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1626 lines
85 KiB
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25 page printout.
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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The Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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1882
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QUESTION. What do you think of the arguments presented by Mr.
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Talmage in favor of the inspiration of the Bible?
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ANSWER. Mr. Talmage takes the ground that there are more
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copies of the Bible than of any other book, and that consequently
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it must be inspired.
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It seems to me that this kind of reasoning proves entirely too
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much. If the Bible is the inspired word of God, it was certainly
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just as true when there was only one copy, as it is to-day; and the
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facts contained in it were just as true before they were written,
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as afterwards. We all know that it is a fact in human nature, that
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a man can tell a falsehood so often that he finally believes it
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himself; but I never suspected, until now, that a mistake could be
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printed enough times to make it true.
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There may have been a time, and probably there was, when there
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were more copies of the Koran than of the Bible. When most
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Christians were utterly ignorant, thousands of Moors were educated;
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and it is well known that the arts and sciences flourished in
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Mohammedan countries in a far greater degree than in Christian.
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Now, at that time, it may be that there were more copies of the
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Koran than of the Bible. If some enterprising Mohammedan had only
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seen the force of such a fact, he might have established the
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inspiration of the Koran beyond a doubt; or, if it had been found
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by actual count that the Koran was a little behind, a few years of
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industry spent in the multiplication of copies, might have
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furnished the evidence of its inspiration.
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Is it not simply amazing that a doctor of divinity, a
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Presbyterian clergyman, in this day and age, should seriously rely
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upon the number of copies of the Bible to substantiate the
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inspiration of that book? Is it possible to conceive of anything
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more fig-leaflessly absurd? If there is anything at all in this
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argument, it is, that all books are true in proportion to the
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number of copies that exist. Of course, the same rule will work
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with newspapers; so that; the newspaper having the largest
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circulation can consistently claim infallibility. Suppose that an
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exceedingly absurd statement should appear in The New York Harold,
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and some one should denounce it as utterly without any foundation
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in fact or probability; what would Mr. Talmage think if the editor
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of the Harold, as an evidence of the truth of the statement, should
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rely on the fact that his paper had the largest circulation of any
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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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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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in the city? One would think that the whole church had acted upon
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the theory that a falsehood repeated often enough was as good as
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the truth.
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Another evidence brought forward by the reverend gentleman to
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prove the inspiration of the Scriptures, is the assertion that if
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Congress should undertake to pass a law to take the Bible from the
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people, thirty millions would rise in defence of that book.
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This argument also seems to me to prove too much, and as a
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consequence, to prove nothing. If Congress should pass a law
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prohibiting the reading of Shakespeare, every American would rise
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in defence of his right to read the works of the greatest man this
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world has known. Still, that would not even tend to show that
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Shakespeare was inspired. The fact is, the American people would
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not allow Congress to pass a law preventing them from reading any
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good book. Such action would not prove the book to be inspired; it
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would prove that the American people believe in liberty.
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There are millions of people in Turkey who would peril their
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lives in defence of the Koran. A fact like this does not prove the
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truth of the Koran; it simply proves what Mohammedans think of that
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book, and what they are willing to do for its preservation.
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It can not be too often repeated, that martyrdom does not
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prove the truth of the thing for which the martyr dies; it only
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proves the sincerity of the martyr and the cruelty of his
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murderers. No matter how many people regard the Bible as inspired,
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-- that fact furnishes no evidence that it is inspired. Just as
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many people have regarded other books as inspired; just as many
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millions have been deluded about the inspiration of books ages and
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ages before Christianity was born.
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The simple belief of one man, or of millions of men, is no
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evidence to another. Evidence must be based, not upon the belief of
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other people, but upon facts. A believer may state the facts upon
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which his belief is founded, and the person to whom he states them
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gives them the weight that according to the construction and
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constitution of his mind he must. But simple, bare belief is not
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testimony. We should build upon facts, not upon beliefs of others,
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nor upon the shifting sands of public opinion. So much for this
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argument.
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The next point made by the reverend gentleman is, that an
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infidel cannot be elected to any office in the United States, in
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any county, precinct, or ward.
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For the sake of the argument, let us admit that this is true.
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What does it prove? There was a time when no Protestant could have
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been elected to any office. What did that prove? There was a time
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when no Presbyterian could have been chosen to fill any public
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station. What did that prove? The same may be said of the members
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of each religious denomination. What does that prove?
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Mr. Talmage says that Christianity must be true. because an
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infidel cannot be elected to office. Now, suppose that enough
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infidels should happen to settle in one precinct to elect one of
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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their own number to office; would that prove that Christianity was
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not true in that precinct? There was a time when no man could have
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been elected to any office, who insisted on the rotundity of the
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earth; what did that prove? There was a time when no man who denied
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the existence of witches, wizards, spooks and devils, could hold
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any position of honor; what did that prove? There was a time when
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an abolitionist could not be elected to office in any State in this
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Union; what did that prove? There was a time when they were not
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allowed to express their honest thoughts; what does that prove?
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There was a time when a Quaker could not have been elected to any
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office; there was a time in the history of this country when but
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few of them were allowed to live; what does that prove? Is it
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necessary, in order to ascertain the truth of Christianity, to look
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over the election returns? Is "inspiration" a question to be
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settled by the ballot? I admit that it was once, in the first
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place, settled that way. I admit that books were voted in and voted
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out, and that the Bible was finally formed in accordance with a
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vote; but does Mr. Talmage insist that the question is not still
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open? Does he not know, that a fact cannot by any possibility be
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affected by opinion? We make laws for the whole people, by the
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whole people. We agree that a majority shall rule, but nobody ever
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pretended that a question of taste could be settled by an appeal to
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majorities, or that a question of logic could be affected by
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numbers. In the world of thought, each man is an absolute monarch,
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each brain is a kingdom, that cannot be invaded even by the tyranny
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of majorities.
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No man can avoid the intellectual responsibility of deciding
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for himself.
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Suppose that the Christian religion had been put to vote in
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Jerusalem? Suppose that the doctrine of the "fall" had been settled
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in Athens, by an appeal to the people, would Mr. Talmage have been
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willing to abide by their decision? If he settles the inspiration
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of the Bible by a popular vote, he must settle the meaning of the
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Bible by the same means. There are more Methodists than
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Presbyterians -- why does the gentleman remain a Presbyterian?
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There are more Buddhists than Christians -- why does he vote
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against majorities? He will remember that Christianity was once
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settled by a popular vote -- that the divinity of Christ was
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submitted to the people, and the people said: "Crucify him!"
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The next, and about the strongest, argument Mr. Talmage makes
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is. that I am an infidel because I was defeated for Governor of
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Illinois.
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When put in plain English. his statement is this: that I was
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defeated because I was an infidel, and that I am an infidel because
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I was defeated. This, I believe, is called reasoning in a circle.
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The truth is, that a good many people did object to me because I
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was an infidel, and the probability is, that if I had denied being
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an infidel, I might have obtained an office. The wonderful part is,
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that any Christian should deride me because I preferred honor to
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political success. He who dishonors himself for the sake of being
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honored by others, will find that two mistakes have been made --
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one by himself, and the other, by the people.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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I presume that Mr.Talmage really thinks that I was extremely
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foolish to avow my real opinions. After all, men are apt to judge
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others somewhat by themselves. According to him. I made the mistake
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of preserving my manhood and losing an office. Now, if I had in
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fact been an infidel, and had denied it, for the sake of position,
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then I admit that every Christian might have pointed at me the
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finger of contempt. But I was an infidel, and admitted it. Surely,
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I should not be held in contempt by Christians for having made the
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admission. I was not a believer in the Bible, and I said so. I was
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not a Christian, and I said so. I was not willing to receive the
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support of any man under a false impression. I thought it better to
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be honestly beaten, than to dishonestly succeed. According to the
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ethics of Mr Talmage I made a mistake, and this mistake is brought
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forward as another evidence of the inspiration of the Scriptures.
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If I had only been elected Governor of Illinois, -- that is to say,
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if I had been a successful hypocrite, I might now be basking in the
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sunshine of this gentleman's respect. I preferred to tell the truth
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-- to be an honest man, -- and I have never regretted the course I
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pursued.
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There are many men now in office who, had they pursued a
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nobler course, would be private citizens. Nominally, they are
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Christians; actually, they are nothing; and this is the combination
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that generally insures political success.
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Mr. Talmage is exceedingly proud of the fact that Christians
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will not vote for infidels. In other words, he does not believe
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that in our Government the church has been absolutely divorced from
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the state. He believes that it is still the Christian's duty to
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make the religious test. Probably he wishes to get his God into the
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Constitution. My position is this:
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Religion is an individual matter -- a something for each
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individual to settle for himself, and with which no other human
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being has any concern, provided the religion of each human being
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allows liberty to every other. When called upon to vote for men to
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fill the offices of this country, I do not inquire as to the
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religion of the candidates. It is none of my business. I ask the
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questions asked by Jefferson: "Is he "honest; is he capable?" It
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makes no difference to me, if he is willing that others should be
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free, what creed he may profess. The moment I inquire into his
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religious belief, I found a little inquisition of my own; I repeat,
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in a small way, the errors of the past, and reproduce, in so far as
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I am capable, the infamy of the ignorant orthodox years.
