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VIII. The Romance
of Orthodoxy
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IT is customary to complain of the bustle
and strenuousness of our epoch. But in truth the chief mark of our epoch
is a profound laziness and fatigue; and the fact is that the real laziness
is the cause of the apparent bustle. Take one quite external case; the
streets are noisy with taxicabs and motorcars; but this is not due to
human activity but to human repose. There would be less bustle if there
were more activity, if people were simply walking about. Our world would
be more silent if it were more strenuous. And this which is true of
the apparent physical bustle is true also of the apparent bustle of
the intellect. Most of the machinery of modern language is laborsaving
machinery; and it saves mental labor very much more than it ought. Scientific
phrases are used like scientific wheels and piston-rods to make swifter
and smoother yet the path of the comfortable. Long words go rattling
by us like long railway trains. We know they are carrying thousands
who are too tired or too indolent to walk and think for themselves.
It is a good exercise to try for once in a way to express any opinion
one holds in words of one syllable. If you say "The social utility
of the indeterminate sentence is recognized by all criminologists as
a part of our sociological evolution towards a more humane and scientific
view of punishment," you can go on talking like that for hours
with hardly a movement of the gray matter inside your skull. But if
you begin "I wish Jones to go to gaol and Brown to say when Jones
shall come out," you will discover, with a thrill of horror, that
you are obliged to think. The long words are not the hard words, it
is the short words that are hard. There is much more metaphysical subtlety
in the word "damn" than in the word "degeneration."
But these long comfortable words that
save modern people the toil of reasoning have one particular aspect
in which they are especially ruinous and confusing. This difficulty
occurs when the same long word is used in different connections to mean
quite different things. Thus, to take a well-known instance, the word
"idealist" has one meaning as a piece of philosophy and quite
another as a piece of moral rhetoric. In the same way the scientific
materialists have had just reason to complain of people mixing up "materialist"
as a term of cosmology with "materialist" as a moral taunt.
So, to take a cheaper instance, the man who hates "progressives"
in London always calls himself a "progressive" in South Africa.
A confusion quite as unmeaning as this
has arisen in connection with the word "liberal" as applied
to religion and as applied to politics and society. It is often suggested
that all Liberals ought to be freethinkers, because they ought to love
everything that is free. You might just as well say that all idealists
ought to be High Churchmen, because they ought to love everything that
is high. You might as well say that Low Churchmen ought to like Low
Mass, or that Broad Churchmen ought to like broad jokes. The thing is
a mere accident of words. In actual modern Europe a freethinker does
not mean a man who thinks for himself. It means a man who, having thought
for himself, has come to one particular class of conclusions, the material
origin of phenomena, the impossibility of miracles, the improbability
of personal immortality and so on. And none of these ideas are particularly
liberal. Nay, indeed almost all these ideas are definitely illiberal,
as it is the purpose of this chapter to show.
In the few following pages I propose
to point out as rapidly as possible that on every single one of the
matters most strongly insisted on by liberalizers of theology their
effect upon social practice would be definitely illiberal. Almost every
contemporary proposal to bring freedom into the church is simply a proposal
to bring tyranny into the world. For freeing the church now does not
even mean freeing it in all directions. It means freeing that peculiar
set of dogmas loosely called scientific, dogmas of monism, of pantheism,
or of Arianism, or of necessity. And every one of these (and we will
take them one by one) can be shown to be the natural ally of oppression.
In fact, it is a remarkable circumstance (indeed not so very remarkable
when one comes to think of it) that most things are the allies of oppression.
There is only one thing that can never go past a certain point in its
alliance with oppression -- and that is orthodoxy. I may, it is true,
twist orthodoxy so as partly to justify a tyrant. But I can easily make
up a German philosophy to justify him entirely.
Now let us take in order the innovations
that are the notes of the new theology or the modernist church. We concluded
the last chapter with the discovery of one of them. The very doctrine
which is called the most old-fashioned was found to be the only safeguard
of the new democracies of the earth. The doctrine seemingly most unpopular
was found to be the only strength of the people. In short, we found
that the only logical negation of oligarchy was in the affirmation of
original sin. So it is, I maintain, in all the other cases.
