's domestic
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||
life did not cease to circulate, although the true atmosphere of
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||
that life was frequently and finely described by men who were too
|
||
big for slander. The truth of Ingersoll's relations with his family
|
||
was indeed well enough and easily to be learned by any one who was
|
||
not inclined to falsehood by the force of prejudice. There was a
|
||
flood of testimonials from journalists, public men, fellow
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||
citizens, emphatic in personal tribute to Ingersoll: but these did
|
||
not serve to abate the mendacious industry of the clergy and their
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||
pious, easily duped flocks. The majority of the faithful agreed
|
||
with the statement of one preacher that "Infidelity never had and
|
||
never could produce a model, moral man." Was it possible that a man
|
||
who disputed the divine authority of the Bible could be a
|
||
gentleman? a man of kindly courtesy and broad generosity in his
|
||
home life? a man indeed who lived according to an exemplary code of
|
||
domestic ideals? It simply could not be. He was an infidel, and, by
|
||
the same token, a sinner of scarlet dye in all things. And, worst
|
||
of all, wasn't it known that he had damned (or helped God to damn)
|
||
the souls of his wife and daughters with his infidelity? It did not
|
||
matter that Mrs. Ingersoll had been "the skeptic daughter of a
|
||
skeptic father"; or that the Ingersoll girls, having been left
|
||
entirely free to form their own beliefs, bad followed the ways of
|
||
intelligence. Fearful pictures were drawn of how Ingersoll had
|
||
seduced his family into the downward path. The Christian liars were
|
||
so, eager to defame their most brilliant foe in his character as a
|
||
father that they spread the tale that his son had lost his mind by
|
||
reading fiction and had 'died in an asylum for the insane.
|
||
Ingersoll's reply to this yarn was amusingly complete: "1. My only
|
||
son was not a great novel reader. 2. He did not go insane. 3. He
|
||
was not sent to an asylum. 4. He did not die. 5. I never had a
|
||
son."
|
||
|
||
A lie that was often repeated and as often refuted, but never
|
||
quite killed, was that of Ingersoll's cowardice as a Union colonel
|
||
in the Civil War. The preacher who descended to abuse of the Prince
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||
of Pagans, and who left this story untold, felt that he had been
|
||
remiss in his duty. The story was that Ingersoll had been in a
|
||
single fight only -- a skirmish of little importance -- and that he
|
||
had ingloriously surrendered himself to a sixteen-year-old boy.
|
||
Officers and men of Colonel Ingersoll's regiment of Illinois
|
||
cavalry came forward with the truth again and again. The Colonel
|
||
was engaged ably and bravely in battle at Shiloh and at Corinth,
|
||
led his cavalry as a scouting force, and at length, with six
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
hundred men, was overwhelmed by ten thousand men under command of
|
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General Forrest; Ingersoll and a number of his men were inevitably
|
||
captured, and the Colonel was placed in charge of a parole camp at
|
||
St. Louis; when exchange finally appeared impossible, the Colonel
|
||
left the army and served with immense effectiveness as an orator
|
||
for the Union cause. From both Union and Confederate sources there
|
||
was plenty of evidence of Ingersoll's true war record, but this
|
||
weighed less than nothing with the firm religious liars. It was
|
||
also declared, with as little truth, that Ingersoll had been a loud
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||
pro-slavery man early in the war.
|
||
|
||
It was persistently charged that Ingersoll was led by greed
|
||
alone to attack God. It is a stock-in-trade of ecclesiastical
|
||
"argument" that any one who fights the church is simply trying to
|
||
fill his pockets. It is perhaps as idle, but also fully as true and
|
||
cogent, to retort that many preachers make ample, easy livings by
|
||
talking for God. Quite often the statement cheerfully went the
|
||
rounds that Ingersoll had candidly told a friend that he didn't
|
||
believe his own teachings and was an agnostic for profit only. Thus
|
||
the pious not only wished to regard the man as a hypocrite but as
|
||
an absolute fool to boot. It did not occur to their credulous minds
|
||
that the agnostic, if he were so mercenary, would not be so blind
|
||
to his own interests as to admit such a motive. One is reminded of
|
||
a story told by Ingersoll. He was advised by a preacher that, even
|
||
if he did believe as he talked, he should for policy's sake hide
|
||
that belief. Ingersoll aptly retorted that, in the light of such
|
||
advice, he was bound to doubt the sincerity of the preacher. As a
|
||
matter of fact, Ingersoll, as any well-informed man of the day
|
||
knew, was able as a lawyer to make a very good living. He could
|
||
have gained high (and probably the highest) political office had he
|
||
been willing to keep quiet about his beliefs on religion. The
|
||
extraordinary generosity of the man ran counter to the view that he
|
||
was impelled by love of money. The theory of greed fails sharply to
|
||
explain Ingersoll's gift of the copyright of his works to his
|
||
rationalist publishers. His many free lectures for charitable
|
||
purposes, in behalf of associations and individuals, would hardly
|
||
have been expected from a greedy man. There are innumerable stories
|
||
of Ingersoll's warm and ready generosity. He had a far better heart
|
||
than most of the preachers who mouthed hypocritically about the
|
||
love of Jesus. One preacher, indeed, described Ingersoll as a man
|
||
who had "the heart of a Christian and the head of an atheist." But
|
||
as a rule the preachers could not bear to hear stories of the
|
||
Pagan's kindness to his fellow men: it was especially unpleasant
|
||
for them to hear a story of the Pagan's extending succor when
|
||
preachers coldly ignored the sufferer. They would not even let it
|
||
pass that Ingersoll was decent to members of his own family. It was
|
||
said that he had been so indifferent to a sister, Mrs, Black, as to
|
||
let her die in poverty. The truth was, as declared among others by
|
||
Mrs. Black's attorney, that for years Ingersoll had given his
|
||
sister the sum of fifty dollars a month; and that, upon her death,
|
||
he provided for her burial; he was with her when she died and her
|
||
dying words did not point to neglect by an unkind brother: "I Would
|
||
like to live, but die content, thanks to your philosophy."
|
||
|
||
Now and then a preacher would smugly accuse Ingersoll of
|
||
having slandered the memory of his own father. The elder Ingersoll
|
||
was a minister, who eventually turned to the belief, or lack of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
belief, of his eloquent son: and who, dying, asked that son to read
|
||
for his comfort Plato on immortality and breathed his last in "the
|
||
happiness of believing that God was almost as good and generous as
|
||
he was himself." Ingersoll, the clergy charged, had laid the blame
|
||
for his infidelity upon his father, and had insisted that the
|
||
harshness of Ingersoll the divine had been responsible for the
|
||
ungodly development of Ingersoll the skeptic. Ingersoll denied this
|
||
lie often, but to little purpose in forcing upon the pulpit a
|
||
respect for the truth. "My father," said Ingersoll, "was infinitely
|
||
better than the God he worshipped." What he did say regarding the
|
||
example of his father was exactly the opposite of the version that
|
||
the holy liars put into his mouth. It was the very kindness and
|
||
humanity of the Rev. Ingersoll that suggested to the young Robert
|
||
the badness of orthodox theology. Thus: "He believed the Bible, and
|
||
in the shadow of that frightful book he passed his life. He
|
||
believed in the truth of its horrors, and for years, thinking of
|
||
the fate of the human race, his eyes were filled with tears." And
|
||
so it was that Robert grew to hate a religion that was so cruel and
|
||
hopeless that it condemned his good father to such unhappiness.
|
||
|
||
As to Ingersoll's charity, which stung uncharitable divines to
|
||
mean and snarling falsehood, it was said that he kept thirty
|
||
families and gave away from $25,000 to $40,000 a year. At any rate,
|
||
whatever the exact figures of his munificence, there can be no
|
||
question in the mind of a candid reader of Ingersoll's life that he
|
||
was one of the most generous of men. Yet one tale circulated, in
|
||
spite of its palpable absurdity, was that Ingersoll had cruelly
|
||
struck a beggar who had approached him for assistance. This story
|
||
was not quite a complete fabrication, having had its origin in the
|
||
report of a Chicago paper that Ingersoll had defended himself
|
||
against a burglar. There were also tales, springing up at every
|
||
change of the wind, about occasions when Ingersoll refused to speak
|
||
before freethought gatherings until money was put into his hands.
|
||
The only foundation for these reports was that Ingersoll, far from
|
||
making a dramatic demand for money on the spot, did time and again
|
||
lecture without pay for benevolent or propaganda purposes. It was
|
||
never denied that Ingersoll earned a great deal of money by
|
||
lecturing. He was not ashamed of it, nor worried by sarcastic
|
||
comments on his earning power. He declared that "it is a frightful
|
||
commentary on the average intellect of the pulpit that a minister
|
||
can't get so large an audience when he preaches for nothing as an
|
||
infidel can draw at a dollar a head." It was true, as the Pagan
|
||
orator remarked with too painful accuracy, that the preachers were
|
||
angry to see crowds flocking to hear the Bible attacked; and that
|
||
their wrath was increased by the reflection that the multitude was
|
||
willing to pay for the evil, blasphemous show.
|
||
|
||
An obvious and ludicrous lie, that appeared in all manner of
|
||
guises, was that Ingersoll had been converted to the Christian
|
||
religion, it did not matter that such a story was contrary --
|
||
absurdly so -- to the reports of the Colonel's hypocrisy; that,
|
||
placed side by side, the story that he was in the habit of weeping
|
||
bitter tears just before he walked upon the stage to orate against
|
||
the God of his belief did not quite fit the tale that he had been
|
||
turned from paganism to piety. At times one lie was in favor, at
|
||
times another: and the "conversion" lie, even as the others, would
|
||
be apparently killed only to spring into life more lustily than
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
ever within a few years. One lie of this latter type was
|
||
particularly fatuous. It was told, and the report found its way
|
||
imposingly into print, that Ingersoll had been made a Christian,
|
||
and specifically an Episcopalian, by the preaching of one Hine.