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Mr.Talmage will accept my thanks for his frankness. I now know
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what controls a Presbyterian when he casts his vote. He cares
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nothing for the capacity, nothing for the fitness, of the candidate
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to discharge the duties of the office to which he aspires; he
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simply asks: Is he a Presbyterian, is he a Protestant, does he
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believe our creed? and then, no matter how ignorant he may be, how
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utterly unfit, he receives the Presbyterian vote. According to Mr.
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Talmage, he would vote for a Catholic who, if he had the power,
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would destroy all liberty of conscience, rather than vote for an
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infidel who, had he the power, would destroy all the religious
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tyranny of the world, and allow every human being to think for
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himself, and to worship God, or not, as and how he pleased.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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Mr. Talmage makes the serious mistake of placing the Bible
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above the laws and Constitution of his country. He places Jehovah
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above humanity. Such men are not entirely safe citizens of any
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republic. And yet, I am in favor of giving to such men all the
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liberty I ask for myself, trusting to education and the spirit of
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progress to overcome any injury they may do, or seek to do.
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When this country was founded, when the Constitution was
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adopted, the churches agreed to let the State alone. They agreed
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that all citizens should have equal civil rights. Nothing could be
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more dangerous to the existence of this Republic than to introduce
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religion into politics. The American theory is, that governments
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are founded, not by gods, but by men, and that the right to govern
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does not come from God, but "from the consent of the governed." Our
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fathers concluded that the people were sufficiently intelligent to
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take care of themselves -- to make good laws and to execute them.
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Prior to that time, all authority was supposed to come from the
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clouds. Kings were set upon thrones by God, and it was the business
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of the people simply to submit. In all really civilized countries,
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that doctrine has been abandoned. The source of political power is
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here, not in heaven. We are willing that those in heaven should
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control affairs there; we are willing that the angels should have
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a government to suit themselves; but while we live here, and while
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our interests are upon this earth, we propose to make and execute
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our own laws.
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If the doctrine of Mr. Talmage is the true doctrine, if no man
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should be voted for unless he is a Christian, then no man should
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vote unless he is a Christian. It will not do to say that sinners
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may vote, that an infidel may be the repository of political power,
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but must not be voted for. A decent Christian who is not willing
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that an infidel should be elected to an office, would not be
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willing to be elected to an office by infidel votes. If infidels
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are too bad to be voted for, they are certainly not good enough to
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vote, and no Christian should be willing to represent such an
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infamous constituency.
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If the political theory of Mr. Talmage is carried out, of
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course the question will arise in a little while, What is a
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Christian? It will then be necessary to write a creed to be
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subscribed by every person before he is fit to vote or to be voted
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for. This of course must be done by the State, and must be settled,
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under our form of government, by a majority vote. Is Mr. Talmage
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willing that the question, What is Christianity? should be so
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settled? Will he pledge himself in advance to subscribe to such a
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creed? Of course he will not. He will insist that he has the right
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to read the Bible for himself, and that he must be bound by his own
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conscience. In this he would be right. If he has the right to read
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the Bible for himself, so have I. If he is to be bound by his
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conscience, so am I. If he honestly believes the Bible to be true,
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he must say so, in order to preserve his manhood; and if I honestly
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believe it to be uninspired, -- filled with mistakes, -- I must say
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so or lose my manhood. How infamous I would be should I endeavor to
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deprive him of his vote, or of his right to be voted for, because
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he had been true to his conscience! And how infamous he is to try
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to deprive me of the right to vote, or to be voted for, because I
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am true to my conscience!
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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SIXTH INTERVIEW.
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When we were engaged in civil war, did Mr. Talmage object to
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any man's enlisting in the ranks who was not a Christian? Was he
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willing, at that time, that sinners should vote to keep our flag in
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heaven? Was he willing that the "unconverted" should cover the
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fields of victory with their corpses, that this nation might not
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die? At the same time, Mr. Talmage knew that every "unconverted"
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soldier killed, went down to eternal fire. Does Mr. Talmage believe
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that it is the duty of a man to fight for a government in which he
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has no rights? Is the man who shoulders his musket in the defence
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of human freedom good enough to cast a ballot? There is in the
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heart of this priest the same hatred of real liberty that drew the
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sword of persecution, that built dungeons, that forged chains and
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made instruments of torture.
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Nobody, with the exception of priests, would be willing to
|
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trust the liberties of this country in the hands of any church. In
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||
order to show the political estimation in which the clergy are
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||
held, in order to show the confidence the people at large have in
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the sincerity and wisdom of the clergy, it is sufficient to state.
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that no priest, no bishop, could by any possibility be elected
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||
President of the United States. No party could carry that load. A
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fear would fall upon the mind and heart of every honest man that
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||
this country was about to drift back to the Middle Ages, and that
|
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the old battles were to be re-fought. If the bishop running for
|
||
President was of the Methodist Church, every other church would
|
||
oppose him. If he was a Catholic, the Protestants would as a body
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||
combine against him. Why? The churches have no confidence in each
|
||
other. Why? Because they are acquainted with each other.
|
||
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||
As a matter of fact, the infidel has a thousand times more
|
||
reason to vote against the Christian, than the Christian has to
|
||
vote against the infidel. The Christian believes in a book superior
|
||
to the Constitution -- superior to all Constitutions and all laws.
|
||
The infidel believes that the Constitution and laws are superior to
|
||
any book. He is not controlled by any power beyond the seas or
|
||
above the clouds. He does not receive his orders from Rome, or
|
||
Sinai. He receives them from his fellow-citizens, legally and
|
||
constitutionally expressed. The Christian believes in a power
|
||
greater than man, to which, upon the peril of eternal pain, he must
|
||
bow. His allegiance, to say the best of it, is divided. The
|
||
Christian puts the fortune of his own soul over and above the
|
||
temporal welfare of the entire world; the infidel puts the good of
|
||
mankind here and now, beyond and over all.
|
||
|
||
There was a time in New England when only church members were
|
||
allowed to vote, and it may be instructive to state the fact that
|
||
during that time Quakers were hanged, women were stripped, tied to
|
||
carts, and whipped from town to town. and their babes sold into
|
||
slavery, or exchanged for rum. Now in that same country, thousands
|
||
and thousands of infidels vote, and yet the laws are nearer just,
|
||
women are not whipped and children are not sold.
|
||
|
||
If all the convicts in all the penitentiaries of the United
|
||
States could be transported to some island in the sea, and there
|
||
allowed to make a government for themselves, they would pass better
|
||
laws than John Calvin did in Geneva. They would have clearer and
|
||
better views of the rights of men, than unconvicted Christians used
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
to have. I do not say that these convicts are better people, but I
|
||
do say that. in my judgment, they would make better laws. They
|
||
certainly could not make worse.
|
||
|
||
If these convicts were taken from the prisons of the United
|
||
States, they would not dream of uniting church and state. They
|
||
would have no religious test. They would allow every man to vote
|
||
and to be voted for, no matter what his religious views might be.
|
||
They would not dream of whipping Quakers, of burning Unitarians, of
|
||
imprisoning or burning Universalists or infidels. They would allow
|
||
all the people to guess for themselves. Some of these convicts, of
|
||
course, would believe in the old ideas, and would insist upon the
|
||
suppression of free thought. Those coming from Delaware would
|
||
probably repeat with great gusto the opinions of Justice Comegys,
|
||
and insist that the whipping-post was the handmaid of Christianity.
|
||
|
||
It would be hard to conceive of a much worse government than
|
||
that founded by the Puritans. They took the Bible for the
|
||
foundation of their political structure. They copied the laws given
|
||
to Moses from Sinai, and the result was one of the worst
|
||
governments that ever disgraced this world. They believed the Old
|
||
Testament to be inspired. They believed that Jehovah made laws for
|
||
all people and for all time. They had not learned the hypocrisy
|
||
that believes and avoids. They did not say: This law was once just,
|
||
but is now unjust; it was once good, but now it is infamous; it was
|
||
given by God once, but now it can only be obeyed by the devil. They
|
||
had not reached the height of biblical exegesis on which we find
|
||
the modern theologian perched, and who tells us that Jehovah has
|
||
reformed. The Puritans were consistent. They did what people must
|
||
do who honestly believe in the inspiration of the Old Testament. If
|
||
God gave laws from Sinai what right have we to repeal them?
|
||
|
||
As people have gained confidence in each other, they have lost
|
||
confidence in the sacred Scriptures. We know now that the Bible can
|
||
not be used as the foundation of government. It is capable of too
|
||
many meanings. Nobody can find out exactly what it upholds, what it
|
||
permits, what it denounces, what it denies. These things depend
|
||
upon what part you read. If it is all true, it upholds everything
|
||
bad and denounces everything good, and it also denounces the bad
|
||
and upholds the good. Then there are passages where the good is
|
||
denounced and the bad commanded; so that any one can go to the
|
||
Bible and find some text, some passage, to uphold anything he may
|
||
desire. If he wishes to enslave his fellowmen, he will find
|
||
hundreds of passages in his favor. If he wishes to be a polygamist,
|
||
he can find his authority there. If he wishes to make war, to
|
||
exterminate his neighbors, there his warrant can be found. If, on
|
||
the other hand, he is oppressed himself, and wishes to make war
|
||
upon his king, he can find a battle-cry. And if the king wishes to
|
||
put him down, he can find text for text on the other side. So, too,
|
||
upon all questions of reform. The teetotaler goes there to get his
|
||
verse, and the moderate drinker finds within the sacred lids his
|
||
best excuse.