I take the most obvious instance first,
the case of miracles. For some extraordinary reason, there is a fixed
notion that it is more liberal to disbelieve in miracles than to believe
in them. Why, I cannot imagine, nor can anybody tell me. For some inconceivable
cause a "broad" or "liberal" clergyman always means
a man who wishes at least to diminish the number of miracles; it never
means a man who wishes to increase that number. It always means a man
who is free to disbelieve that Christ came out of His grave; it never
means a man who is free to believe that his own aunt came out of her
grave. It is common to find trouble in a parish because the parish priest
cannot admit that St. Peter walked on water; yet how rarely do we find
trouble in a parish because the clergyman says that his father walked
on the Serpentine? And this is not because (as the swift secularist
debater would immediately retort) miracles cannot be believed in our
experience. It is not because "miracles do not happen," as
in the dogma which Matthew Arnold recited with simple faith. More supernatural
things are ALLEGED to have happened in our time than would have been
possible eighty years ago. Men of science believe in such marvels much
more than they did: the most perplexing, and even horrible, prodigies
of mind and spirit are always being unveiled in modern psychology. Things
that the old science at least would frankly have rejected as miracles
are hourly being asserted by the new science. The only thing which is
still old-fashioned enough to reject miracles is the New Theology. But
in truth this notion that it is "free" to deny miracles has
nothing to do with the evidence for or against them. It is a lifeless
verbal prejudice of which the original life and beginning was not in
the freedom of thought, but simply in the dogma, of materialism. The
man of the nineteenth century did not disbelieve in the Resurrection
because his liberal Christianity allowed him to doubt it. He disbelieved
in it because his very strict materialism did not allow him to believe
it. Tennyson, a very typical nineteenth century man, uttered one of
the instinctive truisms of his contemporaries when he said that there
was faith in their honest doubt. There was indeed. Those words have
a profound and even a horrible truth. In their doubt of miracles there
was a faith in a fixed and godless fate; a deep and sincere faith in
the incurable routine of the cosmos. The doubts of the agnostic were
only the dogmas of the monist.
Of the fact and evidence of the supernatural
I will speak afterwards. Here we are only concerned with this clear
point; that in so far as the liberal idea of freedom can be said to
be on either side in the discussion about miracles, it is obviously
on the side of miracles. Reform or (in the only tolerable sense) progress
means simply the gradual control of matter by mind. A miracle simply
means the swift control of matter by mind. If you wish to feed the people,
you may think that feeding them miraculously in the wilderness is impossible
-- but you cannot think it illiberal. If you really want poor children
to go to the seaside, you cannot think it illiberal that they should
go there on flying dragons; you can only think it unlikely. A holiday,
like Liberalism, only means the liberty of man. A miracle only means
the liberty of God. You may conscientiously deny either of them, but
you cannot call your denial a triumph of the liberal idea. The Catholic
Church believed that man and God both had a sort of spiritual freedom.
Calvinism took away the freedom from man, but left it to God. Scientific
materialism binds the Creator Himself; it chains up God as the Apocalypse
chained the devil. It leaves nothing free in the universe. And those
who assist this process are called the "liberal theologians."
This, as I say, is the lightest and
most evident case. The assumption that there is something in the doubt
of miracles akin to liberality or reform is literally the opposite of
the truth. If a man cannot believe in miracles there is an end of the
matter; he is not particularly liberal, but he is perfectly honorable
and logical, which are much better things. But if he can believe in
miracles, he is certainly the more liberal for doing so; because they
mean first, the freedom of the soul, and secondly, its control over
the tyranny of circumstance. Sometimes this truth is ignored in a singularly
naive way, even by the ablest men. For instance, Mr. Bernard Shaw
speaks with hearty old-fashioned contempt for the idea of miracles,
as if they were a sort of breach of faith on the part of nature: he
seems strangely unconscious that miracles are only the final flowers
of his own favorite tree, the doctrine of the omnipotence of will. Just
in the same way he calls the desire for immortality a paltry selfishness,
forgetting that he has just called the desire for life a healthy and
heroic selfishness. How can it be noble to wish to make one's life infinite
and yet mean to wish to make it immortal? No, if it is desirable that
man should triumph over the cruelty of nature or custom, then miracles
are certainly desirable; we will discuss afterwards whether they are
possible.
But I must pass on to the larger cases
of this curious error; the notion that the "liberalizing"
of religion in some way helps the liberation of the world. The second
example of it can be found in the question of pantheism -- or rather
of a certain modern attitude which is often called immanentism, and
which often is Buddhism. But this is so much more difficult a matter
that I must approach it with rather more preparation.
The things said most confidently by
advanced persons to crowded audiences are generally those quite opposite
to the fact; it is actually our truisms that are untrue. Here is a case.
There is a phrase of facile liberality uttered again and again at ethical
societies and parliaments of religion: "the religions of the earth
differ in rites and forms, but they are the same in what they teach."
It is false; it is the opposite of the fact. The religions of the earth
do not greatly differ in rites and forms; they do greatly differ in
what they teach. It is as if a man were to say, "Do not be misled
by the fact that the CHURCH TIMES and the FREETHINKER look utterly different,
that one is painted on vellum and the other carved on marble, that one
is triangular and the other hectagonal; read them and you will see that
they say the same thing." The truth is, of course, that they are
alike in everything except in the fact that they don't say the same
thing. An atheist stockbroker in Surbiton looks exactly like a Swedenborgian
stockbroker in Wimbledon. You may walk round and round them and subject
them to the most personal and offensive study without seeing anything
Swedenborgian in the hat or anything particularly godless in the umbrella.