|
||
This Hine was a freak hailing from England, who had a theory that
|
||
the Englishmen were the lost tribes of Israel. It was this wild and
|
||
woolly notion, that would not impress any one above the level of a
|
||
moron, that was supposed to have knocked the props from under the
|
||
celebrated exponent of agnosticism. Ingersoll had carefully studied
|
||
and had riddled the most powerful arguments of Christianity. He was
|
||
familiar with all the subtleties, with the labyrinthine logic, of
|
||
the theologians. He had come through all this with intellect firm
|
||
and unimpaired, only to fall prey to the crack-brained speculation
|
||
of a Hine that, in the words of Ingersoll, "Englishmen and
|
||
Americans are simply Jews in disguise." Toward the end of his life,
|
||
Ingersoll commended the aims and activities of the People's Church,
|
||
Kalamazoo, Mich. And this, too, grew into a story of Infidel Bob's
|
||
bowing the knee to God. The truth was that this institution was a
|
||
church, judged by the ordinary use of the word, in name only. It
|
||
demanded no kind of belief in its members. An atheist could belong
|
||
to it as readily as a literal swallower of Genesis. It was an open
|
||
forum, community hall, free educational institution and charitable
|
||
society. It was no more tainted with Christian doctrine than an
|
||
Ingersoll lecture. It was simply devoted to that religion of
|
||
humanity (but why "religion"?) which Ingersoll had often praised as
|
||
far better than the orthodox religion. When Ingersoll was not being
|
||
"saved" by a Christian lie, his daughters were subject to these
|
||
imaginary conversions. Five times, Miss Eva Ingersoll told a
|
||
reporter, she had been "saved in print": the story was very
|
||
unconvincing, and it did not improve with age. It was also said,
|
||
after Ingersoll's death, that his wife was a Baptist -- a lie which
|
||
was evidently regarded as sublime proof of the error of Ingersoll's
|
||
philosophy of life.
|
||
|
||
The liars about Ingersoll never wearied in their inventions.
|
||
At least, they never stopped, although some of the tales were
|
||
symptomatic of brain-fag. It was undoubtedly a lie of sheer fatigue
|
||
that Ingersoll gave Guiteau the money to buy the pistol with which
|
||
he killed President Garfield. It was also an unconvincing though a
|
||
typically Christian lie to accuse the Colonel of encouraging
|
||
suicide: as if, when any one lost the belief in hell, he was robbed
|
||
of the greatest joy in life. A sentimental, puerile tale was that
|
||
the orator had been driven from the stage in one city when his
|
||
Christian audience sang "Hold the Fort." Again, it was said that
|
||
Ingersoll, with tears streaming down his cheeks, had exclaimed to
|
||
a good Christian lady that he would give anything in the world if
|
||
he could be enfolded in the arms of her faith. It was a lean year
|
||
in falsehood when a story was not produced about the alleged, and
|
||
wholly fabricated, police record of Ingersoll as a young man. It
|
||
was related that Henry Ward Beecher once jumped upon the Colonel
|
||
with the assertion that the latter, in fighting the faith, was
|
||
robbing Christian cripples of their crutches: and that the Colonel
|
||
had been utterly flabbergasted by this witty, weighty, wonderful
|
||
"argument." Beecher promptly denied the lie -- and no wonder.
|
||
Beecher, of course, was too big a man to meet an opponent with
|
||
falsehood; he would not be flattered by having petty, nonsensical
|
||
dodges of Christian sophistry put down to his credit; he was in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
truth a great admirer of Ingersoll, saying of him: "He is the most
|
||
brilliant speaker of the English tongue of all men on this globe."
|
||
A story of less pretension (though it is hard to measure the
|
||
degrees of importance of such lies) had it that Ingersoll was
|
||
keeping a record of all preachers who had fallen into sin or crime
|
||
and who had landed in the penitentiary. Another tale was that
|
||
Ingersoll had backed out of a discussion, in the North American
|
||
Review, with a judge Black. As a matter of fact, as stated by Allen
|
||
Thorndike Rice, editor of the Review, judge Black, after replying
|
||
to Ingersoll's first article, refused to reply to the second
|
||
article. Another man, one George P. Fisher, wrote the reply, on the
|
||
pledge (not complimentary to Christian courage) that it would end
|
||
the controversy.
|
||
|
||
The final lie -- the inevitable lie -- was that Ingersoll
|
||
repented, bewailed his misspent life, and embraced the Christian
|
||
faith on his deathbed. Ingersoll naturally foresaw that such a lie
|
||
would be told. He often expressed the wish that he might die
|
||
slowly, conscious of the approaching end, and show the world that
|
||
an agnostic could die as serene and steady in his belief as any
|
||
Christian. It happened that Ingersoll died, in a chair and not in
|
||
bed, suddenly of heart disease. He had known (though his family had
|
||
not) for several years that he might die any minute -- yet he
|
||
continued to lecture against religion. Ingersoll had no opportunity
|
||
in death to reaffirm or recant his beliefs. There is on record an
|
||
affidavit of Mrs. Ingersoll and two friends, who were the only
|
||
persons present, stating the very simple facts of Ingersoll's last
|
||
moments. This lie, as were the other lies, was immediately
|
||
denounced. The truth was revealed for all honest men who wished to
|
||
know it. Yet no one knew better than Ingersoll that a lie is
|
||
deathless. Today one may hear a revivalist crying out in a
|
||
backwoods tabernacle that Ingersoll died a fearful, sin-conscious
|
||
penitent: almost the whole catalogue of lies about Ingersoll are,
|
||
with very little refurbishing, occasionally put to use even in this
|
||
day. They are not so popular, nor so powerful, as once they were.
|
||
The story of Ingersoll's ordeal reads, indeed, like an incredible
|
||
tale out of a dark, remote, uncivilized past. But it is still true
|
||
that lurid deathbed tales, and puerile personal attacks upon so-
|
||
called infidels, are sweetly solemn and reassuring to the faithful.
|
||
And perhaps another Ingersoll, or another Voltaire, will be
|
||
assailed by such a host of liars as yelped upon the trail of
|
||
Ingersoll. Such immense phenomena of falsehood, like miracles, are
|
||
too extraordinary for everyday occurrence. The liars must have a
|
||
rest. They cannot, in human nature, keep it up year after year with
|
||
never a pause. They have tremendous, but surely not infinite,
|
||
endurance. It must have been a relief to the liars when Ingersoll
|
||
died. They could enjoy a long vacation, with merely an occasional,
|
||
small, limited lie for the sake of keeping in practice.
|
||
|
||
"SOMETHING IN IT"
|
||
|
||
We only half live when we only half think. -- Voltaire.
|
||
|
||
Clinging to the outskirts of every sham is a host of half-
|
||
hearted fellows, who cannot quite think their way completely free
|
||
from sham, and who are not so constituted as to be energetic
|
||
adherents -- but who still, as you will observe, hover around the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
edges of popular fooleries, ready in any little crisis of
|
||
discussion to pipe: "There's something in it." What may surprise
|
||
you is that they do not have a timid or blurred tone; but that an
|
||
accent of strange if not thorough conviction is evident in their
|
||
utterance, growing perceptibly in ardor in response to the hoot of
|
||
the skeptic: until, having started out with a leaning, they end
|
||
with a fall plump into the arms of sham. It is human nature (though
|
||
not the wisest nor the noblest human nature) to defend a position
|
||
taken, or even suggested as desirable; and the "something in it"
|
||
fellow is driven, by the logic of illogical argumentation, farther
|
||
into the heart of doubtful belief than he would venture solitary.
|
||
|
||
One smiles, even so, to see "Something-In-It" visibly take on
|
||
flesh, fill out the hollows of uncertainty, describe curves of
|
||
nicely fashioned credulity, reveal the color and sparkle of an
|
||
intense faith -- and stand out, apparently, in the very body of a
|
||
proselyte that has conned well its rigmarole: Something turns by
|
||
seeming magic into Everything; from "It May Be" we arrive at the
|
||
explicit "It Is."
|
||
|
||
Time and again, I have observed this process, and it has never
|
||
ceased to amuse me. In my library not long ago a little group was
|
||
galloping in talk; and it was not until well toward the close of
|
||
this talkfest that the controversial note was struck. It was, let
|
||
me say, a sudden and surprising note. We had been talking about
|
||
shams and indeed destroying them (for the nonce) at a lively and
|
||
friendly rate; and we were, one and all, agreed that Smashing Shams
|
||
was the purpose for which the human mind was evolved in all its
|
||
deadly cleverness. "Perhaps" said I, in that spirit of levity which
|
||
is the distraction of the pious, "it is a game invented for the
|
||
sport of God, to amuse God and save him from boredom. God molds
|
||
certain minds to put up shams in order that other minds, also
|
||
molded by him, can have the fun of knocking them down. And God is
|
||
vastly entertained, so to speak, by this continual sham battle."
|
||
And then -- hold your breath! -- up spake one Yorick, a grave-
|
||
digger, who had a mind to contemplate the skull of Astrology, whose
|
||
carcass has long rotted in the world's intellectual graveyard, side
|
||
by side with other storied shams, but whose ghost indeed lurked
|
||
still in dark corners.
|
||
|
||
God, weary of the harmonious atmosphere of enlightenment,
|
||
jerked himself into a posture of attention. Here was a pretty show,
|
||
One of the Sham Smashers immediately stood up and, said he,
|
||
"There's something in it" -- It, of course, being Astrology. This
|
||
dead one -- this ghost of the superstitious past -- put life into
|
||
a peacefully expiring conclave.