|
||
|
||
Most intelligent people are now convinced that the bible is
|
||
not a guide; that in reading it you must exercise your reason; that
|
||
you can neither safely reject nor accept all; that he who takes one
|
||
passage for a staff, trips upon another; that while one text is a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
light, another blows it out; that it is such a mingling of rocks
|
||
and quicksand, such a labyrinth of clews and snares -- so few
|
||
flowers among so many nettles and thorns, that it misleads rather
|
||
than directs, and taken altogether, is a hindrance and not a help.
|
||
|
||
Another important point made by Mr. Talmage is, that if the
|
||
Bible is thrown away. we will have nothing left to swear witnesses
|
||
on, and that consequently the administration of justice will become
|
||
impossible.
|
||
|
||
There was a time when the Bible did not exist, and if Mr.
|
||
Talmage is correct, of course justice was impossible then, and
|
||
truth must have been a stranger to human lips. How can we depend
|
||
upon the testimony of those who wrote the Bible, as there was no
|
||
Bible in existence while they were writing. and consequently there
|
||
was no way to take their testimony, and we have no account of their
|
||
having been sworn on the Bible after they got it finished. It is
|
||
extremely sad to think that all the nations of antiquity were left
|
||
entirely without the means of eliciting truth. No wonder that
|
||
Justice was painted blindfolded.
|
||
|
||
What perfect fetichism it is, to imagine that a man will tell
|
||
the truth simply because he has kissed an old piece of sheepskin
|
||
stained with the saliva of all classes. A farce of this kind adds
|
||
nothing to the testimony of an honest man; it simply allows a rogue
|
||
to give weight to his false testimony. This is really the only
|
||
result that can be accomplished by kissing the Bible. A desperate
|
||
villain, for the purpose of getting revenge, or making money, will
|
||
gladly go through the ceremony, and ignorant juries and
|
||
superstitious judges will be imposed upon. The whole system of
|
||
oaths is false, and does harm instead of good. Let every man walk
|
||
into court and tell his story, and let the truth of the story be
|
||
judged by its reasonableness, taking into consideration the
|
||
character of the witness, the interest he has. and the position he
|
||
occupies in the controversy, and then let it be the business of the
|
||
jury to ascertain the real truth -- to throw away the unreasonable
|
||
and the impossible, and make up their verdict only upon what they
|
||
believe to be reasonable and true. An honest man does not need the
|
||
oath, and a rascal uses it simply to accomplish his purpose. If the
|
||
history of courts proved that every man, after kissing the Bible,
|
||
told the truth, and that those who failed to kiss it sometimes
|
||
lied. I should be in favor of swearing all people on the Bible; but
|
||
the experience of very lawyer is, that kissing the Bible is not
|
||
always the preface of a true story. It is often the ceremonial
|
||
embroidery a falsehood.
|
||
|
||
If there is an infinite God who attends to the affairs of men,
|
||
it seems to me almost a sacrilege to publicly appeal to him in
|
||
every petty trial. If one will go into any court, and notice the
|
||
manner in which oaths are administered, -- the utter lack of
|
||
solemnity -- the matter-of-course air with which the whole thing is
|
||
done, he will be convinced that it is a form of no importance. Mr.
|
||
Talmage would probably agree with the judge of whom the following
|
||
story is told:
|
||
|
||
A witness was being sworn. The judge noticed that he was not
|
||
holding up his hand. He said to the clerk: "Let the witness hold up
|
||
his right hand." "His right arm was shot off." replied the clerk.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
"Let him hold up his left, then." "That was shot off, too, your
|
||
honor." "Well, then, let him raise one foot; no man can be sworn in
|
||
this court without holding something up."
|
||
|
||
My own opinion is, that if every copy of the Bible in the
|
||
world were destroyed, there would be some way to ascertain the
|
||
truth in judicial proceedings; and any other book would do just as
|
||
well to swear witnesses upon, or a block in the shape of a book
|
||
covered with some kind of calfskin could do equally well, or just
|
||
the calfskin would do. Nothing is more laughable than the
|
||
performance of this ceremony, and I have never seen in court one
|
||
calf kissing the skin of another, that I did not feel humiliated
|
||
that such things were done in the name of Justice.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage has still another argument in favor of the
|
||
preservation of the Bible. He wants to know what book could take
|
||
its place on the center. table.
|
||
|
||
I admit that there is much force in this. Suppose we all
|
||
admitted the Bible to be an uninspired book, it could still he kept
|
||
on the center-table. It would be just as true then as it is now.
|
||
Inspiration can not add anything to a fact; neither can inspiration
|
||
make the immoral moral, the unjust just, or the cruel merciful. If
|
||
it is a fact that God established human slavery, that does not
|
||
prove slavery to be right; it simply shows that God was wrong. If
|
||
I have the right to use my reason in determining whether the Bible
|
||
is inspired or not, and if in accordance with my reason I conclude
|
||
that it is inspired, I have still the right to use my reason in
|
||
determining whether the commandments of God are good or bad. Now,
|
||
suppose we take from the Bible every word upholding slavery, every
|
||
passage in favor of polygamy, every verse commanding soldiers to
|
||
kill women and children, it would be just as fit for the center-
|
||
table as now. Suppose every impure word was taken from it; suppose
|
||
that the history of Tamar was left out, the biography of Lot, and
|
||
all other barbarous accounts of a barbarous people, it would look
|
||
just as well upon the center-table as now.
|
||
|
||
Suppose that we should become convinced that the writers of
|
||
the New Testament were mistaken as to the eternity of punishment,
|
||
or that all the passages now relied upon to prove the existence of
|
||
perdition were shown to be interpolations, and were thereupon
|
||
expunged, would not the book be dearer still to every human being
|
||
with a heart? I would like to see every good passage in the Bible
|
||
preserved. I would like to see, with all these passages from the
|
||
Bible, the loftiest sentiments from all other books that have ever
|
||
been uttered by men in all ages and of all races, bound in one
|
||
volume, and to see that volume, filled with the greatest, the
|
||
purest and the best, become the household book.
|
||
|
||
The average Bible, on the average center-table, is about as
|
||
much used as though it were a solid block. It is scarcely ever
|
||
opened, and people who see its covers every day are unfamiliar with
|
||
its every page.
|
||
|
||
I admit that some things have happened somewhat hard to
|
||
explain, and tending to show that the Bible is no ordinary book. I
|
||
heard a story, not long ago, bearing upon this very subject.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
A man was a member of the church, but after a time, having had
|
||
bad luck in business affairs, became somewhat discouraged. Not
|
||
feeling able to contribute his share to the support of the church,
|
||
he ceased going to meeting, and finally became an average sinner.
|
||
His bad luck pursued him until he found himself and his family
|
||
without even a crust to eat. At this point, his wife told him that
|
||
she believed they were suffering from a visitation of God, and
|
||
begged him to restore family worship, and see if God would not do
|
||
something for them. Feeling that he could not possibly make matters
|
||
worse, he took the Bible from its resting place on a shelf where it
|
||
had quietly slumbered and collected the dust of many months, and
|
||
gathered his family about him. He opened the sacred volume, and to
|
||
his utter astonishment, there, between the divine leaves, was a
|
||
ten-dollar bill. He immediately dropped on his knees. His wife
|
||
dropped on hers, and the children on theirs, and with streaming
|
||
eyes they returned thanks to God. He rushed to the butcher's and
|
||
bought some steak, to the baker's and bought some bread, to the
|
||
grocer's and got some eggs and butter and tea, and joyfully
|
||
hastened home. The supper was cooked, it was on the table, grace
|
||
was said, and every face was radiant with joy. Just at that happy
|
||
moment a knock; was heard, the door was opened, and a policeman
|
||
entered and arrested the father for passing counterfeit money.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage is also convinced that the Bible is inspired and
|
||
should be preserved because there is no other book that a mother
|
||
could give her son as he leaves the old home to make his way in the
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
Thousands and thousands of mothers have presented their sons
|
||
with Bibles without knowing really what the book contains. They
|
||
simply followed the custom, and the sons as a rule honored the
|
||
Bible, not because they knew anything of it, but because it was a
|
||
gift from mother. But surely, if all the passages upholding
|
||
polygamy were out, the mother would give the book to her son just
|
||
as readily, and he would receive it just as joyfully. If there were
|
||
not one word in it tending to degrade the mother, the gift would
|
||
certainly be as appropriate. The fact that mothers have presented
|
||
Bibles to their sons does not prove that the book is inspired. The
|
||
most that can be proved by this fact is that the mothers believed
|
||
it to be inspired. It does not even tend to show what the book is,
|
||
neither does it tend to establish the truth of one miracle recorded
|
||
upon its pages. We cannot believe that fire refused to burn, simply
|
||
because the statement happens to be in a book presented to a son by
|
||
his mother, and if all the mothers of the entire world should give
|
||
Bibles to all their children, this would not prove that it was once
|
||
right to murder mothers, or to enslave mothers, or to sell their
|
||
babes.