It is exactly in their souls that they are divided. So the truth is
that the difficulty of all the creeds of the earth is not as alleged
in this cheap maxim: that they agree in meaning, but differ in machinery.
It is exactly the opposite. They agree in machinery; almost every great
religion on earth works with the same external methods, with priests,
scriptures, altars, sworn brotherhoods, special feasts. They agree in
the mode of teaching; what they differ about is the thing to be taught.
Pagan optimists and Eastern pessimists would both have temples, just
as Liberals and Tories would both have newspapers. Creeds that exist
to destroy each other both have scriptures, just as armies that exist
to destroy each other both have guns.
The great example of this alleged identity
of all human religions is the alleged spiritual identity of Buddhism
and Christianity. Those who adopt this theory generally avoid the ethics
of most other creeds, except, indeed, Confucianism, which they like
because it is not a creed. But they are cautious in their praises of
Mahommedanism, generally confining themselves to imposing its morality
only upon the refreshment of the lower classes. They seldom suggest
the Mahommedan view of marriage (for which there is a great deal to
be said), and towards Thugs and fetish worshippers their attitude may
even be called cold. But in the case of the great religion of Gautama
they feel sincerely a similarity.
Students of popular science, like Mr.
Blatchford, are always insisting that Christianity and Buddhism are
very much alike, especially Buddhism. This is generally believed, and
I believed it myself until I read a book giving the reasons for it.
The reasons were of two kinds: resemblances that meant nothing because
they were common to all humanity, and resemblances which were not resemblances
at all. The author solemnly explained that the two creeds were alike
in things in which all creeds are alike, or else he described them as
alike in some point in which they are quite obviously different. Thus,
as a case of the first class, he said that both Christ and Buddha were
called by the divine voice coming out of the sky, as if you would expect
the divine voice to come out of the coal-cellar. Or, again, it was gravely
urged that these two Eastern teachers, by a singular coincidence, both
had to do with the washing of feet. You might as well say that it was
a remarkable coincidence that they both had feet to wash. And the other
class of similarities were those which simply were not similar. Thus
this reconciler of the two religions draws earnest attention to the
fact that at certain religious feasts the robe of the Lama is rent in
pieces out of respect, and the remnants highly valued. But this is the
reverse of a resemblance, for the garments of Christ were not rent in
pieces out of respect, but out of derision; and the remnants were not
highly valued except for what they would fetch in the rag shops. It
is rather like alluding to the obvious connection between the two ceremonies
of the sword: when it taps a man's shoulder, and when it cuts off his
head. It is not at all similar for the man. These scraps of puerile
pedantry would indeed matter little if it were not also true that the
alleged philosophical resemblances are also of these two kinds, either
proving too much or not proving anything. That Buddhism approves of
mercy or of self-restraint is not to say that it is specially like Christianity;
it is only to say that it is not utterly unlike all human existence.
Buddhists disapprove in theory of cruelty or excess because all sane
human beings disapprove in theory of cruelty or excess. But to say that
Buddhism and Christianity give the same philosophy of these things is
simply false. All humanity does agree that we are in a net of sin. Most
of humanity agrees that there is some way out. But as to what is the
way out, I do not think that there are two institutions in the universe
which contradict each other so flatly as Buddhism and Christianity.
Even when I thought, with most other
well-informed, though unscholarly, people, that Buddhism and Christianity
were alike, there was one thing about them that always perplexed me;
I mean the startling difference in their type of religious art. I do
not mean in its technical style of representation, but in the things
that it was manifestly meant to represent. No two ideals could be more
opposite than a Christian saint in a Gothic cathedral and a Buddhist
saint in a Chinese temple. The opposition exists at every point; but
perhaps the shortest statement of it is that the Buddhist saint always
has his eyes shut, while the Christian saint always has them very wide
open. The Buddhist saint has a sleek and harmonious body, but his eyes
are heavy and sealed with sleep. The mediaeval saint's body is wasted
to its crazy bones, but his eyes are frightfully alive. There cannot
be any real community of spirit between forces that produced symbols
so different as that. Granted that both images are extravagances, are
perversions of the pure creed, it must be a real divergence which could
produce such opposite extravagances. The Buddhist is looking with a
peculiar intentness inwards. The Christian is staring with a frantic
intentness outwards. If we follow that clue steadily we shall find some
interesting things.