|
||
|
||
Treason! Well, traitors must die. We leaped upon the base
|
||
deserter. We reminded him that astrology was as archaic as alchemy
|
||
-- that astronomy had scientifically supplanted the one as had
|
||
chemistry the other. We urged him to look carefully to the fact
|
||
that no scientist of the slightest repute could be persuaded to
|
||
offer a word in behalf of this moldered corpse of Astrology -- the
|
||
scientific world condemned it to a man. We pointed out derisively
|
||
that the books of astrology revealed contradictions -- oh, the most
|
||
absurd! -- on every page; and that the list of supposed
|
||
characteristics for one lunar type could not possibly be contained
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
in fewer than a dozen persons. We told our erstwhile friend that a
|
||
philosopher had quite simply exposed the folly of the zodiacal
|
||
theory with a single, obvious, devastating illustration: he had
|
||
mentioned a certain battle in which some thousands of poor souls,
|
||
all born under numerous signs, had fallen under the arms of the
|
||
enemy on a single day. It might as well have been another battle;
|
||
it might indeed have been any situation, any path, any field of
|
||
life. Whatever the sign, the men and women born under it will be
|
||
found to have the most widely varying fortunes and characteristics.
|
||
The world, in short, is full of failures born under the sign of
|
||
success; slaves born under the sign of leadership; fools born under
|
||
the sign of wisdom. A theory that showed itself to be manifestly
|
||
false at least as often as it appeared to be true -- a theory that
|
||
did not and could not work -- was full of sham and nothing else.
|
||
|
||
And, despite our talk, the man held to this medieval magic.
|
||
Opposition stirred and spurred him. He had said, "There's something
|
||
in it." It was not long before we perceived that he was really a
|
||
downright believer in astrology. He had himself been marked from
|
||
the glittering heavens at the hour of his birth as a leader of men
|
||
-- and such indeed he had proved to be. The moon influenced the
|
||
tides -- and, by the same plain and infallible token, the stars did
|
||
influence the individual dispositions and destinies of men. It was
|
||
hopeless. The stars, if they could not win, could not absolutely
|
||
lose.
|
||
|
||
Other shams, you will hear, are to be defended by that vague
|
||
"something" which pretends to much more importance than inherently
|
||
belongs to it -- and which so often throws caution to the winds,
|
||
ceases to be a "something" and reveals its true identity of
|
||
unashamed and unquestioning sham. There is "something in" palmistry
|
||
-- and the pretty stenographer, in the temporary role of scientist,
|
||
will tell your fortune. There is no less -- always "something" at
|
||
the very least -- in phrenology: and the bumps in your head will
|
||
prophesy and classify the bumps you are due to get in life. There
|
||
is "something" in this superstition, about the weather or warts;
|
||
and in that popular notion, which, to be sure, is distinctly apart
|
||
from the world's recognized and trustworthy knowledge, but which
|
||
still entertains the fancy of those who are bound to believe that
|
||
there is "something" in something. And this "something," unless it
|
||
steps boldly into the pose of being a great deal indeed, is not
|
||
defined. WHAT is in this or that sham if it is worth an inch of
|
||
standing room in the world of truth and reality? Give us, we
|
||
implore, a real image that will fix this Something usefully or at
|
||
least understandably in our minds. We get nothing -- unless it be
|
||
a retreat to the most interior defenses of sham and a struggle to
|
||
uphold sham in toto.
|
||
|
||
A great deal of the strength of religion lies in the
|
||
"something in it" tribe. There are men who disclaim the brand of
|
||
orthodoxy, who ostensibly are of different mettle than the devout
|
||
and the hymn-singing elect of the Lord, and who may even wear on
|
||
occasion an air of skepticism. Yet they stand just outside the
|
||
church door, as it were; they are ready to defend the altar if it
|
||
is actually jeopardized; they are quick to protest, when some
|
||
thinker asks why religion should continue to hold any degree of
|
||
influence over the thoughts of mankind, that "There is something in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
it." "Hold!" they cry. "We have followed you thus far in the attack
|
||
on sham. We fire against superstition. We are against theology. We
|
||
are against Churchianity. But leave us religion -- a little of it,
|
||
for God's sake. Something -- for pity and a fair chance leave us
|
||
something." We are familiar with the man who cries that -- after
|
||
all -- there must have been something before the first cradle and
|
||
there must be something beyond the last grave. They ask -- oh!
|
||
unanswerably: Who started this ball of mud to rolling? Who or what
|
||
raised the curtain for the cosmic show? What is the spirit of man
|
||
and whither goeth it? They ask as ineffectually as the poet
|
||
struggling with the impenetrable. They know nothing and, by a queer
|
||
stroke of logic, this becomes that Something which is the last
|
||
refuge of the half-thinkers.
|
||
|
||
These men who are afraid to think straight through sham and
|
||
emerge, wholly stripped of illusion and compromise, into the fresh
|
||
air of reality -- these men who cry "There is something in it" help
|
||
perhaps more than they realize to make the wheels of sham go round.
|
||
Full many and loud and earnest as are the shouters of religion,
|
||
sufficient and sinister menace that they are, they alone could not
|
||
maintain the sham of religion. God would be ill defended if he had
|
||
to rest his safety with the prayer band and the altar crowd. He
|
||
depends, as does all hokuin from the highest to the lowest, upon
|
||
the innumerable reserves who are full of faint-hearted
|
||
reservations, who are not willing to burn their bridges of belief
|
||
and go boldly forth in quest of the truth whatever it may be --
|
||
looking without fear, and with all honesty, upon a Nothing rather
|
||
than leaning upon a vague, tricky, sham-serving Something.
|
||
|
||
This Something is simply the entering wedge of sham. It is the
|
||
weak cry, and withal the insidious gesture, of the apologist of
|
||
sham -- who, however unsuspectingly, plays into the hands of the
|
||
charlatans and the fanatics.
|
||
|
||
Something in it -- It is sham. The something that is in it is
|
||
the drug of credulity that has cultivated the worst habits known to
|
||
man. "Something in it" is the slogan of the half-thinkers.
|
||
|
||
A POCKETFUL OF PREACHERS
|
||
|
||
"Preachers come out every night
|
||
And tell us what's wrong and what's right --"
|
||
|
||
The "inspirational" preacher; the preacher who is a "Power";
|
||
the preacher who is noted for his "heart talks"; the preacher who
|
||
is a man among men"; the preacher who advocates "muscular
|
||
Christianity"; the preacher who is "Christlike": each helps to
|
||
uphold the faith and the prestige and the business organization of
|
||
Christianity in this modern day of doubt and sin. They are not
|
||
content to be known simply as preachers; they call themselves
|
||
teachers also. Solemnly they will quote: "Where there is no vision,
|
||
the people perish." They give vision to the people, thus assuring
|
||
them life and safety from a retrogression to barbarism. These
|
||
preachers are, by way of courtesy, known as leaders of community
|
||
life; they are even regarded -- also courteously -- as intellectual
|
||
lights; they are presumably the guardians of morality. One who
|
||
seeks the best, in the way of thought and of ethics, will be
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
directed to a church. Simply listen to a preacher -- a preacher who
|
||
is respectable, holding by a superstition that is dignified by a
|
||
few centuries of age -- and yon will hear wisdom that is not in the
|
||
books nor on the tongues of other men; and that is not to be won by
|
||
any degree of self-culture outside the church.
|
||
|
||
What do the preachers teach? What sort of wisdom do they
|
||
offer? What is the truth back of this pretension of the great
|
||
intellect, the great vision, the great ethical insight of the so-
|
||
called man of God? We can learn in church; or by the radio; or in
|
||
the newspapers. These are days of slack churchliness; and preachers
|
||
try in other ways than the censorship of theaters and amusements
|
||
generally to stirrpulate the trade of holiness; one of the most
|
||
popular means, and very modern, being the press. So that on
|
||
Saturday there is a page of advertisements urging the people to
|
||
worship in the various temples; and on Monday there is a page of
|
||
sermon-synopses, whereby those who were indifferent to the call may
|
||
still receive the message. Thus I am able to learn from the Kansas
|
||
City 'Times' (any paper in any city will do for the purpose) what
|
||
the leading preachers have delivered by way of revelation and
|
||
healing and uplift. The "high lights" of the sermons are, I
|
||
presume, spread before me: the very essence of ecclesiastical
|
||
wisdom. Looking over a page of preachments in the 'Times' of
|
||
Monday, February 2, I observe (with such astonishment as I can
|
||
easily control) that this supreme intelligence, this brilliant
|
||
guidance, of the pulpit consists of the dreariest, emptiest
|
||
platitudes -- flights of bunk -- appeals to credulity -- emphasis
|
||
upon the unreal, the unimportant and the uninteresting. We will be
|
||
diverted, I believe, by a review of this symposium of "wit, wisdom
|
||
and eloquence" on The Things Worth-While.
|
||
|
||
The moral influence of the church is revealed in the words of
|
||
Rev. John W. Bradbury, Bales Baptist church. Being a Baptist rather
|
||
than a Christian Scientist, he admits that "sin is real." So, he
|
||
adds, is forgiveness -- that is to say, God's forgiveness. Wisely
|
||
and profoundly, he asks and answers: "How can a man relive his
|
||
life? Or rebuild his career? He cannot." We tremble at this
|
||
thought, but we are at once reassured that "forgiveness will take
|
||
care of it." Again: "Sin is a thing that stands between us and God.
|
||
But the barrier is removed by God's mercy and forgiveness." We are
|
||
punished if we transgress the laws of nature or of man: but God is
|
||
the great forgiver. It seems to me that Rev. Bradbury confuses the
|
||
ethical issue; that his moral instruction is false and weak. Is it
|
||
wise to point men to the easy way of throwing their burdens upon
|
||
God? Is not this, at bottom, a teaching of irresponsibility? I am
|
||
not precisely a moralist -- certainly not as a judge of my fellows
|
||
-- but I do say that the highest morality is that which bids a man
|
||
look to his own acts, to their effects upon his own character, and
|
||
to their validity in the light of his own reason and conscience.