|
||
|
||
The inspiration of the Bible is not a question of natural
|
||
affection. It can not be decided by the love a mother bears her
|
||
son. It is a question of fact, to be substantiated like other
|
||
facts. If the Turkish mother should give a copy of the Koran to her
|
||
son, I would still have my doubts about the inspiration of that
|
||
book; and if some Turkish soldier saved his life by having in his
|
||
pocket a copy of the Koran that accidentally stopped a bullet just
|
||
opposite his heart, I should still deny that Mohammed was a prophet
|
||
of God.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
Nothing can be more childish than to ascribe mysterious powers
|
||
to inanimate objects. To imagine that old rags made into pulp,
|
||
manufactured into paper, covered with words, and bound with the
|
||
skin of a calf or a sheep, can have any virtues when thus put
|
||
together that did not belong to the articles out of which the book
|
||
was constructed, is of course infinitely absurd.
|
||
|
||
In the days of slavery, negroes used to buy dried roots of
|
||
other negroes, and put these roots in their pockets, so that a
|
||
whipping would not give them pain. Kings have bought diamonds to
|
||
give them luck. Crosses and scapularies are still worn for the
|
||
purpose of affecting the inevitable march of events. People still
|
||
imagine that a verse in the Bible can step in between a cause and
|
||
its effect; really believe that an amulet, a charm, the bone of
|
||
some saint, a piece of a cross, a little image of the Virgin, a
|
||
picture of a priest, will affect the weather, will delay frost,
|
||
will prevent disease, will insure safety at sea, and in some cases
|
||
prevent hanging. The banditti of Italy have great confidence in
|
||
these things, and whenever they start upon an expedition of theft
|
||
and plunder, they take images and pictures of saints with them,
|
||
such as have been blest by a priest or pope. They pray sincerely to
|
||
the Virgin, to give them luck, and see not the slightest
|
||
inconsistency tn appealing to all the saints in the calendar to
|
||
assist them in robbing honest people.
|
||
|
||
Edmund About tells a story that illustrates the belief of the
|
||
modern Italian. A young man was gambling. Fortune was against him.
|
||
In the room was a little picture representing the Virgin and her
|
||
child. Before this picture he crossed himself, and asked the
|
||
assistance of the child. Again he put down his money and again
|
||
lost. Returning to the picture, he told the child that he had lost
|
||
all but one piece, that he was about to hazard that, and made a
|
||
very urgent request that he would favor him with divine assistance.
|
||
He put down the last piece. He lost. Going to the picture and
|
||
shaking his fist at the child, he cried out: "Miserable bambino, I
|
||
am glad they crucified you!"
|
||
|
||
The confidence that one has in an image, in a relic, in a
|
||
book, comes from the same source, -- fetichism. To ascribe
|
||
supernatural virtues to the skin of a snake, to a picture, or to a
|
||
bound volume, is intellectually the same.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage has still another argument in favor of the
|
||
inspiration of the Scriptures. He takes the ground that the Bible
|
||
must be inspired, because so many people believe it.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage should remember that a scientific fact does not
|
||
depend upon the vote of numbers; -- it depends simply upon
|
||
demonstration; it depends upon intelligence and investigation, not
|
||
upon an ignorant multitude; it appeals to the highest, instead of
|
||
to the lowest. Nothing can be settled by popular prejudice.
|
||
|
||
According to Mr. Talmage, there are about three hundred
|
||
million Christians in the world. Is this true? In all countries
|
||
claiming to be Christian -- including all of civilized Europe,
|
||
Russia in Asia, and every country on the Western hemisphere, we
|
||
have nearly four hundred millions of people. Mr. Talmage claims
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
that three hundred millions are Christians. I suppose he means by
|
||
this, that if all should perish tonight, about three hundred
|
||
millions would wake up in heaven -- having lived and died good and
|
||
consistent Christians.
|
||
|
||
There are in Russia about eighty millions of people -- how
|
||
many Christians? I admit that they have recently given more
|
||
evidence of orthodox Christianity than formerly. They have been
|
||
murdering old men; they have thrust daggers into the breasts of
|
||
women; they have violated maidens -- because they were Jews.
|
||
Thousands and thousands are sent each year to the mines of Siberia,
|
||
by the Christian government of Russia. Girls eighteen years of age,
|
||
for having expressed a word in favor of human liberty, are to-day
|
||
working like beasts of burden, with chains upon their limbs and
|
||
with the marks of whips upon their backs. Russia, of course, is
|
||
considered by Mr. Talmage as a Christian country -- a country
|
||
utterly, destitute of liberty -- without freedom of the press,
|
||
without freedom of speech, where every mouth is locked and every
|
||
tongue a prisoner -- a country filled with victims, soldiers,
|
||
spies, thieves and executioners. What would Russia be, in the
|
||
opinion of Mr. Talmage, but for Christianity? How could it be
|
||
worse, when assassins are among the best people in it? The truth
|
||
is, that the people in Russia, to-day, who are in favor of human
|
||
liberty, are not Christians. The men willing to sacrifice their
|
||
lives for the good of others, are not believers in the Christian
|
||
religion. The men who wish to break chains are infidels; the men
|
||
who make chains are Christians. Every good and sincere Catholic of
|
||
the Greek Church is a bad citizen, an enemy of progress, a foe of
|
||
human liberty. Yet Mr. Talmage regards Russia as a Christian
|
||
country.
|
||
|
||
The sixteen millions of people in Spain are claimed as
|
||
Christians. Spain, that for centuries was the assassin of human
|
||
rights; Spain, that endeavored to spread Christianity by flame and
|
||
fagot; Spain, the soil where the Inquisition flourished, where
|
||
bigotry grew, and where cruelty was worship, -- where murder was
|
||
prayer. I admit that Spain is a Christian nation. I admit that
|
||
infidelity has gained no foothold beyond the Pyrenees. The
|
||
Spaniards are orthodox. They believe in the inspiration of the Old
|
||
and New Testaments. They have no doubts about miracles -- no doubts
|
||
about heaven, no doubts about hell. I admit that the priests, the
|
||
highwaymen, the bishops and thieves, are equally true believers.
|
||
The man who takes your purse on the highway, and the priest who
|
||
forgives the robber, are alike orthodox.
|
||
|
||
It gives me pleasure, however, to say that even in Spain there
|
||
is a dawn. Some great men, some men of genius, are protesting
|
||
against the tyranny of Catholicism. Some men have lost confidence
|
||
in the cathedral, and are beginning to ask the State to erect the
|
||
schoolhouse. They are beginning to suspect that priests are for the
|
||
most pan impostors and plunderers.
|
||
|
||
According to Mr. Talmage, the twenty-eight millions in Italy
|
||
are Christians. There the Christian Church was early established,
|
||
and the popes are today the successors of St. Peter. For hundreds
|
||
and hundreds of years, Italy was the beggar of the world, and to
|
||
her, from every land, flowed streams of gold and silver. The
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
country was covered with convents, and monasteries, and churches,
|
||
and cathedrals filled with monks and nuns. Its roads were crowded
|
||
with pilgrims, and its dust was on the feet of the world. What has
|
||
Christianity done for Italy -- Italy, its soil a blessing, its sky
|
||
a smile -- Italy, with memories great enough to kindle the fires of
|
||
enthusiasm in any human breast?
|
||
|
||
Had it not been for a few Freethinkers, for a few infidels,
|
||
for such men as Garibaldi and Mazzini, the heaven of Italy would
|
||
still have been without a star. I admit that Italy, with its popes
|
||
and bandits, with its superstition and ignorance, with its
|
||
sanctified beggars, is a Christian nation; but in a little while,
|
||
-- in a few days, -- when according to the prophecy of Garibaldi
|
||
priests, with spades in their hands, will dig ditches to drain the
|
||
Pontine marshes; in a little while, when the pope leaves the
|
||
Vatican, and seeks the protection of a nation he has denounced, --
|
||
asking alms of intended victims; when the nuns shall marry, and the
|
||
monasteries shall become factories, and the whirl of wheels shall
|
||
take the place of drowsy prayers -- then, and not until then, will
|
||
Italy be, -- not a Christian nation, but great, prosperous, and
|
||
free.
|
||
|
||
In Italy, Giordano Bruno was burned. Some day, his monument
|
||
will rise above the cross of Rome.
|
||
|
||
We have in our day one example, -- and so far as I know,
|
||
history records no other, -- of the resurrection of a nation. Italy
|
||
has been called from the grave of superstition. She is "the first
|
||
fruits of them that slept."
|
||
|
||
I admit with Mr. Talmage that Portugal is a Christian country
|
||
-- that she engaged for hundreds of years in the slave trade, and
|
||
that she Justified the infamous traffic by passages in the Old
|
||
Testament. I admit, also, that she persecuted the Jews in
|
||
accordance with the same divine volume. I admit that all the crime,
|
||
ignorance, destitution, and superstition in that country were
|
||
produced by the Catholic Church. I also admit that Portugal would
|
||
be better if it were Protestant. Every Catholic is in favor of
|
||
education enough to change a barbarian into a Catholic; every
|
||
Protestant is in favor of education enough to change a Catholic
|
||
into a Protestant; but Protestants and Catholics alike are opposed
|
||
to education that will lead to any real philosophy and science. I
|
||
admit that Portugal is what it is, on account of the preaching of
|
||
the gospel. I admit that Portugal can point with pride to the
|
||
triumphs of what she calls civilization within her borders, and
|
||
truthfully ascribe the glory to the church. But in a little while,
|
||
when more railroads are built, when telegraphs connect her people
|
||
with the civilized world, a spirit of doubt, of investigation, will
|
||
manifest itself in Portugal.