A short time ago Mrs. Besant, in an
interesting essay, announced that there was only one religion in the
world, that all faiths were only versions or perversions of it, and
that she was quite prepared to say what it was. According to Mrs. Besant
this universal Church is simply the universal self. It is the doctrine
that we are really all one person; that there are no real walls of individuality
between man and man. If I may put it so, she does not tell us to love
our neighbors; she tells us to be our neighbors That is Mrs. Besant's
thoughtful and suggestive description of the religion in which all men
must find themselves in agreement. And I never heard of any suggestion
in my life with which I more violently disagree. I want to love my neighbor
not because he is I, but precisely because he is not I. I want to adore
the world, not as one likes a looking-glass, because it is one's self,
but as one loves a woman, because she is entirely different. If souls
are separate love is possible. If souls are united love is obviously
impossible. A man may be said loosely to love himself, but he can hardly
fall in love with himself, or, if he does, it must be a monotonous courtship.
If the world is full of real selves, they can be really unselfish selves.
But upon Mrs. Besant's principle the whole cosmos is only one enormously
selfish person.
It is just here that Buddhism is on
the side of modern pantheism and immanence. And it is just here that
Christianity is on the side of humanity and liberty and love. Love desires
personality; therefore love desires division. It is the instinct of
Christianity to be glad that God has broken the universe into little
pieces, because they are living pieces. It is her instinct to say "little
children love one another" rather than to tell one large person
to love himself. This is the intellectual abyss between Buddhism and
Christianity; that for the Buddhist or Theosophist personality is the
fall of man, for the Christian it is the purpose of God, the whole point
of his cosmic idea. The world-soul of the Theosophists asks man to love
it only in order that man may throw himself into it. But the divine
centre of Christianity actually threw man out of it in order that he
might love it. The oriental deity is like a giant who should have lost
his leg or hand and be always seeking to find it; but the Christian
power is like some giant who in a strange generosity should cut off
his right hand, so that it might of its own accord shake hands with
him. We come back to the same tireless note touching the nature of Christianity;
all modern philosophies are chains which connect and fetter; Christianity
is a sword which separates and sets free. No other philosophy makes
God actually rejoice in the separation of the universe into living souls.
But according to orthodox Christianity this separation between God and
man is sacred, because this is eternal. That a man may love God it is
necessary that there should be not only a God to be loved, but a man
to love him. All those vague theosophical minds for whom the universe
is an immense melting-pot are exactly the minds which shrink instinctively
from that earthquake saying of our Gospels, which declare that the Son
of God came not with peace but with a sundering sword. The saying rings
entirely true even considered as what it obviously is; the statement
that any man who preaches real love is bound to beget hate. It is as
true of democratic fraternity as a divine love; sham love ends in compromise
and common philosophy; but real love has always ended in bloodshed.
Yet there is another and yet more awful truth behind the obvious meaning
of this utterance of our Lord. According to Himself the Son was a sword
separating brother and brother that they should for an eon hate each
other. But the Father also was a sword, which in the black beginning
separated brother and brother, so that they should love each other at
last.
This is the meaning of that almost insane
happiness in the eyes of the mediaeval saint in the picture. This is
the meaning of the sealed eyes of the superb Buddhist image. The Christian
saint is happy because he has verily been cut off from the world; he
is separate from things and is staring at them in astonishment. But
why should the Buddhist saint be astonished at things? -- since there
is really only one thing, and that being impersonal can hardly be astonished
at itself. There have been many pantheist poems suggesting wonder, but
no really successful ones. The pantheist cannot wonder, for he cannot
praise God or praise anything as really distinct from himself. Our immediate
business here, however, is with the effect of this Christian admiration
(which strikes outwards, towards a deity distinct from the worshipper)
upon the general need for ethical activity and social reform. And surely
its effect is sufficiently obvious. There is no real possibility of
getting out of pantheism, any special impulse to moral action. For pantheism
implies in its nature that one thing is as good as another; whereas
action implies in its nature that one thing is greatly preferable to
another. Swinburne in the high summer of his skepticism tried in vain
to wrestle with this difficulty. In "Songs before Sunrise,"
written under the inspiration of Garibaldi and the revolt of Italy he
proclaimed the newer religion and the purer God which should wither
up all the priests of the world:
"What doest thou now Looking Godward
to cry I am I, thou art thou, I am low, thou art high, I am thou that
thou seekest to find him, find thou but thyself, thou art I."