|
||
The true ethic is that not all our piety or wit can turn back the
|
||
clock, erase a word, nor and an escape from reality. We must pay
|
||
and collect, learn and unlearn, suffer and enjoy in this life and
|
||
not in another; we cannot let God "take care of it." The man who
|
||
looks, not to God, but to himself; who strives to pay, in character
|
||
and effort, his way through life rather than to pray himself into
|
||
heaven; who realizes that he will play out his role, for good or
|
||
ill, in the real world and that no God, in a world beyond the sky,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
will enable him to "relive his life" -- such a man is supported by
|
||
a sounder morality than is the man who feels that a God is standing
|
||
back of him to redeem his false promises, his poor character, his
|
||
failure to recognize that he alone, and not another, must live his
|
||
life. Self-reliance, in other words, is far better counsel than
|
||
reliance on any man or any God. It is better to respect your own
|
||
character and your neighbor's rights than to put aside spiritual
|
||
credit with a God as a means of paying, in the sweet bye-and-bye,
|
||
for your lack of character and your offense against neighbors. Fine
|
||
words may roll off the preacher's tongue -- but they are false
|
||
words; they weaken character; they turn the individual's gaze from
|
||
himself, and from the real theater of his actions, to God and
|
||
Paradise; they suggest to a man that he can pile up a mountain of
|
||
debts to life, and that God will "take care of it." Such is
|
||
Christian morality, as Rev. Bradbury presents it brilliantly to
|
||
view.
|
||
|
||
The "Reds" in politics and religion are the targets of Dr.
|
||
Harry C. Rogets, Linwood Presbyterian church. Religiously speaking,
|
||
a "Red" is one who scoffs at, regards lightly, or attacks creeds in
|
||
general and, we suppose, the Presbyterian creed in particular. "A
|
||
creed," says the Doctor, with an ineffable air of wisdom, "is
|
||
simply a statement of what one believes." Very simple indeed -- and
|
||
quite meaningless. The important questions are how we arrive at a
|
||
belief; what foundation there is for a belief; what purpose is
|
||
served by a belief. In short, a creed is not to be defended by
|
||
saying that it is what one believes. Is the belief true? Is it
|
||
important? And is the belief held as sacred, beyond question or
|
||
dispute, not to be profaned by the hand of reason? Again, to use
|
||
the word "creed" more carefully, is our belief merely a formula? a
|
||
little trick of words and symbols that we mumble and imagine that
|
||
we have intoned the last phrase of truth? Does a creed mean a few
|
||
narrow notions -- hardly to be called ideas -- that we are bent
|
||
upon holding fast, not letting them go for any offer of truth in
|
||
exchange? Apparently this is the sort of creed that Dr. Rogers
|
||
would defend. He warns -- this intellectual and spiritual leader --
|
||
against the "open mind." "On certain things," he says, "a man ought
|
||
to close his mind." Undoubtedly, among the things on which a man
|
||
should close his mind, the Presbyterian creed stands first. "There
|
||
is no intellectual chaos," we are told, "worse than always to have
|
||
"'an open mind.'" The good Doctor puzzles me. We can agree that a
|
||
man who never has an opinion is a man who never uses his mind to
|
||
very definite advantage. But does it follow that a man who is never
|
||
willing to change an opinion is a wise man? Has Dr. Rogers, by
|
||
chance, never heard the simple old adage, "A wise man changes his
|
||
mind, a fool never does"? This, you observe, is the kind of wisdom
|
||
that ennobled the minds, this the kind of ethical teaching that
|
||
broadened the characters, of Presbyterian pewholders in Kansas City
|
||
on the first Sunday in February. Hang for dear life to a dead creed
|
||
-- and don't think! Be a Presbyterian -- and keep your mind closed
|
||
on that subject! The man who urges you to beware falling into a rut
|
||
-- who points out the folly of narrow creeds that exclude the broad
|
||
possibilities and the meaning of life -- who says that thinking is
|
||
a good employment for the human mind: such a man is a "Red." Dr.
|
||
Rogers is the kind of teacher who advises his pupils to throw their
|
||
books into the fire when they have learned the first lesson; or,
|
||
worse, who reads the lesson aloud to them and tells them not to
|
||
look inside the book to see whether he is right.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
The best we can make of the words of Rev. J.W. Abet, Trinity
|
||
Methodist Episcopal church, is that knowledge, intelligence, a good
|
||
mind will not suffice to make one a Christian; and that one may be
|
||
without these qualities and still be a Christian. Indeed this is
|
||
true; and Rev. Abel goes even further and declares joyfully that it
|
||
is a wonderful gift of Jesus to mankind. And, too, they are the
|
||
"fundamental things" which the ignorant may gain -- merely through
|
||
belief that asks few questions -- and which the "wise and prudent"
|
||
may lose by refusing to believe too easily. "Humbler minds" may
|
||
believe in God, while this marvel of theology may not impress great
|
||
minds. The joy of belief in miracles is not denied to the most
|
||
illiterate; but intellectuals, skeptics of the Voltaire type,
|
||
wander in the bleak fields of mere human wisdom; limited, indeed,
|
||
as these men will admit; but there is no despondency and no fear in
|
||
their admission. We know, too, that "visions" of the end of this
|
||
world and of the wonders of another world are invariably vouchsafed
|
||
to lunatics, and withheld from sound-minded persons who are not
|
||
sufficiently spiritual to be senseless. Rev. Abel, instead of
|
||
bringing wisdom, comforts the ignorant by telling them that this
|
||
ignorance is illuminated by the light and love of Jesus. Self-
|
||
culture is not so important as self-surrender to the mouldy myth of
|
||
God. Genius may have its triumphs of the spirit and intellect;
|
||
mediocrity and stupidity have -- priceless possessions! -- that
|
||
"spirituality" which is synonymous with superstition. Yawn, ye
|
||
jolly skeptics; and perceive wearily that, while Rev. Abel may be
|
||
able in belief and full to overflowing with Jesus, there is no
|
||
wisdom in him. As a teacher, he is simply a pathetic example of the
|
||
need of teaching -- and, first, self-teaching.
|
||
|
||
"The sacred torch of truth" -- this is held aloft by Rev.
|
||
George Elton Harris, Calvary Baptist church. To be sure, Rev.
|
||
Harris is not the original torch-bearer. He has but caught the
|
||
torch as it fell from other hands. Yet he is modest -- and careful
|
||
not to arouse undue expectations. "The torch," says he, "is not a
|
||
flaring beacon light." Not always. "There are times when it seems
|
||
to be a flickering candle" -- for example, at the present moment,
|
||
with the Reverend waving it feebly with a hand that shakes, perhaps
|
||
not from an excitement of desire to discover more truth, but in
|
||
fear that the torch may flare up too cruelly and reveal truth that
|
||
the Reverend cannot use in his business. And who, down the ages,
|
||
have successively held this torch of truth that has finally fallen
|
||
into the hands of Rev. Harris? Be slow to answer; you are likely to
|
||
be wrong. These men were not Plato, Aristotle, Bruno, Voltaire,
|
||
Diderot, Locke, Bacon, Schopenhauer, Goethe -- no, nor any men in
|
||
a list that might resemble them. They were -- Paul, Augustine,
|
||
Athanasius, Savonarola, Wycliffe, Huss, Waldo, Zwingli, Luther,
|
||
Calvin, Wesley. These men held the torch -- and indeed, so eager
|
||
they were, sometimes a torch did not satisfy them and they had need
|
||
of a large stake, a fire of considerable size, and the best of
|
||
human fuel to light the world with truth. Others suffered martyrdom
|
||
for holding aloft the torch -- of truth? No; of theology; of church
|
||
doctrine; of speculations about God and the way to commune with
|
||
God, Athanasius is known, not as the Father of Truth, but as the
|
||
"Father of Orthodoxy." John Wesley, while he did not discover,
|
||
stoutly upheld the great truth of witchcraft. Calvin served truth
|
||
by advocating that Serviettes be put to death, not by burning -- an
|
||
"atrocity" -- but by the sword; and he was not content with this
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
limited chore for the truth, but engaged in a manly struggle with
|
||
the Lutherans on the question of the Lord's Supper -- one side
|
||
"holding that in the eucharist the body and blood of Christ are
|
||
objectively and consubstantially present," etc., and the other side
|
||
that "there is only a virtual presence of the body and blood of
|
||
Christ," etc. I could tell you who believed which -- but what does
|
||
it matter? The point is that these fanatics, and not the great
|
||
thinkers, have been responsible for the passage of the torch of
|
||
truth from hand to hand along the centuries -- and, when the torch
|
||
flickered, they replenished its light at the next stake that marked
|
||
a victory for truth. Now, in Rev. Harris' hands, it flickers as you
|
||
have seen. But hold! and despair not! for another light shines:
|
||
"The true light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the
|
||
world." This light is the Lord Jesus Christ.