|
||
|
||
When the people stop counting beads, and go to the study of
|
||
mathematics; when they think more of plows than of prayers for
|
||
agricultural purposes; when they find that one fact gives more
|
||
light to the mind than a thousand tapers, and that nothing can by
|
||
any possibility be more useless than a priest, -- then Portugal
|
||
will begin to cease to be what is called a Christian nation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
I admit that Austria, with her thirty-seven millions, is a
|
||
Christian nation -- including her Croats, Hungarians, Servians, and
|
||
Gypsies. Austria was one of the assassins of Poland. When we
|
||
remember that John Sobieski drove the Mohammedans from the gates of
|
||
Vienna, and rescued from the hand of the "infidel" the beleaguered
|
||
city, the propriety of calling Austria a Christian nation becomes
|
||
still more apparent. If one wishes to know exactly how "Christian"
|
||
Austria is, let him read the history of Hungary, let him read the
|
||
speeches of Kossuth. There is one good thing about Austria: slowly
|
||
but surely she is undermining the church by education. Education is
|
||
the enemy of superstition. Universal education does away with the
|
||
classes born of the tyranny of ecclesiasticism -- classes founded
|
||
upon cunning, greed, and brute strength. Education also tends to do
|
||
away with intellectual cowardice. The educated man is his own
|
||
priest, his own pope, his own church.
|
||
|
||
When cunning collects tolls from fear, the church prospers.
|
||
|
||
Germany is another Christian nation. Bismarck is celebrated
|
||
for his Christian virtues.
|
||
|
||
Only a little while ago, Bismarck, when a bill was under
|
||
consideration for ameliorating the condition of the Jews, stated
|
||
publicly that Germany was a Christian nation, that her business was
|
||
to extend and protect the religion of Jesus Christ, and that being
|
||
a Christian nation, no laws should he passed ameliorating the
|
||
condition of the Jews. Certainly a remark like this could not have
|
||
been made in any other than a Christian nation. There is no freedom
|
||
of the press, there is no freedom of speech, in Germany. The
|
||
Chancellor has gone so far as to declare that the king is not
|
||
responsible to the people. Germany must be a Christian nation. The
|
||
king gets his right to govern, not from his subjects, but from God.
|
||
He relies upon the New Testament. He is satisfied that "the powers
|
||
that be in Germany are ordained of God." He is satisfied that
|
||
treason against the German throne is treason against Jehovah. There
|
||
are millions of Freethinkers in Germany. They are not in the
|
||
majority, otherwise there would be more liberty in that country.
|
||
Germany is not an infidel nation, or speech would be free, and
|
||
every man would be allowed to express his honest thoughts.
|
||
|
||
Wherever I see Liberty in chains, wherever the expression of
|
||
opinion is a crime, I know that that country is not infidel; I know
|
||
that the people are not ruled by reason. I also know that the
|
||
greatest men of Germany -- her Freethinkers, her scientists, her
|
||
writers, her philosophers, are, for the most part, infidel. Yet
|
||
Germany is called a Christian nation, and ought to be so called
|
||
until her citizens are free.
|
||
|
||
France is also claimed as a Christian country. This is not
|
||
entirely true. France once was thoroughly Catholic, completely
|
||
Christian. At the time of the massacre of Saint Bartholomew, the
|
||
French were Christians. Christian France made exiles of the
|
||
Huguenots. Christian France for years and years was the property of
|
||
the Jesuits. Christian France was ignorant, cruel, orthodox and
|
||
infamous. When France was Christian, witnesses were cross-examined
|
||
with instruments of torture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
Now France is not entirely under Catholic control, and yet she
|
||
is by far the most prosperous nation in Europe. I saw, only the
|
||
other day, a letter from a Protestant bishop, in which he states
|
||
that there are only about a million Protestants in France, and only
|
||
four or five millions of Catholics, and admits, in a very
|
||
melancholy way, that thirty-four or thirty-five millions are
|
||
Freethinkers. The bishop is probably mistaken in his figures, but
|
||
France is the best housed, the best fed, the best clad country in
|
||
Europe.
|
||
|
||
Only a little while ago, France was overrun. trampled into the
|
||
very earth, by the victorious hosts of Germany, and France
|
||
purchased her peace with the savings of centuries. And yet France
|
||
is now rich and Prosperous and free, and Germany poor, discontented
|
||
and enslaved. Hundreds and thousands of Germans, unable to find
|
||
liberty at home, are coming to the United States.
|
||
|
||
I admit that England is a Christian country. Any doubts upon
|
||
this point can be dispelled by reading her history -- her career in
|
||
India, what she has done in China, her treatment of Ireland, of the
|
||
American Colonies, her attitude during our Civil war; all these
|
||
things show conclusively that England is a Christian nation.
|
||
|
||
Religion has filled Great Britain with war. The history of the
|
||
Catholics, of the Episcopalians, of Cromwell -- all the burnings,
|
||
the maimings, the brandings, the imprisonments, the confiscations,
|
||
the civil wars, the bigotry, the crime -- show conclusively that
|
||
Great Britain has enjoyed to the full the blessings of "our most
|
||
holy religion."
|
||
|
||
Of course, Mr. Talmage claims the United States as a Christian
|
||
country. The truth is, our country is not as Christian as it once
|
||
was. When heretics were hanged in New England, when the laws of
|
||
Virginia and Maryland provided that the tongue of any man who
|
||
denied the doctrine of the Trinity should be bored with hot iron,
|
||
and that for the second offence he should suffer death, I admit
|
||
that this country was Christian. When we engaged in the slave
|
||
trade, when our flag protected piracy and murder in every sea,
|
||
there is not the slightest doubt that the United States was a
|
||
Christian country. When we believed in slavery, and when we
|
||
deliberately stole the labor of four millions of people; when we
|
||
sold women and babes, and when the people of the North enacted a
|
||
law by virtue of which every Northern man was bound to turn hound
|
||
and pursue a human being who was endeavoring to regain his liberty,
|
||
I admit that the United States was a Christian nation. I admit that
|
||
all these things were upheld by the Bible -- that the slave trader
|
||
was justified by the Old Testament, that the bloodhound was a kind
|
||
of missionary in disguise, that the auction block was an altar, the
|
||
slave pen a kind of church, and that the whipping-post was
|
||
considered almost as sacred as the cross. At that time, our country
|
||
was a Christian nation.
|
||
|
||
I heard Frederick Douglass say that he lectured against
|
||
slavery for twenty years before the doors of a single church were
|
||
opened to him. In New England, hundreds of ministers were driven
|
||
from their pulpits because they preached against the crime of human
|
||
slavery. At that time, this country was a Christian nation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
Only a few years ago, any man speaking in favor of the rights
|
||
of man, endeavoring to break a chain from a human limb, was in
|
||
danger of being mobbed by the Christians of this country. I admit
|
||
that Delaware is still a Christian State. I heard a story about
|
||
that State the other day.
|
||
|
||
About fifty years ago, an old Revolutionary soldier applied
|
||
for a pension. He was asked his age, and he replied that he was
|
||
fifty years old. He was told that if that was his age, he could not
|
||
have been in the Revolutionary War, and consequently was not
|
||
entitled to any pension. He insisted, however, that he was only
|
||
fifty years old. Again they told him that there must be some
|
||
mistake. He was so wrinkled, so bowed, had so many marks of age,
|
||
that he must certainly be more than fifty years old. "Well," said
|
||
the old man. "if I must explain, I will: I lived forty years in
|
||
Delaware; but I never counted that time, and I hope God won't."
|
||
|
||
The fact is, we have grown less and less Christian every year
|
||
from 1620 until now, and the fact is that we have grown more and
|
||
more civilized, more and more charitable, nearer and nearer just.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage speaks as though all the people in what he calls
|
||
the civilized world were Christians. Admitting this to be true, I
|
||
find that in these countries millions of men are educated, trained
|
||
and drilled to kill their fellow Christians. I find Europe covered
|
||
with forts to protect Christians from Christians, and the seas
|
||
filled with men-of-war for the purpose of ravaging the coasts and
|
||
destroying the cities of Christian nations. These countries are
|
||
filled with prisons, with workhouses, with jails and with toiling,
|
||
ignorant and suffering millions. I find that Christians have
|
||
invented most of the instruments of death, that Christians are the
|
||
greatest soldiers, fighters, destroyers. I find that every
|
||
Christian country is taxed to its utmost to support these soldiers;
|
||
that every Christian nation is now groaning beneath the grievous
|
||
burden of monstrous debt, and that nearly all these debts were
|
||
contracted in waging war. These bonds, these millions, these almost
|
||
incalculable amounts, were given to pay for shot and shell, for
|
||
rifle and torpedo, for men-of-war, for forts and arsenals, and all
|
||
the devilish enginery of death. I find that each of these nations
|
||
prays to God to assist it as against all others; and when one
|
||
nation has overrun, ravaged and pillaged another, it immediately
|
||
returns thanks to the Almighty, and the ravaged and pillaged kneel
|
||
and thank God that it is no worse.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage is welcome to all the evidence he can find in the
|
||
history of what he is pleased to call the civilized nations of the
|
||
world, tending to show the inspiration of the Bible.