Of which the immediate and evident deduction
is that tyrants are as much the sons of God as Garibaldis; and that
King Bomba of Naples having, with the utmost success, "found himself"
is identical with the ultimate good in all things. The truth is that
the western energy that dethrones tyrants has been directly due to the
western theology that says "I am I, thou art thou." The same
spiritual separation which looked up and saw a good king in the universe
looked up and saw a bad king in Naples. The worshippers of Bomba's god
dethroned Bomba. The worshippers of Swinburne's god have covered Asia
for centuries and have never dethroned a tyrant. The Indian saint may
reasonably shut his eyes because he is looking at that which is I and
Thou and We and They and It. It is a rational occupation: but it is
not true in theory and not true in fact that it helps the Indian to
keep an eye on Lord Curzon. That external vigilance which has always
been the mark of Christianity (the command that we should WATCH and
pray) has expressed itself both in typical western orthodoxy and in
typical western politics: but both depend on the idea of a divinity
transcendent, different from ourselves, a deity that disappears. Certainly
the most sagacious creeds may suggest that we should pursue God into
deeper and deeper rings of the labyrinth of our own ego. But only we
of Christendom have said that we should hunt God like an eagle upon
the mountains: and we have killed all monsters in the chase.
Here again, therefore, we find that
in so far as we value democracy and the self-renewing energies of the
west, we are much more likely to find them in the old theology than
the new. If we want reform, we must adhere to orthodoxy: especially
in this matter (so much disputed in the counsels of Mr. R. J. Campbell),
the matter of insisting on the immanent or the transcendent deity. By
insisting specially on the immanence of God we get introspection, self-isolation,
quietism, social indifference --Tibet. By insisting specially on the
transcendence of God we get wonder, curiosity, moral and political adventure,
righteous indignation -- Christendom. Insisting that God is inside man,
man is always inside himself. By insisting that God transcends man,
man has transcended himself.
If we take any other doctrine that has
been called old-fashioned we shall find the case the same. It is the
same, for instance, in the deep matter of the Trinity. Unitarians (a
sect never to be mentioned without a special respect for their distinguished
intellectual dignity and high intellectual honor) are often reformers
by the accident that throws so many small sects into such an attitude.
But there is nothing in the least liberal or akin to reform in the substitution
of pure monotheism for the Trinity. The complex God of the Athanasian
Creed may be an enigma for the intellect; but He is far less likely
to gather the mystery and cruelty of a Sultan than the lonely god of
Omar or Mahomet. The god who is a mere awful unity is not only a king
but an Eastern king. The HEART of humanity, especially of European humanity,
is certainly much more satisfied by the strange hints and symbols that
gather round the Trinitarian idea, the image of a council at which mercy
pleads as well as justice, the conception of a sort of liberty and variety
existing even in the inmost chamber of the world. For Western religion
has always felt keenly the idea "it is not well for man to be alone."
The social instinct asserted itself everywhere as when the Eastern idea
of hermits was practically expelled by the Western idea of monks. So
even asceticism became brotherly; and the Trappists were sociable even
when they were silent. If this love of a living complexity be our test,
it is certainly healthier to have the Trinitarian religion than the
Unitarian. For to us Trinitarians (if I may say it with reverence) --
to us God Himself is a society. It is indeed a fathomless mystery of
theology, and even if I were theologian enough to deal with it directly,
it would not be relevant to do so here. Suffice it to say here that
this triple enigma is as comforting as wine and open as an English fireside;
that this thing that bewilders the intellect utterly quiets the heart:
but out of the desert, from the dry places and, the dreadful suns, come
the cruel children of the lonely God; the real Unitarians who with scimitar
in hand have laid waste the world. For it is not well for God to be
alone.
Again, the same is true of that difficult
matter of the danger of the soul, which has unsettled so many just minds.
To hope for all souls is imperative; and it is quite tenable that their
salvation is inevitable. It is tenable, but it is not specially favorable
to activity or progress. Our fighting and creative society ought rather
to insist on the danger of everybody, on the fact that every man is
hanging by a thread or clinging to a precipice. To say that all will
be well anyhow is a comprehensible remark: but it cannot be called the
blast of a trumpet. Europe ought rather to emphasize possible perdition;
and Europe always has emphasized it. Here its highest religion is at
one with all its cheapest romances. To the Buddhist or the eastern fatalist
existence is a science or a plan, which must end up in a certain way.
But to a Christian existence is a STORY, which may end up in any way.
In a thrilling novel (that purely Christian product) the hero is not
eaten by cannibals; but it is essential to the existence of the thrill
that he MIGHT be eaten by cannibals. The hero must (so to speak) be
an eatable hero. So Christian morals have always said to the man, not
that he would lose his soul, but that he must take care that he didn't.
In Christian morals, in short, it is wicked to call a man "damned":
but it is strictly religious and philosophic to call him damnable.
All Christianity concentrates on the
man at the crossroads. The vast and shallow philosophies, the huge syntheses
of humbug, all talk about ages and evolution and ultimate developments.