|
||
|
||
So far, it appears, we have gained little wisdom. The
|
||
intellect, the vision, and the ethics of the pulpit have shown
|
||
themselves as very feeble, very hazy, very petty. We are led to
|
||
believe that Kansas City is poorly guided indeed, and we do not
|
||
wonder that a modicum of sin is to be found in a city that has this
|
||
kind of "spiritual" leadership. It is not such a bad city, however,
|
||
we are assured by Dr. Samuel D. Harkness; and, it being the
|
||
seventy-fifth anniversary of the city, the Doctor entertains us
|
||
with a booster sermon. Are there harlots, bandits and bootleggers
|
||
in the metropolis? Even so, are there 'not also the Y.M.C.A., the
|
||
Art Institute, the Kansas City Theater, a Little Symphony
|
||
Orchestra, newspapers, allied charities, etc.? And do not "the
|
||
Catholic bishop and his priests, the Jewish rabbis and the
|
||
ministers of Protestantism sit in council with the business and
|
||
professional men of the city and work together for the common
|
||
good"? There is the war memorial, too, though the Doctor forgets to
|
||
include it; and, with a reliable weather man, the climate is good;
|
||
and there are boulevards -- although Dr. Andreas Bard, St. Mark's
|
||
Lutheran church, warns us that they are ill used for "joyrides and
|
||
jazz tunes on the Lord's day." Dr. Bard further says that "As a
|
||
matter of self-preservation we must hold on to the Gospel." If "we"
|
||
are the preachers, we in a manner agree. The divine Doctor, by the
|
||
way, has a simple (and, of course, infallible) test of truth: Time
|
||
is the Test of Truth. "The survival of Christian teaching through
|
||
almost twenty centuries of struggle proves that it contains eternal
|
||
elements of truth." It is obvious, therefore, that Buddhism, being
|
||
some centuries older, contains more of these elements -- more
|
||
eternal and more true; and that Mohammedanism, being a few
|
||
centuries younger, is a little shorter on truth -- eternal truth,
|
||
at any rate -- than is Christianity. ... And if Rev. Harkness did
|
||
not convince you that Kansas City, as a Kiwanis orator might
|
||
declare, is "a mighty good little town," then how can you doubt it
|
||
when Rev. W.A. Tetley, Westport Methodist church., pays tribute to
|
||
the city's "atmosphere of spirituality"? Rev. Tetley has been
|
||
preaching "Christ and His crucified" for twenty-one years: and his
|
||
contribution to civic boosting is to say that in Kansas City it is
|
||
"much easier to influence a man to accept Christ" than anywhere
|
||
else that he knows of personally. This is the best, the subtlest,
|
||
the most far-reaching tribute of all -- the fact that Christ stands
|
||
high in Kansas City and is almost as popular as Coolidge. ...
|
||
Interesting, if not exactly belonging under the head of wisdom, is
|
||
the statement by Dr. James Edward Congdon, First Presbyterian
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
church, that Judas betrayed Jesus of his own free will. God knew he
|
||
would do it, but had no hand in it; although it was God's whole
|
||
purpose to get Jesus crucified and, as Dr. Congdon tells us, the
|
||
damnation of Judas was the salvation of all mankind. One reflects
|
||
that it is still an open question whether mankind owes more in this
|
||
matter to Jesus or to Judas. The ineffable-wise teaching, the
|
||
sublime philosophy and ethics, that Dr. Congdon has to offer is
|
||
perhaps best revealed when he says: "When God created man with a
|
||
likeness unto Himself He imparted to man a will. God never
|
||
overrides that will. When in His foreknowledge He sees that man
|
||
will destroy himself by choosing wrongly, He provides in advance
|
||
for man's protection and for recovery of the wreckage."' Obviously,
|
||
it would be impolite and impertinent and irrelevant to inquire why
|
||
God refuses or neglects or is unable to provide for man before
|
||
rather than after the latter destroys himself. ... I select a
|
||
single bright and beautiful gem from the sermon of Dr. Clarence
|
||
Reidenback, Westminster Congregational church: "The best people are
|
||
Christian people." ... Rev. V.C. Clark, Agnes Avenue Methodist
|
||
Episcopal church, sermonized on the subject: "How to Fish for Men."
|
||
He says: "We do not fish for men as we do for fish. ... The end in
|
||
view is not to benefit the fish." On the contrary, what is the
|
||
object in fishing for men? This: "We try to catch men because they
|
||
will be a help to our church." Rev. Clark praises Jesus for having
|
||
been a good fisherman -- a man who knew how to bait his hook, as it
|
||
were. "Jesus caught men by giving them something. He gave the blind
|
||
eyes, the deaf ears, the sick health, the poor riches, the idle
|
||
work, the weary rest, the sinful forgiveness." Oh! the clever
|
||
Jesus, who always knew what a man wanted most; and gave it to him
|
||
on the spot; and caught him. Yes-
|
||
|
||
"Preachers come out every night,
|
||
And tell us what's wrong and what's right --"
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
JIM-JAM EVANGELISM
|
||
|
||
If there is anything, lower, anything more contemptible,
|
||
anything more offensive to the nostrils of intelligence and sheer,
|
||
down-right decency than evangelism as it disports itself at an -
|
||
American crossroads, I want -- no, please, I don't want -- to, be
|
||
told of it.
|
||
|
||
In the first place, we have an imitator of Billy Sunday
|
||
vileness come to raise the roof for God. And for the worst God,
|
||
too, that man ever invented: the God of the Old Testament who, if
|
||
the accounts be true as Bryan says, was guilty of more crimes than
|
||
are mentioned in his own Decalogue. Before and after the Ten
|
||
Commandments, this God gave his chosen tribe of savages
|
||
commandments to kill, rape and steal without let or hindrance. He
|
||
kept them in hot water, on the warpath and in a savage,
|
||
superstitious furor continually, It is a God of jealousy, of hate,
|
||
of slaughter, of chicanery -- a God who is a firebrand, a
|
||
pestilence and a terror -- that our modern John the Baptist, who
|
||
has subsisted on something wilder than wild honey, brings to the
|
||
yokelry of Village Corners. Without the false excuse of religion,
|
||
or the excuse of patriotism in wartime, any man exhibiting such a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
mad performance would be viewed correctly as an inciter to all
|
||
possible crimes, a disturber of the peace on a tremendous scale.
|
||
But in God's behalf, Hell is freely realized.
|
||
|
||
We have in this evangelist, if he is typical of the tribe, an
|
||
insane ignoramus. A ranter of the worst type, verbally shelling the
|
||
woods for God. A man who cannot be described as primitive, without
|
||
injustice to our remote ancestors. A man who belongs somewhere --
|
||
his God, if any one, alone knows where -- in "the dark backward and
|
||
abysm of time." A man who has as little respect for as he has
|
||
knowledge of any civilized emotion or way of thought. A man who,
|
||
himself incapable of thought, is filled with hate of all thinking
|
||
men. A man who has every trick of the charlatan armed with every
|
||
impulse of the fanatic. -- A man, too, who cheaply and vulgarly
|
||
attracts the crowd by his alleged reputation as a sinner of the
|
||
most scarlet dye. Sin, in every crude or lurid or fantastic shape,
|
||
is the head and front of the man's appeal to these yeoman of the
|
||
hinterland who are moved by enormous titillations at the vision of
|
||
the glory and wickedness that is Babylon. The morbidity and
|
||
hysteria of the Christian appeal is fully displayed as the people
|
||
of the country-side sweat and tremble and listen, prurient and pop-
|
||
eyed, in the tabernacle. Culture, if she wandered into this
|
||
tabernacle, would be torn to pieces by the jackals driven crazy by
|
||
frantic imaginings of sin and salvation. The evangelist, God's mob
|
||
orator, rules the roost.
|
||
|
||
This sin-killer's stock in trade is every Christian trick and
|
||
lie and miserable degradation of thought. There is hardly any
|
||
variation of the performances of these men. Year after year, as
|
||
they go the gaping, grovelling rounds, they bedevil the mob in the
|
||
old, fearful, ranting style. There are denunciations of great free-
|
||
thinkers. And in this, too, there is partly the appeal of the
|
||
sinful and forbidden. As one mentions the Devil with bated breath
|
||
at the crossroads, so does one utter the awful names of Voltaire,
|
||
Tom Paine, Bob Ingersoll. What an unholy delight it is to hear
|
||
these men named openly, with appropriate biblical curses. Damn them
|
||
all! All of them wicked infidels, emissaries of the Devil, men who
|
||
plucked God's beard. Voltaire -- as terrible and tantalizing a
|
||
mouthful as the Scarlet Woman or the Demon Rum. Tom Paine -- ah,
|
||
here is witchcraft, here's a potion brewed by Satan himself. Bob
|
||
Ingersoll -- verily God thunders in his wrath and the Devil
|
||
chortles and puffs sulphuriously in his glee.
|
||
|
||
The "arguments" are the old ones, conditioned by the absolute
|
||
absence of thought. First and last, here's the Bible -- and damn
|
||
any man who doesn't believe it, every word. God has spoken. John
|
||
the Baptist repeats him. Of course, there is no room for doubt --
|
||
and Hell is for the doubters. But -- Suppose we agree with Bob
|
||
Ingersoll -- just to show him up -- and say that we don't know?
|
||
Then why take a chance with your future? Play safe. As an ex-
|
||
gambler, the evangelist can tell his crowd that no clever man
|
||
overlooks a cinch. Believe in God, and you can't lose. If the Bible
|
||
is right -- as every man not depraved by sin and crime knows it is
|
||
-- then the Christian draws the winning number. And the infidel
|
||
Voltaire loses. If there is nothing after death, who has lost?
|
||
Voltaire and the village idiot will sleep side by side in equal
|
||
nothingness. Faith? We take everything on faith. We don't know that
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
such a man as Napoleon ever lived. Yet we believe it. We don't know
|
||
that there's such a country as India. By the power of faith, oh
|
||
brethren, do we believe it. Undoubtedly Christ was the Son of God:
|
||
else why do we at the crossroads worship him as such? What better
|
||
proof does any man want than the Bible? There the whole story is
|
||
written, in black and white, and if a man is so illiterate as not
|
||
to be able to read it, he can hearken to the preacher and still be
|
||
saved. People want immortality. This is proof that they will get
|
||
it. The Bible has lived. Tom Paine couldn't destroy it. Then it
|
||
must indeed be the Word of God. Man hasn't written another Bible.
|
||
Therefore God wrote it, and it is irreplaceable save by the divine
|
||
hand. Did Ingersoll prove that there is no God? Then, by his
|
||
failure to prove that there isn't, he proved that there is a God.
|
||
Out of his own mouth is he condemned.