|
||
|
||
And right here it may be well enough to say again, that the
|
||
question of inspiration can not be settled by the votes of the
|
||
superstitious millions. It can not be affected by numbers. It must
|
||
be decided by each human being for himself. If every man in this
|
||
world, with one exception, believed the Bible to be the inspired
|
||
word of God, the man who was the exception could not lose his right
|
||
to think, to investigate, and to judge for himself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. You do not think, then, that any of the arguments
|
||
brought forward by Mr. Talmage for the purpose of establishing the
|
||
inspiration of the Bible, are of any weight whatever?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. I do not. I do not see how it is possible to make
|
||
poorer, weaker or better arguments than he has made.
|
||
|
||
Of course, there can be no "evidence" of the inspiration of
|
||
the Scriptures. What is "inspiration"? Did God use the prophets
|
||
simply as instruments? Bid he put his thoughts in their minds. and
|
||
use their hands to make a record? Probably few Christians will
|
||
agree as to what they mean by "inspiration." The general idea is,
|
||
that the minds of the writers of the books of the Bible were
|
||
controlled by the divine will in such a way that they expressed,
|
||
independently of their own opinions, the thought of God. I believe
|
||
it is admitted that God did not choose the exact words, and is not
|
||
responsible for the punctuation or syntax. It is hard to give any
|
||
reason for claiming more for the Bible than is claimed by those who
|
||
wrote it. There is no claim of "inspiration" made by the writer of
|
||
First and Second Kings. Not one word about the author having been
|
||
"inspired" is found in the book of Job, or in Ruth, or in
|
||
Chronicles, or in the Psalms, or Ecclesiastes, or in Solomon's
|
||
Song, and nothing is said about the author of the book of Esther
|
||
having been "inspired." Christians now say that Matthew, Mark, Luke
|
||
and John were "inspired" to write the four gospels, and yet neither
|
||
Mark, nor Luke, nor John, nor Matthew claims to have been
|
||
"inspired." If they were "inspired," certainly they should have
|
||
stated that fact. The very first thing stated in each of the
|
||
gospels should have been a declaration by the writer that he had
|
||
been "inspired," and that he was about to write the book under the
|
||
guidance of God, and at the conclusion of each gospel there should
|
||
have been a solemn statement that the writer had put down nothing
|
||
of himself, but had in all things followed the direction and
|
||
guidance of the divine will. The church now endeavors to establish
|
||
the inspiration of the Bible by force, by social ostracism, and by
|
||
attacking the reputation of every man who denies or doubts. In all
|
||
Christian countries, they begin with the child in the cradle. Each
|
||
infant is told by its mother, by its father, or by some of its
|
||
relatives, that "the Bible is an inspired book." This pretended
|
||
fact, by repetition "in season and out of season," is finally
|
||
burned and branded into the brain to such a degree that the child
|
||
of average intelligence never outgrows the conviction that the
|
||
Bible is, in some peculiar sense, an "inspired" book. The question
|
||
has to be settled for each generation. The evidence is not
|
||
sufficient, and the foundation of Christianity is perpetually
|
||
insecure. Beneath this great religious fabric there is no rock. For
|
||
eighteen centuries, hundreds and thousands and millions of people
|
||
have been endeavoring to establish the fact that the Scriptures are
|
||
inspired, and since the dawn of science, since the first star
|
||
appeared in the night of the Middle Ages, until this moment, the
|
||
number of people who have doubted the fact of inspiration has
|
||
steadily increased. These doubts have not been born of ignorance,
|
||
they have not been suggested by the unthinking. They have forced
|
||
themselves upon the thoughtful, upon the educated, and now the
|
||
verdict of the intellectual world is, that the Bible is not
|
||
inspired. Notwithstanding the fact that the church has taken
|
||
advantage of infancy, has endeavored to control education, has
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
filled all primers and spelling books and readers and text books
|
||
with superstition -- feeding all minds with the miraculous and
|
||
supernatural, the growth toward a belief in the natural and toward
|
||
the rejection of the miraculous has been steady and sturdy since
|
||
the sixteenth century. There has been, too, a moral growth, until
|
||
many passages in the Bible have become barbarous, inhuman and
|
||
infamous. The Bible has remained the same, while the world has
|
||
changed. In the light of physical and moral discovery, "the
|
||
inspired volume" seems in many respects absurd. If the same
|
||
progress is made in the next, as in the last, century, it is very.
|
||
easy to predict the place that will then be occupied by the Bible.
|
||
By comparing long periods of time, it is easy to measure the
|
||
advance of the human race. Compare the average sermon of to-day
|
||
with the average sermon of one hundred years ago. Compare what
|
||
ministers teach to-day with the creeds they profess to believe, and
|
||
you will see the immense distance, that even the church has
|
||
traveled in the last century.
|
||
|
||
The Christians tell us that scientific men have made mistakes,
|
||
and that there is very little certainty in the domain of human
|
||
knowledge. This I admit. The man who thought the world was flat,
|
||
and who had a way of accounting for the movement of the heavenly
|
||
bodies, had what he was pleased to call a philosophy. He was, in
|
||
his way, a geologist and an astronomer. We admit that he was
|
||
mistaken; but if we claimed that the first geologist and the first
|
||
astronomer were inspired, it would not do for us to admit that any
|
||
advance had been made, or that any errors of theirs had been
|
||
corrected. We do not claim that the first scientists were inspired.
|
||
We do not claim that the last are inspired. We admit that all
|
||
scientific men are fallible. We admit that they do not know
|
||
everything. We insist that they know but little, and that even in
|
||
that little which they are supposed to know, there is the
|
||
possibility of error. The first geologist said: "The earth is
|
||
flat." Suppose that the geologists of to-day should insist that
|
||
that man was inspired, and then endeavor to show that the word
|
||
"flat," in the "Hebrew, did not mean quite flat, but just a little
|
||
rounded; what would we think of their honesty? The first astronomer
|
||
insisted that the sun and moon and stars revolve around this earth
|
||
-- hat this little earth was the center of the entire system.
|
||
Suppose that the astronomers of to-day should insist that that
|
||
astronomer was inspired, and should try to explain, and say that he
|
||
simply used the language of the common people, and when he stated
|
||
that the sun and moon and stars revolved around the earth, he
|
||
merely meant that they "apparently revolved," and that the earth,
|
||
in fact, turned over, would we consider them honest men? You might
|
||
as well say that the first painter was inspired, or that the first
|
||
sculptor had the assistance of God, as to say that the first
|
||
writer, or the first bookmaker, was divinely inspired. It is more
|
||
probable that the modern geologist is inspired than that the
|
||
ancient one was, because the modern geologist is nearer right. It
|
||
is more probable that William Lloyd Garrison was inspired upon the
|
||
question of slavery than that Moses was. It is more probable that
|
||
the author of the Declaration of Independence spoke by divine
|
||
authority than that the author of the Pentateuch did. In other
|
||
words, if there can be any evidence of "inspiration," it must lie
|
||
in the fact of doing or saying the best possible thing that could
|
||
have been done or said at that time or upon that subject.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
To make myself clear: The only possible evidence of
|
||
"inspiration" would be perfection -- a perfection excelling
|
||
anything that man unaided had ever attained. An inspired "book
|
||
should excel all other books; an inspired statue should be the best
|
||
in this world; an inspired painting should be beyond all others. If
|
||
the Bible. has been improved in any particular, it was not, in that
|
||
particular, "inspired." If slavery is wrong, the Bible is not
|
||
inspired. If polygamy is vile and loathsome, the Bible is not
|
||
inspired. If wars of extermination are cruel and heartless. the
|
||
Bible is not "inspired." If there is within that book a
|
||
contradiction of any natural fact; if there is one ignorant
|
||
falsehood, if there is one mistake, then it is not "inspired." I do
|
||
not mean mistakes that have grown out of translations; but if there
|
||
was in the original manuscript one mistake, then it is not
|
||
"inspired." I do not demand a miracle; I do not demand a knowledge
|
||
of the future; I simply demand an absolute knowledge of the past.
|
||
I demand an absolute knowledge of the then present; I demand a
|
||
knowledge of the constitution of the human mind -- of the facts in
|
||
nature, and that is all I demand.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. If I understand you, you think that all political
|
||
power should come from the people; do you not believe in any
|
||
"special providence," and do you take the ground that God does not
|
||
interest himself in the affairs of nations and individuals?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. The Christian idea is that God made the world, and
|
||
made certain laws for the government of matter and mind, and that
|
||
he never interferes except upon special occasions, when the
|
||
ordinary laws fail to work out the desired end. Their notion is,
|
||
that the Lord now and then stops the horses simply to show that he
|
||
is driving. It seems to me that if an infinitely wise being made
|
||
the world, he must have made it the best possible; and that if he
|
||
made laws for the government of matter and mind, he must have made
|
||
the best possible laws. If this is true, not one of these laws can
|
||
he violated without producing a positive injury. It does not seem
|
||
probable that infinite wisdom would violate a law that infinite
|
||
wisdom had made.