The true philosophy is concerned with the instant. Will a man take this
road or that? -- that is the only thing to think about, if you enjoy
thinking. The eons are easy enough to think about, any one can think
about them. The instant is really awful: and it is because our religion
has intensely felt the instant, that it has in literature dealt much
with battle and in theology dealt much with hell. It is full of DANGER,
like a boy's book: it is at an immortal crisis. There is a great deal
of real similarity between popular fiction and the religion of the western
people. If you say that popular fiction is vulgar and tawdry, you only
say what the dreary and well-informed say also about the images in the
Catholic churches. Life (according to the faith) is very like a serial
story in a magazine: life ends with the promise (or menace) "to
be continued in our next." Also, with a noble vulgarity, life imitates
the serial and leaves off at the exciting moment. For death is distinctly
an exciting moment.
But the point is that a story is exciting
because it has in it so strong an element of will, of what theology
calls freewill. You cannot finish a sum how you like. But you can finish
a story how you like. When somebody discovered the Differential Calculus
there was only one Differential Calculus he could discover. But when
Shakespeare killed Romeo he might have married him to Juliet's old nurse
if he had felt inclined. And Christendom has excelled in the narrative
romance exactly because it has insisted on the theological freewill.
It is a large matter and too much to one side of the road to be discussed
adequately here; but this is the real objection to that torrent of modern
talk about treating crime as disease, about making a prison merely a
hygienic environment like a hospital, of healing sin by slow scientific
methods. The fallacy of the whole thing is that evil is a matter of
active choice whereas disease is not. If you say that you are going
to cure a profligate as you cure an asthmatic, my cheap and obvious
answer is, "Produce the people who want to be asthmatics as many
people want to be profligates." A man may lie still and be cured
of a malady. But he must not lie still if he wants to be cured of a
sin; on the contrary, he must get up and jump about violently. The whole
point indeed is perfectly expressed in the very word which we use for
a man in hospital; "patient" is in the passive mood; "sinner"
is in the active. If a man is to be saved from influenza, he may be
a patient. But if he is to be saved from forging, he must be not a patient
but an IMPATIENT. He must be personally impatient with forgery. All
moral reform must start in the active not the passive will.
Here again we reach the same substantial
conclusion. In so far as we desire the definite reconstructions and
the dangerous revolutions which have distinguished European civilization,
we shall not discourage the thought of possible ruin; we shall rather
encourage it. If we want, like the Eastern saints, merely to contemplate
how right things are, of course we shall only say that they must go
right. But if we particularly want to MAKE them go right, we must insist
that they may go wrong.
Lastly, this truth is yet again true
in the case of the common modern attempts to diminish or to explain
away the divinity of Christ. The thing may be true or not; that I shall
deal with before I end. But if the divinity is true it is certainly
terribly revolutionary. That a good man may have his back to the wall
is no more than we knew already; but that God could have his back to
the wall is a boast for all insurgents for ever. Christianity is the
only religion on earth that has felt that omnipotence made God incomplete.
Christianity alone has felt that God, to be wholly God, must have been
a rebel as well as a king. Alone of all creeds, Christianity has added
courage to the virtues of the Creator. For the only courage worth calling
courage must necessarily mean that the soul passes a breaking point
and does not break. In this indeed I approach a matter more dark and
awful than it is easy to discuss; and I apologize in advance if any
of my phrases fall wrong or seem irreverent touching a matter which
the greatest saints and thinkers have justly feared to approach. But
in that terrific tale of the Passion there is a distinct emotional suggestion
that the author of all things (in some unthinkable way) went not only
through agony, but through doubt. It is written, "Thou shalt not
tempt the Lord thy God." No; but the Lord thy God may tempt Himself;
and it seems as if this was what happened in Gethsemane. In a garden
Satan tempted man: and in a garden God tempted God. He passed in some
superhuman manner through our human horror of pessimism. When the world
shook and the sun was wiped out of heaven, it was not at the crucifixion,
but at the cry from the cross: the cry which confessed that God was
forsaken of God. And now let the revolutionists choose a creed from
all the creeds and a god from all the gods of the world, carefully weighing
all the gods of inevitable recurrence and of unalterable power. They
will not find another god who has himself been in revolt. Nay, (the
matter grows too difficult for human speech,) but let the atheists themselves
choose a god. They will find only one divinity who ever uttered their
isolation; only one religion in which God seemed for an instant to be
an atheist.
These can be called the essentials of
the old orthodoxy, of which the chief merit is that it is the natural
fountain of revolution and reform; and of which the chief defect is
that it is obviously only an abstract assertion. Its main advantage
is that it is the most adventurous and manly of all theologies. Its
chief disadvantage is simply that it is a theology. It can always be
urged against it that it is in its nature arbitrary and in the air.