|
||
|
||
But the supreme proof! The tales of deathbed repentance! Every
|
||
wandering prophet and Bible-thumper has a quiver full of them. The
|
||
infidel always gets cold feet when, dying, he thinks of Hell. Old
|
||
sinners, who have denied God their lives long, on their deathbeds
|
||
cry out for God's mercy. Smart men, who have been puffed up by
|
||
their intellects and sneered at the simple faith of the morons,
|
||
have at last yielded up the ghost with a prayer and wildly
|
||
imploring gesture. The infidel who has impiously read the books
|
||
forgets them all when old Death stalks upon him, and he remembers
|
||
then the lessons taught him at his mother's knee. Or the reprobate
|
||
who has rioted with the temptations of thought, as he kneels at the
|
||
bedside of a dying loved one -- daughter, sister or wife -- sees a
|
||
vision of The Pearly Gates Ajar. And along with these cheap, silly
|
||
tales we have the old lies about Tom Paine and Bob Ingersoll. They
|
||
repented at the last, the gaping mob is told. They denied their
|
||
teachings. They wished to burn their books. They were not saved --
|
||
oh, no. They were simply cowards, who tried at the last moment to
|
||
cheat Hell of its human, heretic fuel. How this apostle of the jim-
|
||
jams does heap filth and falsehood upon the graves of the
|
||
freethinkers! These were monsters, who dared to think contrary to
|
||
the jumping, jabbering witch-doctors. What's a murderer, or any
|
||
malefactor of the most vicious stripe, by the side of the infidel
|
||
who has disputed the word of God and this hell-raising zealot? who
|
||
has tried to liberate the human mind from the slavery of
|
||
superstition? This rat of an evangelist gnaws furiously at the
|
||
imaginary forms of dead men who, by his side, loom as very colossi
|
||
of intellect and nobility. For a performance equal to this, we must
|
||
turn to Swift's Yahoos.
|
||
|
||
The evangelist, too, may confront man with God in a crudely
|
||
melodramatic gesture. Brann tells how a preacher in a Texas city
|
||
resorted to this trick of histrionic befuddlement. This iconoclast
|
||
of the Texan wilds was writing editorials on a San Antonio or
|
||
Houston paper; and he was laboring to inculcate a few religious
|
||
notions slightly above those of human brutes. The man of God
|
||
objected to this interference with his fetching vaudeville act and
|
||
devoted a sermon to this villain of godless journalism. As a
|
||
climax, the preacher suddenly waved before the mob a copy of the
|
||
paper and a copy of the Bible, shouting: "Whom will you believe?
|
||
Brann or God?" This is a perfect example of the methods of the
|
||
evangelist. He is a trickster, a cheap befooler of the multitude,
|
||
in every word and gesture. He is an actor, who is methodically mad.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
He plays every Possible note upon the name and fame of God, the
|
||
Devil, the Paines and the Ingersolls. He pours forth an endless
|
||
stream of billingsgate. He spits upon truth. He kicks reason. He
|
||
turns on the sewers of holiness and decent men fly to escape the
|
||
spectacle and the stench. Like the vile Yahoos, he treats man,
|
||
proud man, to a bath of filth. He uses every trick of crude,
|
||
bucolic bombast, stinking Billy Sunday invective, dodgings and
|
||
twistings not sufficiently agile and robust to be called sophistry,
|
||
sentimental drivel that would make the angels weep but not in
|
||
grief, threats and blustering that only a yokel would heed.
|
||
|
||
Above all, this evangelist uses the trick of terror. He is
|
||
appealing to ignorant people. Therefore he is appealing to people
|
||
who, can be moved powerfully by fear of the unknown. And this fear
|
||
he gives them in tremendous doses. From first to last, Hell is the
|
||
main attraction and repulsion. It both attracts and repels. And it
|
||
unfailingly terrifies. It drives men and women to their knees.
|
||
There is crying aloud, rending of garments, rolling in agony.
|
||
Always, this evangelist cracks the Devil's whip over the heads of
|
||
the mob. The roaring and crackling of the eternal flames, the
|
||
terrible fumes that rise from the pit, Satan in his orthodox
|
||
theological presentment -- these are the devices that draw the
|
||
shouts and the shekels. After weeks spent in giving the people Hell
|
||
in exchange for a guarantee and the freewill offering, the
|
||
evangelist chars the rafters and cracks the walls of the temple
|
||
with a final sermon on Hell which will beat the Devil if anything
|
||
will. Those who have held out thus long are not likely to show
|
||
further hesitation. Whoever does fail to step lively in this great
|
||
crisis is lost beyond the possibility of redemption. If a man
|
||
doesn't repent when the Devil actually singes his whiskers, so to
|
||
speak, it's dead certain that he's bound in a bee-line for the land
|
||
where Bob Ingersoll will go. As fear is the great, saving influence
|
||
of religion, so the man who is unafraid, who can look calmly upon
|
||
the contortions of the holy howlers, is proof against the religious
|
||
spell.
|
||
|
||
Not calmly, though without the authentically God-inspired
|
||
excitement of fear, do we look upon the spectacle. We react to it
|
||
in varying moods. Disgust is what we most often and most strongly
|
||
feel. And shame perhaps -- shame for Man, to see him thus mocked
|
||
and presented as worse than ape-like in the antics of this
|
||
creature. We may see it humorously as an uproarious joke, or as a
|
||
grim and ugly joke, a satire on man that no Swift with deadly pen
|
||
could portray. And we may, quite properly, ponder certain of its
|
||
social consequences -- as a joke that should be laughed at with
|
||
intent to kill. For it is an evil thing, and it has echoes and
|
||
manifestations, not so obviously farcical, that extend far beyond
|
||
the crossroads and are involved in shams of the most respectable
|
||
and dignified type.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps we should waste our pity to bestow it upon the yokelry
|
||
who are visited by these calamities known as camp meetings or
|
||
revivals or orgies of evangelism. They enjoy it. It is a great show
|
||
to them. No doubt they regard it somewhat as they do the circus or
|
||
the travelling medicine fakir or the Uncle Tom's Cabin company. It
|
||
is the show of shows that fills the barren life of the crossroads
|
||
with hectic, shivering joy. There is a type of mind that revels in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
the emotion of fear, that when drunk with the ecstasy of terror is
|
||
happy in contrast with its usual dull functioning. This craziness
|
||
of religion is a relief to the dullness of ordinary life. And there
|
||
is plenty of company; it's a herd debauch; all are fear-stricken,
|
||
all shout when they see God face to face, and one witnesses the
|
||
fears and the miraculous wild-eyed conversions of others. A simple,
|
||
unimportant fellow may even win a moment's glory by "pinch-hitting"
|
||
at the mourners' bench and yanking a neighbor out of Hell by his
|
||
dangerously scorched coat-tails. And while sin is not unknown in
|
||
this bare, weather-beaten environment, it is a crude, commonplace
|
||
sort of sin, the very elemental unadorned sordidness of man the
|
||
animal; but from this John the Baptist, who hails from the halls of
|
||
Babylon and beyond, there can be heard tales of strange, gaudy,
|
||
whirling sins that reveal amazingly the ingenuity of the Devil. One
|
||
call hear scandals about the wicked doings of the outer world --
|
||
not to forget the immemorial, never-old scandals about the skeptics
|
||
(short, ugly "infidels" in the evangelist's lexicon) who wallowed
|
||
in intellect and other kinds of dissipation.
|
||
|
||
So on the whole, though the spectacle of men crazy and fear-
|
||
struck and babbling of Gods and of moons made of green cheese is
|
||
not an inspiring one, it is no doubt true that those whom the
|
||
evangelist hits in the very bowels of superstition enjoy the blow.
|
||
Yet if the community be large enough to contain a small body of
|
||
intelligent men and women (and indeed the revivalist rage strikes
|
||
towns that are higher in the scale than Dutch Hollow or Village
|
||
Corners) one cannot but feel the distress of this minority that is
|
||
exposed to weeks of the idiocy and savagery of old-fashioned
|
||
religion. There are towns, too, in which the majority, if not
|
||
downright unbelievers, are too civilized to practice religion to
|
||
the full. It is not pleasant for them to have the fanatics stirred
|
||
and the community torn emotionally asunder by the invasion of one
|
||
hundred per cent religion with blood in its eye. They feel the
|
||
blasts of hate. They are drawn, willy-nilly, into this feud between
|
||
God and the Devil, between the sinners and the saved who can hardly
|
||
restrain the impulse to anticipate the Devil and go after every
|
||
sinner with a pitchfork and a flaming brand. The man who as a rule,
|
||
whether unbelieving or faintly believing or indifferent, goes about
|
||
his business without molestation is now liable to the interference
|
||
(he being a foe or a possible convert) of every pious meddler and
|
||
missionary who feels the gripe of God in his gizzard. He may be let
|
||
alone personally, but he must live in this community that has
|
||
suddenly reverted to pre-Voltairean type. And as there is the
|
||
atmosphere of hate which no man can escape wholly, as there is the
|
||
spectacle of emotional insanity which must impinge unpleasantly
|
||
upon any civilized man, so there is always an extraordinary impulse
|
||
of bigotry aroused by these outbursts and inundations of
|
||
evangelism. The evangelist, in short, arouses the worst impulses of
|
||
the herd in a community, so that they are articulate and menacing
|
||
to a degree beyond their everyday, smug, pious habitude, A church-
|
||
ridden bailiwick is bad enough; but when the bigots start on the
|
||
warpath, when God actually appears in person at the First Metho-Bap
|
||
Church, Hell's to pay and the quiet, decent, self-respecting sinner
|
||
may have t little of the pitch splashed upon him.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
IS SCIENCE A SHAM?
|
||
|
||
What's a sham? I'd really like to know. I have always had a
|
||
rough, simple notion of what is sham. I have regarded as sham that
|
||
which is false and hollow, which pretends (usually with much pomp
|
||
and with stiff neck and bloodshot eye) to be what it is not, as
|
||
something which may glitter deceptively but which is not gold, as
|
||
mere "sound and fury" trying to pass itself off as wisdom.