|
||
|
||
Most ministers insist that God now and then interferes in the
|
||
affairs of this world; that he has not interfered as much lately as
|
||
he did formerly. When the world was comparatively new, it required
|
||
altogether more tinkering and fixing than at present. Things are at
|
||
last in a reasonably good condition, and consequently a great
|
||
amount of interference is not necessary. In old times it was found
|
||
necessary frequently to raise the dead, to change the nature of
|
||
fire and water, to punish people with plagues and famine, to
|
||
destroy cities by storms of fire and brimstone, to change women
|
||
into salt, to cast hailstones upon heathen, to interfere with the
|
||
movements of our planetary system, to stop the earth not only, but
|
||
sometimes to make it turn the other way, to arrest the moon, and to
|
||
make water stand up like a wall. Now and then, rivers were divided
|
||
by striking them with a coat, and people were taken to heaven in
|
||
chariots of fire. These miracles. in addition to curing the sick,
|
||
the halt, the deaf and blind, were in former times found necessary,
|
||
but since the "apostolic age," nothing of the kind has been
|
||
resorted to except in Catholic countries. Since the death of the
|
||
last apostle, God has appeared only to members of the Catholic
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
Church, and all modern miracles have been performed for the benefit
|
||
of Catholicism. There is no authentic account of the Virgin Mary
|
||
having ever appeared to a Protestant. The bones of Protestant
|
||
saints have never cured a solitary disease. Protestants now say
|
||
that the testimony of the Catholics can not be relied upon. and
|
||
yet, the authenticity of every book in the New Testament was
|
||
established by Catholic testimony. Some few miracles were performed
|
||
in Scotland, and in fact in England and the United States, but they
|
||
were so small that they are hardly worth mentioning. Now and then.
|
||
a man was struck dead for taking the name of the Lord in vain. Now
|
||
and then, people were drowned who were found in boats on Sunday.
|
||
Whenever anybody was about to commit murder, God has not interfered
|
||
-- the reason being that he gave man free-will, and expects to hold
|
||
him accountable in another world, and there is no exception to this
|
||
free-will doctrine, but in cases where men swear or violate the
|
||
Sabbath. They are allowed to commit all other crimes without any
|
||
interference on the part of the Lord.
|
||
|
||
My own opinion is, that the clergy found it necessary to
|
||
preserve the Sabbath for their own uses, and for that reason
|
||
endeavored to impress the people with the enormity of its
|
||
violation, and for that purpose, gave instances of people being
|
||
drowned and suddenly struck dead for working or amusing themselves
|
||
on that day. The clergy have objected to any other places of
|
||
amusement except their own, being opened on that day. They wished
|
||
to compel people either to go to church or stay at home. They have
|
||
also known that profanity tended to do away with the feelings of
|
||
awe they wished to cultivate, and for that reason they have
|
||
insisted that swearing was one of the most terrible of crimes,
|
||
exciting above all others the wrath of God.
|
||
|
||
There was a time when people fell dead for having spoken
|
||
disrespectfully to a priest. The priest at that time pretended to
|
||
be the visible representative of God, and as such, entitled to a
|
||
degree of reverence amounting almost to worship. Several cases are
|
||
given in the ecclesiastical history of Scotland where men were
|
||
deprived of speech for having spoken rudely to a parson.
|
||
|
||
These stories were calculated to increase the importance of
|
||
the clergy and to convince people that they were under the special
|
||
care of the Deity. The story about the bears devouring the little
|
||
children was told in the first place, and has been repeated since,
|
||
simply to protect ministers from the laughter of children. There
|
||
ought to be carved on each side of every pulpit a bear with
|
||
fragments of children in its mouth, as this animal has done so much
|
||
to protect the dignity of the clergy.
|
||
|
||
Besides the protection of ministers, the drowning of breakers
|
||
of the Sabbath, and striking a few people dead for using profane
|
||
language, I think there is no evidence of any providential
|
||
interference in the affairs of this world in what may be called
|
||
modern times. Ministers have endeavored to show that great
|
||
calamities have been brought upon nations and cities as a
|
||
punishment for the wickedness of the people. They have insisted
|
||
that some countries have been visited with earthquakes because the
|
||
people had failed to discharge their religious duties; but as
|
||
earthquakes happened in uninhabited countries, and often at sea,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
where no one is hurt, most people have concluded that they are not
|
||
sent as punishments. They have insisted that cities have been
|
||
burned as a punishment, and to show the indignation of the Lord,
|
||
but at the same time they have admitted that if the streets had
|
||
been wider, the fire departments better organized, and wooden
|
||
buildings fewer, the design of the Lord would have been frustrated.
|
||
|
||
After reading the history of the world, it is somewhat
|
||
difficult to find which side the Lord is really on. He has allowed
|
||
Catholics to overwhelm and destroy Protestants, and then he has
|
||
allowed Protestants to overwhelm and destroy Catholics. He has
|
||
allowed Christianity to triumph over Paganism, and he allowed
|
||
Mohammedans to drive back the hosts of the cross from the sepulchre
|
||
of his son. It is curious that this God would allow the slave trade
|
||
to go on, and yet punish the violators of the Sabbath. It is simply
|
||
wonderful that he would allow kings to wage cruel and remorseless
|
||
war, to sacrifice millions upon the altar of heartless ambition,
|
||
and at the same time strike a man dead for taking his name in vain.
|
||
It is wonderful that he allowed slavery to exist for centuries in
|
||
the United States; that he allows polygamy now in Utah; that he
|
||
cares nothing for liberty in Russia, nothing for free speech in
|
||
Germany. nothing for the sorrows of the overworked, underpaid
|
||
millions of the world; that he cares nothing for the innocent
|
||
languishing in prisons, nothing for the patriots condemned to
|
||
death, nothing for the heart-broken widows and orphans, nothing for
|
||
the starving, and yet has ample time to note a sparrow's fall. If
|
||
he would only strike dead the would-be murderers; if he would only
|
||
palsy the hands of husbands uplifted to strike their wives; if he
|
||
would render speechless the cursers of children, he could afford to
|
||
overlook the swearers and breakers of his Sabbath.
|
||
|
||
For one, I am not satisfied with the government of this world,
|
||
and I am going to do what little I can to make it better. I want
|
||
more thought and less fear, more manhood and less superstition,
|
||
less prayer and more help, more education, more reason, more
|
||
intellectual hospitality. and above all, and over all, more liberty
|
||
and kindness.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Do you think that God, if there be one, when he
|
||
saves or damns a man, will take into consideration all the
|
||
circumstances of the man's life?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. Suppose that two orphan boys, James and John, are
|
||
given homes. James is taken into a Christian family and John into
|
||
an infidel. James becomes a Christian, and dies in the faith. John
|
||
becomes an infidel, and dies without faith in Christ. According to
|
||
the Christian religion, as commonly preached, James will go to
|
||
heaven, and John to hell.
|
||
|
||
Now, suppose that God knew that if James had been raised by
|
||
the infidel family, he would have died an infidel, and that if John
|
||
had been raised by the Christian family, he would have died a
|
||
Christian. What then? Recollect that the boys did not choose the
|
||
families in which they were placed.
|
||
|
||
Suppose that a child, cast away upon an island in which he
|
||
found plenty of food, grew to manhood; and suppose that after he
|
||
had reached mature years, the island was visited by a missionary
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
who taught a false religion; and suppose that this islander was
|
||
convinced that he ought to worship a wooden idol; and suppose,
|
||
further, that the worship consisted in sacrificing animals; and
|
||
suppose the islander, actuated only by what he conceived to be his
|
||
duty and by thankfulness, sacrificed a toad every night and every
|
||
morning upon the altar of his wooden god; that when the sky looked
|
||
black and threatening he sacrificed two toads; that when feeling
|
||
unwell he sacrificed three; and suppose that in all this he was
|
||
honest, that he really believed that the shedding of toad-blood
|
||
would soften the heart of his god toward him? And suppose that
|
||
after he had become fully convinced of the truth of his religion,
|
||
a missionary of the "true religion" should visit the island, and
|
||
tell the history of the Jews -- unfold the whole scheme of
|
||
salvation? And suppose that the islander should honestly reject the
|
||
true religion? Suppose he should say that he had "internal
|
||
evidence" not only, but that many miracles had been performed by
|
||
his god, in his behalf; that often when the sky was black with
|
||
storm, he had sacrificed a toad, and in a few moments the sun was
|
||
again visible, the heavens blue, and without a cloud; that on
|
||
several occasions, having forgotten at evening to sacrifice his
|
||
toad, he found himself unable to sleep -- that his conscience smote
|
||
him, he had risen, made the sacrifice, returned to his bed, and in
|
||
a few moments sunk into a serene and happy slumber? And suppose,
|
||
further, that the man honestly believed that the efficacy of the
|
||
sacrifice depended largely on the size of the toad? Now suppose
|
||
that in this belief the man had died, -- what then?