But it is not so high in the air but that great archers spend their
whole lives in shooting arrows at it -- yes, and their last arrows;
there are men who will ruin themselves and ruin their civilization if
they may ruin also this old fantastic tale. This is the last and most
astounding fact about this faith; that its enemies will use any weapon
against it, the swords that cut their own fingers, and the firebrands
that burn their own homes. Men who begin to fight the Church for the
sake of freedom and humanity end by flinging away freedom and humanity
if only they may fight the Church. This is no exaggeration; I could
fill a book with the instances of it. Mr. Blatchford set out, as an
ordinary Bible-smasher, to prove that Adam was guiltless of sin against
God; in maneuvering so as to maintain this he admitted, as a mere side
issue, that all the tyrants, from Nero to King Leopold, were guiltless
of any sin against humanity. I know a man who has such a passion for
proving that he will have no personal existence after death that he
falls back on the position that he has no personal existence now. He
invokes Buddhism and says that all souls fade into each other; in order
to prove that he cannot go to heaven he proves that he cannot go to
Hartle-pool. I have known people who protested against religious education
with arguments against any education, saying that the child's mind must
grow freely or that the old must not teach the young. I have known people
who showed that there could be no divine judgment by showing that there
can be no human judgment, even for practical purposes. They burned their
own corn to set fire to the church; they smashed their own tools to
smash it; any stick was good enough to beat it with, though it were
the last stick of their own dismembered furniture. We do not admire,
we hardly excuse, the fanatic who wrecks this world for love of the
other. But what are we to say of the fanatic who wrecks this world out
of hatred of the other? He sacrifices the very existence of humanity
to the nonexistence of God. He offers his victims not to the altar,
but merely to assert the idleness of the altar and the emptiness of
the throne. He is ready to ruin even that primary ethic by which all
things live, for his strange and eternal vengeance upon some one who
never lived at all.
And yet the thing hangs in the heavens
unhurt. Its opponents only succeed in destroying all that they themselves
justly hold dear. They do not destroy orthodoxy; they only destroy political
and common courage sense. They do not prove that Adam was not responsible
to God; how could they prove it? They only prove (from their premises)
that the Czar is not responsible to Russia. They do not prove that Adam
should not have been punished by God; they only prove that the nearest
sweater should not be punished by men. With their oriental doubts about
personality they do not make certain that we shall have no personal
life hereafter; they only make certain that we shall not have a very
jolly or complete one here. With their paralyzing hints of all conclusions
coming out wrong they do not tear the book of the Recording Angel; they
only make it a little harder to keep the books of Marshall & Snelgrove.
Not only is the faith the mother of all worldly energies, but its foes
are the fathers of all worldly confusion. The secularists have not wrecked
divine things; but the secularists have wrecked secular things, if that
is any comfort to them. The Titans did not scale heaven; but they laid
waste the world.
 |
IX.
Authority and The Adventurer
 |
THE last chapter has been concerned
with the contention that orthodoxy is not only (as is often urged) the
only safe guardian of morality or order, but is also the only logical
guardian of liberty, innovation and advance. If we wish to pull down
the prosperous oppressor we cannot do it with the new doctrine of human
perfectibility; we can do it with the old doctrine of Original Sin.
If we want to uproot inherent cruelties or lift up lost populations
we cannot do it with the scientific theory that matter precedes mind;
we can do it with the supernatural theory that mind precedes matter.
If we wish specially to awaken people to social vigilance and tireless
pursuit of practice, we cannot help it much by insisting on the Immanent
God and the Inner Light: for these are at best reasons for contentment;
we can help it much by insisting on the transcendent God and the flying
and escaping gleam; for that means divine discontent. If we wish particularly
to assert the idea of a generous balance against that of a dreadful
autocracy we shall instinctively be Trinitarian rather than Unitarian.
If we desire European civilization to be a raid and a rescue, we shall
insist rather that souls are in real peril than that their peril is
ultimately unreal. And if we wish to exalt the outcast and the crucified,
we shall rather wish to think that a veritable God was crucified, rather
than a mere sage or hero. Above all, if we wish to protect the poor
we shall be in favor of fixed rules and clear dogmas. The RULES of a
club are occasionally in favor of the poor member. The drift of a club
is always in favor of the rich one.
And now we come to the crucial question
which truly concludes the whole matter. A reasonable agnostic, if he
has happened to agree with me so far, may justly turn round and say,
"You have found a practical philosophy in the doctrine of the Fall;
very well. You have found a side of democracy now dangerously neglected
wisely asserted in Original Sin; all right. You have found a truth in
the doctrine of hell; I congratulate you. You are convinced that worshippers
of a personal God look outwards and are progressive; I congratulate
them. But even supposing that those doctrines do include those truths,
why cannot you take the truths and leave the doctrines? Granted that
all modern society is trusting the rich too much because it does not
allow for human weakness; granted that orthodox ages have had a great
advantage because (believing in the Fall) they did allow for human weakness,
why cannot you simply allow for human weakness without believing in
the Fall? If you have discovered that the idea of damnation represents
a healthy idea of danger, why can you not simply take the idea of danger
and leave the idea of damnation? If you see clearly the kernel of commonsense
in the nut of Christian orthodoxy, why cannot you simply take the kernel
and leave the nut? Why cannot you (to use that cant phrase of the newspapers
which I, as a highly scholarly agnostic, am a little ashamed of using)
why cannot you simply take what is good in Christianity, what you can
define as valuable, what you can comprehend, and leave all the rest,
all the absolute dogmas that are in their nature incomprehensible?"