|
||
|
||
An idea is a sham, I take it, when it claims to be the
|
||
embodiment of eternal truth yet cannot stand the light of even
|
||
temporary reason.
|
||
|
||
A man is a sham, in my humble, view, when he claims to have
|
||
virtue and knowledge that are not even faintly concealed about his
|
||
person and that may indeed be out of reach of the wisest men. A
|
||
sham is a lie, it may be crude or clever, that appeals to the
|
||
passionately prejudiced and uninstructed minds of men.
|
||
|
||
For example, patriotism is a sham when it lets out the howl
|
||
that the people of another nation are a pack of beasts and
|
||
criminals, unrelated to the human family, and unmoved by such
|
||
motives as animate the breasts of the patriots that sweat and breed
|
||
in our noble country. Politics is a sham when it is a mere trick of
|
||
playing on the stupidity of the masses, of promising a new heaven
|
||
and earth beyond the power or purpose of the glib politicians: when
|
||
it spreads broadcast such a bald slogan as "Coolidge or Chaos":
|
||
when a Dawes rallies the right-thinking masses to protect the
|
||
tyranny of the courts, pretending that these courts are the
|
||
bulwarks of liberty.
|
||
|
||
Religion is a sham when it claims to reveal the secret of life
|
||
and death, to possess the eternal supreme truth, when it says that
|
||
he who does not believe shall be damned.
|
||
|
||
Words are a sham when they make a great display but mean
|
||
nothing.
|
||
|
||
Actions are a sham when they parade themselves in dishonest
|
||
motives: when the petty pretends to be noble, the selfish pretends
|
||
to be altruistic, the shrewd and calculating pretends to be naive.
|
||
|
||
Sham is a windbag pretending to have guts and arteries, castor
|
||
oil pretending to be champagne, a dunghill pretending to be a
|
||
diamond mine.
|
||
|
||
I ruminate thus about sham, trying honestly to define the
|
||
thing for myself, because I receive now and then a letter from a
|
||
reader who seems to have quite another view of sham: a view,
|
||
however, that is not at all clear to me. As an instance, here is a
|
||
reader who tells me I shall do well to smash shams, but he adds
|
||
that I should not forget to smash the sham of science while I am
|
||
about it.
|
||
|
||
Now just what does my friend mean? Frankly, I am puzzled. Here
|
||
is a vast body of knowledge, brought together from the ends of the
|
||
earth -- knowledge that is the result of careful thought and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
research, that has been acquired slowly a little at a time, that
|
||
has tested itself, that is indeed a guide and servant to men in the
|
||
practical affairs of life -- and what is here that can be
|
||
denominated sham? Grant that it is imperfect knowledge -- still, it
|
||
is the very best knowledge we have, and it is very useful
|
||
knowledge, knowledge that we constantly employ and could not get
|
||
along without. Admit that this knowledge leaves a large territory
|
||
that must be marked as Unknown -- still, that territory is smaller
|
||
than it was a hundred or fifty years ago, and we have at least
|
||
learned, thanks to science, not to be so terrified by it as our
|
||
ancestors were.
|
||
|
||
Science has changed the face of this earth: it has harnessed
|
||
the forces of Nature -- forces whose secret laws it had first to
|
||
discover -- it has created practically a new world within the
|
||
memory of men living: and is this, then, to be called sham?
|
||
|
||
There is a lot of theory in science: well, my friend, theory
|
||
is an indispensable tool of the human mind: and so long as a theory
|
||
works, why complain? And remember this: when a theory ceases to
|
||
work, when newly discovered facts rob it of its usefulness, science
|
||
drops it or trims it a little here and there, and goes ahead with
|
||
the quiet and business-like air that distinguishes it from hollow,
|
||
high-sounding fanaticism.
|
||
|
||
Science -- the scientists -- doesn't pretend to have grasped
|
||
in its fingers the Eternal Truth. Science doesn't throw a God at
|
||
one's head. Science doesn't demand that one believe or be damned.
|
||
Science reasons. Science investigates. Science tests itself. The
|
||
scientist is engaged in a constant search for truth: and being the
|
||
servant of truth, and not of a creed or a myth, he is always ready
|
||
to confess an error, is indeed scrupulous to detect an error in his
|
||
own thought and investigation.
|
||
|
||
Science is not a sham but a tremendous reality. Science works
|
||
-- builds -- quietly prevails -- promises little and performs much.
|
||
|
||
What, I ask you, has religion accomplished that can stand
|
||
fittingly by the work of Science? If religion had done one-half for
|
||
the human race what science has done -- and were it ever so
|
||
imperfect, ever so tentative, ever so far from any final goat of
|
||
all Good and all Truth -- still, you would not find me calling
|
||
religion a sham or attacking it as such. Religion has given nothing
|
||
to the world, excepting tears and groans and cries of hate and
|
||
gibberings of superstition. It has been a fraud, a parasite upon
|
||
the human race, an enormous windbag gathering the millions who
|
||
fondly imagine they shall discover treasures within. Religion is a
|
||
sham. Science has paid its way -- it has been a useful and
|
||
brilliant and tireless worker -- it has poured wealth and knowledge
|
||
into the lap of the human race.
|
||
|
||
Science is not a sham.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
RELIGION -- A PILE OF GARBAGE
|
||
|
||
Religion, says H.L. Mencken, deserves no more respect than a
|
||
pile of garbage. He says it with an eye that is fixed in particular
|
||
disgust upon the rampant native Christianity that has bred such
|
||
monstrosities as Cotton Mather, Sam Jones and Billy Sunday and that
|
||
regularly produces its Talmadges and Parkhursts to boot. The kind
|
||
of religion that flourishes at the crossroads is a subject for a
|
||
Rabelais, forgetting his gusto in a sense of social duty, to handle
|
||
with averted nostrils and a ten-foot pen. And the religion that
|
||
displays itself elegantly in the city temple is different only in
|
||
that it walks on soft carpets and knows how to use its knife and
|
||
fork and mingles the terrible odor of sanctity with a dash of
|
||
Parisian perfume. But religion, let us say (using Christianity not
|
||
as the sole but only the worst and contiguous example) is exactly
|
||
deserving in the manner and degree allotted to it by the just Mr.
|
||
Mencken. Fine words are no strangers to Mencken, but he waste sweet
|
||
adjectives upon rottenness. Contrary to statements that have been
|
||
made, I say that Mencken is a master of literary style in that he
|
||
uses words with a thought of their meaning. What better example
|
||
could we have of Mr. Mencken's stylistic aptness, honesty and vigor
|
||
than his use of the phrase, "a pile of garbage"? The rhetoric of
|
||
that statement can be defended as almost perfect: and indeed I
|
||
would suggest only a slight change. Why not say that religion is a
|
||
pile of garbage?
|
||
|
||
We shall have to look at this pile of garbage -- not stir it
|
||
to the, bottom nor ram our noses into it but poke investigatively
|
||
around the edges. It is not likely that you will find in a pile of
|
||
garbage any fresh, savory, wholesome food. A bit of good food,
|
||
accidentally dumped upon the garbage pile, instantly loses its
|
||
virtue. Garbage spoils whatever it touches. In the garbage pile of
|
||
religion you will see, in the first place, certain messes that have
|
||
been cooked and chewed over, and most gastrically used, until there
|
||
is left in them nothing that well-regulated palate or stomach or a
|
||
sane mind can find pleasant or useful. The dietitian has no place
|
||
here, and only the scavenger is needed. Whether this food, when it
|
||
was food, was good, healthful, natural food, who will bother to
|
||
say? Formerly it may have been a gastric offense: now it is a
|
||
ghastly offense. It may have been hard to digest: now it is hardly
|
||
possible to see or smell, and it temporarily paralyzes the
|
||
appetite.
|
||
|
||
This garbage of religion, we can plainly see, is full of the
|
||
stuff of superstitious loaves and fishes that have cursed man with
|
||
a vile, perpetual bellyache since prehistoric times. What old food
|
||
is this that was a raw, bloody meal thousands of years ago when man
|
||
lived precariously, filled with panic, mumbling his food and his
|
||
fear-thoughts in terror! These are the endless regurgitated and
|
||
rechewed remnants of the victuals of medicine men and myth-makers
|
||
who subsisted as best they could in a strange world long before
|
||
Christ appeared to feed the multitude, still hungry for signs and
|
||
wonders. Holy hermits eating to grow thin, and holy-hilarious monks
|
||
eating that flesh might follow gorging, rolled this religious stew
|
||
on their tongues. Flea-bitten fanatics in the Dark Ages ground
|
||
their teeth over this very flesh, slightly burnt in those days. And
|
||
as men with enormous, panic-driven appetite and no taste have in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
every age slung this food into them as ravenously as a hobo
|
||
dripping mulligan from his jaws: so we remember that honest,
|
||
intelligent men in every age have ventured to try a spoonful of the
|
||
mess and quickly spat it out in disgust.
|
||
|
||
In short, we observe that this garbage of religion consists
|
||
largely of the oldest superstition known to man; that it is a brew
|
||
and batch of creeds and myths and fear-thoughts and stupid, servile
|
||
worship that have been guzzled and gnawed over wherever man has
|
||
mistaken the rumble of an aching, empty belly for the voice of God;
|
||
that when this slum-gullion, which has gone down so many throats
|
||
and along the way of all flesh, was first concocted both man's
|
||
culinary and his culture were in a crude, savage state, We think we
|
||
know garbage when we see it -- when we smell it. There is more than
|
||
one kind of garbage, though in truth the garbage pile and the
|
||
dunghill are death to all distinction, being not readily measured
|
||
except by the shovelful: but obviously a thing that belongs on the
|
||
garbage Pile -- that indeed a thrust of the stick turns up for our
|
||
unpleasant gaze -- is the stuff that is mixed with the saliva and
|
||
bile of greasy-fingered generations, the fear of God in their
|
||
bowels.