|
||
|
||
It must be remembered that God knew when the missionary of the
|
||
false religion went to the island; and knew that the islander would
|
||
be convinced of the truth of the false religion; and he also knew
|
||
that the missionary of the true religion could not, by any
|
||
possibility, convince the islander of the error of his way; what
|
||
then?
|
||
|
||
If God is infinite, we cannot speak of him as making efforts,
|
||
as being tired. We cannot consistently say that one thing is easy
|
||
to him, and another thing is hard, providing both are possible.
|
||
This being so, why did not God reveal himself to every human being?
|
||
Instead of having an inspired book, why did he not make inspired
|
||
folks? Instead of having his commandments put on tables of stone,
|
||
why did he not write them on each human brain? Why was not the mind
|
||
of each man so made that every religious truth necessary to his
|
||
salvation was an axiom?
|
||
|
||
Do we not know absolutely that man is greatly influenced by
|
||
his surroundings? If Mr. Talmage had been born in Turkey, is it not
|
||
probable that he would now be a whirling Dervish? If he had first
|
||
seen the light in Central Africa, he might now have been prostrate
|
||
before some enormous serpent; if in India, he might have been a
|
||
Brahmin. running a prayer-machine; if in Spain, he would probably
|
||
have been a priest, with his beads and holy water. Had he been born
|
||
among the North American Indians, he would speak of the "Great
|
||
Spirit," and solemnly smoke the pipe of peace.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage teaches that it is the duty of children to
|
||
perpetuate the errors of their parents; consequently, the religion
|
||
of his parents determined his theology. It is with him not a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
question of reason, but of parents; not a question of argument, but
|
||
of filial affection. He does not wish to be a philosopher, but an
|
||
obedient son. Suppose his father had been a Catholic, and his
|
||
mother a Protestant, -- what then? Would he show contempt for his
|
||
mother by following the path of his father; or would he show
|
||
disrespect for his father, by accepting the religion of his mother;
|
||
or would he have become a Protestant with Catholic proclivities, or
|
||
a Catholic with Protestant leanings? Suppose his parents had both
|
||
been infidels -- what then?
|
||
|
||
Is it not better for each one to decide honestly for himself?
|
||
Admitting that your parents were good and kind; admitting that they
|
||
were honest in their views, why not have the courage to say, that
|
||
in your opinion, father and mother were both mistaken? No one can
|
||
honor his parents by being a hypocrite, or an intellectual coward.
|
||
Whoever is absolutely true to himself, is true to his parents, and
|
||
true to the whole world. Whoever is untrue to himself, is false to
|
||
all mankind. Religion must be an individual matter. If there is a
|
||
God, and if there is a day of judgment, the church that a man
|
||
belongs to will not be tried, but the man will be tried.
|
||
|
||
It is a fact that the religion of most people was made for
|
||
then, by others; that they have accepted certain dogmas, not
|
||
because they have examined them, but because they were told that
|
||
they were true. Most of the people in the United States, had they
|
||
been born in Turkey, would now be Mohammedans, and most of the
|
||
Turks, had they been born in Spain, would now be Catholics.
|
||
|
||
It is almost, if not quite, impossible for a man to rise
|
||
entirely above the ideas, views, doctrines and religions of his
|
||
tribe or country. No one expects to find philosophers in Central
|
||
Africa, or scientists among the Feejees. No one expects to find
|
||
philosophers or scientists in any country where the church has
|
||
absolute control.
|
||
|
||
If there is an infinitely good and wise God, of course he will
|
||
take into consideration the surroundings of every human being. He
|
||
understands the philosophy of environment, and of heredity. He
|
||
knows exactly the influence of the mother, of all associates, of
|
||
all associations. He will also take into consideration the amount,
|
||
quality and form of each brain, and whether the brain was healthy
|
||
or diseased. He will take into consideration the strength of the
|
||
passions, the weakness of the judgment. He will know exactly the
|
||
force of all temptation -- what was resisted. He will take an
|
||
account of every effort made in the right direction, and will
|
||
understand all the winds and waves and quicksand and shores and
|
||
shallows in, upon and around the sea of every life.
|
||
|
||
My own opinion is, that if such a being exists, and all these
|
||
things are taken into consideration, we will be absolutely amazed
|
||
to see how small the difference is between the "good" and the
|
||
"bad." Certainly there is no such difference as would justify a
|
||
being of infinite wisdom and benevolence in rewarding one with
|
||
eternal joy and punIshing the other with eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. What are the principal reasons that: have satisfied
|
||
you that the Bible is not an inspired book?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. The great evils that have afflicted this world are:
|
||
|
||
First. Human slavery -- where men have bought and sold their
|
||
fellow-men -- sold babes from mothers, and have practiced every
|
||
conceivable cruelty upon the helpless.
|
||
|
||
Second. Polygamy -- an institution that destroys the home,
|
||
that treats woman as a simple chattel, that does away with the
|
||
sanctity of marriage, and with all that is sacred in love.
|
||
|
||
Third. Wars of conquest and extermination -- by which nations
|
||
have been made the food of the sword.
|
||
|
||
Fourth. The idea entertained by each nation that all other
|
||
nations are destitute of rights -- in other words, patriotism
|
||
founded upon egotism, prejudice, and love of plunder.
|
||
|
||
Religious. Religious persecution.
|
||
|
||
Sixth. The divine right of kings -- an idea that rests upon
|
||
the inequality of human rights, and insists that people should be
|
||
governed without their consent; that the right of one man to govern
|
||
another comes from God, and not from the consent of the governed.
|
||
This is caste -- one of the most odious forms of slavery.
|
||
|
||
Seventh. A belief in malicious supernatural beings -- devils,
|
||
witches, and wizards.
|
||
|
||
Eighth. A belief in an infinite being who ordered, commanded,
|
||
established and approved all these evils.
|
||
|
||
Ninth. The idea that one man can be good for another, or bad
|
||
for another -- that is to say, that one can be rewarded for the
|
||
goodness of another, or justly punished for the sins of another.
|
||
|
||
Tenth. The dogma that a finite being can commit an infinite
|
||
sin, and thereby incur the eternal displeasure of an infinitely
|
||
good being, and be justly subjected to eternal torment.
|
||
|
||
My principal objection to the Bible is that it sustains all of
|
||
these ten evils -- that it is the advocate of human slavery, the
|
||
friend of polygamy; that within its pages I find the command to
|
||
wage wars of extermination; that I find also that the Jews were
|
||
taught to hate foreigners -- to consider all human beings as
|
||
inferior to themselves; I also find persecution commanded as a
|
||
religious duty; that kings were seated upon their thrones by the
|
||
direct act of God. and that to rebel against a king was rebellion
|
||
against God. I object to the Bible also because I find within its
|
||
pages the infamous spirit of caste -- I see the sons of Levi set
|
||
apart as the perpetual beggars and governors of a people; because
|
||
I find the air filled with demons seeking to injure and betray the
|
||
sons of men; because this book is the fountain of modern
|
||
superstition, the bulwark of tyranny and the fortress of caste.
|
||
This book also subverts the idea of justice by threatening infinite
|
||
punishment for the sins of a finite being.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
SIXTH INTERVIEW.
|
||
|
||
At the same time, I admit -- as I always have admitted -- that
|
||
there are good passages in the Bible -- good laws, good teachings,
|
||
with now and then a true line of history. But when it is asserted
|
||
that every word was written by inspiration -- that a being of
|
||
infinite wisdom and goodness is its author, -- then I raise the
|
||
standard of revolt.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. What do you think of the declaration of Mr. Talmage
|
||
that the Bible will be read in heaven throughout all the endless
|
||
ages of eternity?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. Of course I know but very little as to what is or will
|
||
be done in heaven. My knowledge of that country is somewhat
|
||
limited, and it may be possible that the angels will spend most of
|
||
their time in turning over the sacred leaves of the Old Testament.
|
||
I can not positively deny the statement of the Reverend Mr. Talmage
|
||
as I have but very little idea as to how the angels manage to kill
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
The Reverend Mr. Spurgeon stated in a sermon that some people
|
||
wondered what they would do through all eternity in heaven. He said
|
||
that, as for himself, for the first hundred thousand years he would
|
||
look at the wound in one of the Savior's feet, and for the next
|
||
hundred thousand years he would look at the wound in his other
|
||
foot, and for the next hundred thousand years he would look at the
|
||
wound in one of his hands, and for the next hundred thousand years
|
||
he would look at the wound in the other hand, and for the next
|
||
hundred thousand years he would look at the wound in his side.
|
||
|
||
Surely, nothing could be more delightful than this A man
|
||
capable of being happy in such employment, could of course take
|
||
great delight in reading even the genealogies of the Old Testament.
|
||
It is very easy to see what a glow of joy would naturally
|
||
overspread the face of an angel while reading the history of the
|
||
Jewish wars, how the seraphim and cherubim would clasp their rosy
|
||
palms in ecstasy over the fate of Korah and his company. and what
|
||
laughter would wake the echoes of the New Jerusalem as some one
|
||
told again the story of the children and the bears; and what happy
|
||
groups, with folded pinious, would smilingly listen to the 109th
|
||
Psalm.
|
||
**** ****
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|