|
||
|
||
Among other things that we recognize in the garbage pile,
|
||
there are bunches of decayed food -- food that has missed its
|
||
purpose of proper nourishment and that has rotted until it is no
|
||
longer good in the eyes of sensible people. We agree that food is
|
||
good only when it is not too far removed from a fresh state. when
|
||
it has a right honest flavor. Vegetables that have grown stale and
|
||
bitter to the taste -- the blighted cabbage, the shrivelled carrot
|
||
and the feeble, rancid tomato -- are fit only to repose amid the
|
||
corruption of the garbage pile. Yet many people, who will not eat
|
||
decayed food, will swallow decayed notions and call themselves
|
||
pious in the act: and they have only praise for the faculties of
|
||
man as corrupted from their respectable, sensible and noble uses.
|
||
|
||
This decay of faculties, this corruption of the intellectual
|
||
food of man, is rank in the pile of holy garbage that goes by the
|
||
name of religion. Wherever it has touched the human mind, religion
|
||
has, after the manner of garbage, spoiled what is good. So infinite
|
||
in faculty is man, as the melancholy Dane did observe, but also how
|
||
infinitely base or miserable or pitiful is man when his faculties
|
||
have been decayed by religion. What shall we say of the man who,
|
||
for love of God, hates and persecutes his fellow men? The touch of
|
||
religion kills the generous enthusiasm in man and in its place we
|
||
have fanaticism. The sense of wonder, while it now and then
|
||
inspires a poet, more widely impels the poor millions in their
|
||
folly to wriggle in the dust and mumble supplications to the
|
||
Unknown. The poetry in man has been cheated by religion, which has
|
||
given man the dry bones of faith to feed his sense of the mystery
|
||
and mightiness of life and his hunger for the sublime. The man who
|
||
falls into the spiritual decay of religion cannot see the real
|
||
wonders of the universe. Beating his head at the altar, hiding in
|
||
his pew with eyes cast down in prayer, he cannot look up at the
|
||
stars. And if he happens to see the stars, the emotion that is
|
||
proper to the beholding of grandeur decays in a pulpy reflection of
|
||
piety.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
There is in man a great capacity for admiring what seems
|
||
greater than his individual self, what represents to him a certain
|
||
loftiness and virtue. And how has religion treated this instinct of
|
||
man to reach out to something better than himself? lt has given man
|
||
gods and foolish saints and madmen rending their garments: it has
|
||
given him the admiration of an awful nothingness, a heedful of
|
||
chimerical images, a vain and worthless show of bubbles fit only to
|
||
entertain children. This fraud of religion has persuaded men, not
|
||
only that piety is a kind of excellence, but indeed that piety
|
||
(especially the marauding brand of piety, armed with the dangerous
|
||
zeal of the bigot) is the supreme virtue of man. The maid upon
|
||
which the hypnotic spell of religion has been cast sees the
|
||
preacher as greater than the philosopher: and sees the psalm-
|
||
singing, shouting type of Christian as higher than the man who
|
||
functions more quietly as a thinking animal.
|
||
|
||
The human imagination, with its creative possibilities,
|
||
becomes a cowardly, contemptible thing when it is touched by the
|
||
hand of religion. Fasting and prayer give rise to the sort of
|
||
vision that belongs in the madhouse, yet that when cried up as
|
||
sacred revelations meet with a success that is the envy of
|
||
charlatans outside the church who are engaged in fooling the herd
|
||
by the ways of man rather than the ways of God. Imagination may
|
||
enable a Shakespeare to give us super-reality, an epitome of man,
|
||
in art: or it may lead a Bunyan to give us Sunday-school morality
|
||
in the guise of a Methodist fairy tale, a Swedenborg to give us
|
||
wild visions of "the undiscovered country from whose bourne no
|
||
traveler returns." The desire for a feeling of permanence, for
|
||
something more than a passing puppet's role in life, which inspires
|
||
a man uncorrupted by Christianity to build for the men of the
|
||
future, to pass on his personality in a solid and splendid way to
|
||
the coming race: this desire to escape being ignominiously snuffed
|
||
out like a brief candle appears, in its perverted Christian form,
|
||
as a petty longing for the prolongation of personal inaptitude into
|
||
an endless Paradise beyond the grave: if a man is absolutely
|
||
irreligious, he may want to give men culture, control of the forces
|
||
of Nature, wiser and kinder laws of social life, the joys of art,
|
||
philosophy to make the most of life: but the man whose mind has
|
||
been wrung limp by the laying on of sacerdotal paws thinks of an
|
||
eternity of vague, fatuous bliss and all he has to offer men is the
|
||
choice of Heaven or Hell. So we observe that the man who tries to
|
||
persuade his fellows that they can make this life somewhat more
|
||
beautiful and intelligent is hooted by the mob; while the holy man
|
||
who talks with a long face about mansions in the skies has no lack
|
||
of a gaping audience.
|
||
|
||
We may be told that faith is the great gift of religion to
|
||
man. Verily it is upon faith, as interpreted by Saint Paul and
|
||
intended for simpletons, that religion finally pins its defense and
|
||
justification and hope. Yet what an empty, trifling, purposeless
|
||
faith! 'Tis a faith that is mere blind credulity, that demands the
|
||
surrender of the human mind. This is a faith in ghosts, not in men:
|
||
in foolish incantations, not in realistic effort: in sanctified
|
||
mumnieries and miracles, not in living possibilities. It is not the
|
||
kind of faith or daring of the spirit which Napoleon expressed when
|
||
he declared that nothing is impossible -- that the human mind and
|
||
will are instruments of marvelous, illimitable uses. It is not
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
faith in the purposes of life -- the kind of faith avowed by a
|
||
Goethe -- that leads a man to noble achievements that satisfy the
|
||
intelligence. Faith that means the will to live or the willingness
|
||
to be used by life -- that means a healthy sort of illusion,
|
||
sufficiently earthy and holding to life -- that means a certain
|
||
egoistic belief in the importance of ourselves and our actions:
|
||
this kind of faith may inspire men to work for ends that are beyond
|
||
their immediate fleeting day, to build for ages unborn and possibly
|
||
condemned to futility. This is the faith that dares and does
|
||
things, the faith that labors with intelligent human tools for
|
||
intelligent and worthy human purposes. But this heart of energy and
|
||
wise illusion, this pragmatic spirit of intimacy and identification
|
||
with life, is in its aspect of Christian clearly the idle,
|
||
ridiculous, meaningless bowing of heads and bending of knees in
|
||
prayer: it is the attitude and the belief that moves the savage
|
||
worshipping a wooden idol, It robs man of every vestige of dignity
|
||
and intelligence.
|
||
|
||
The influence of religion, in all its manifestations, sends
|
||
man flat in the dust, a pitiful, grovelling object. This lord of
|
||
life, when religion gets hold of him, is the victim of decay and
|
||
the slave of sickening superstition. The highest faculty of man --
|
||
the reasoning faculty -- is used (indeed abused) by religion to
|
||
invent theological absurdities and monstrosities. What shameful
|
||
thins are the creeds of man, when seen clearly as perversions of
|
||
the human intellect, as the distortion of the mind by visions of
|
||
terror and stupid, saintly tricks, as the bending of the noble
|
||
faculty of reason to the squinting consideration of quiddities and
|
||
all manner of mad trifles! Imagine this human mind -- that in a
|
||
Diderot could produce an Encyclopedia, in a Bacon a Novtim Organum,
|
||
in a Goethe a Faust, in a Darwin or a Haeckel an immense structure
|
||
of scientific knowledge -- turning itself to farce in the skull of
|
||
a Christian fanatic and gasping for divine light on the subject of
|
||
baptism or witches or virgin birth or the divinity of Jesus! Think
|
||
of men for ages wrangling about the quality of inspiration, human
|
||
or divine, in a book -- mere black on white -- that is a jumble of
|
||
concupiscence and murder and intrigue and the beliefs of half-
|
||
civilized, wandering tribes who regarded this world as the
|
||
footstool of a fatuous God, who never knew his own mind a week
|
||
ahead, and who might kick the world over in a moment's celestial
|
||
caprice! And man, proud man who is distinguished from other animals
|
||
by his ability to reason in lofty and tremendous and most intricate
|
||
fashion, has argued interminably and shed blood and lit terrible,
|
||
fantastic fires of martyrdom over the precise, piffling
|
||
interpretation of little combinations of words in this so-called
|
||
Holy Writ! This mighty being, Man, supreme on the earth, endowed
|
||
with infinite faculties, wrestled through wretched centuries with
|
||
imaginary angels and devils.
|
||
|
||
And the human mind today, in the midst of all the
|
||
possibilities of culture and enlightenment, is still in millions of
|
||
men and women wholly subject to the influence of terrors and
|
||
trifles. The curse of religion still robs man of his reasoning
|
||
faculty; of his potentially fine, artistic imagination; of his
|
||
spirit of true poetry and of wonder that is not the mere witless
|
||
gawking and trembling of holy-rolling morons; of his conception of
|
||
the truly sublime, his admiration of great things, his impulse to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
STUDIES IN RATIONALISM
|
||
|
||
seek higher levels of life and thought; of his sense of values, of
|
||
his dignity and decent, true presentment as a human being, religion
|
||
has robbed man in every please and faculty of living.
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We see in religion the decay of every good thing in this
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world. Mencken is right. He hit upon the very phrase -- the very
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name and habitation of this holy fraud. It is a pile of garbage. It
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is the reteaching of superstitions as old as the jungles. It is the
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dumping round of decayed human faculties, wilted and sour and
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rancid, blasted in base usage -- fit only to smear the hands of
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fanatics who wish to throw something at the heads of civilized men
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trying to guide to noble uses the capacities of thought and emotion
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that have been so foully abused by religion,
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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26
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