This is the real question; this is the last question; and it is a pleasure
to try to answer it.
The first answer is simply to say that
I am a rationalist. I like to have some intellectual justification for
my intuitions. If I am treating man as a fallen being it is an intellectual
convenience to me to believe that he fell; and I find, for some odd
psychological reason, that I can deal better with a man's exercise of
freewill if I believe that he has got it. But I am in this matter yet
more definitely a rationalist. I do not propose to turn this book into
one of ordinary Christian apologetics; I should be glad to meet at any
other time the enemies of Christianity in that more obvious arena. Here
I am only giving an account of my own growth in spiritual certainty.
But I may pause to remark that the more I saw of the merely abstract
arguments against the Christian cosmology the less I thought of them.
I mean that having found the moral atmosphere of the Incarnation to
be common sense, I then looked at the established intellectual arguments
against the Incarnation and found them to be common nonsense. In case
the argument should be thought to suffer from the absence of the ordinary
apologetic I will here very briefly summarize my own arguments and conclusions
on the purely objective or scientific truth of the matter.
If I am asked, as a purely intellectual
question, why I believe in Christianity, I can only answer, "For
the same reason that an intelligent agnostic disbelieves in Christianity."
I believe in it quite rationally upon the evidence But the evidence
in my case, as in that of the intelligent agnostic, is not really in
this or that alleged demonstration; it is in an enormous accumulation
of small but unanimous facts. The secularist is not to be blamed because
his objections to Christianity are miscellaneous and even scrappy; it
is precisely such scrappy evidence that does convince the mind. I mean
that a man may well be less convinced of a philosophy from four books,
than from one book, one battle, one landscape, and one old friend. The
very fact that the things are of different kinds increases the importance
of the fact that they all point to one conclusion. Now, the non-Christianity
of the average educated man today is almost always, to do him justice,
made up of these loose but living experiences. I can only say that my
evidences for Christianity are of the same vivid but varied kind as
his evidences against it. For when I look at these various anti-Christian
truths, I simply discover that none of them are true. I discover that
the true tide and force of all the facts flows the other way. Let us
take cases. Many a sensible modern man must have abandoned Christianity
under the pressure of three such converging convictions as these: first,
that men, with their shape, structure, and sexuality, are, after all,
very much like beasts, a mere variety of the animal kingdom; second,
that primeval religion arose in ignorance and fear; third, that priests
have blighted societies with bitterness and gloom. Those three anti-Christian
arguments are very different; but they are all quite logical and legitimate;
and they all converge. The only objection to them (I discover) is that
they are all untrue. If you leave off looking at books about beasts
and men, if you begin to look at beasts and men then (if you have any
humor or imagination, any sense of the frantic or the farcical) you
will observe that the startling thing is not how like man is to the
brutes, but how unlike he is. It is the monstrous scale of his divergence
that requires an explanation. That man and brute are like is, in a sense,
a truism; but that being so like they should then be so insanely unlike,
that is the shock and the enigma. That an ape has hands is far less
interesting to the philosopher than the fact that having hands he does
next to nothing with them; does not play knucklebones or the violin;
does not carve marble or carve mutton. People talk of barbaric architecture
and debased art. But elephants do not build colossal temples of ivory
even in a rococo style; camels do not paint even bad pictures, though
equipped with the material of many camel's-hair brushes. Certain modern
dreamers say that ants and bees have a society superior to ours. They
have, indeed, a civilization; but that very truth only reminds us that
it is an inferior civilization. Who ever found an anthill decorated
with the statues of celebrated ants? Who has seen a beehive carved with
the images of gorgeous queens of old? No; the chasm between man and
other creatures may have a natural explanation, but it is a chasm. We
talk of wild animals; but man is the only wild animal. It is man that
has broken out. All other animals are tame animals; following the rugged
respectability of the tribe or type. All other animals are domestic
animals; man alone is ever undomestic, either as a profligate or a monk.
So that this first superficial reason for materialism is, if anything,
a reason for its opposite; it is exactly where biology leaves off that
all religion begins.
It would be the same if I examined the
second of the three chance rationalist arguments; the argument that
all that we call divine began in some darkness and terror. When I did
attempt to examine the foundations of this modern idea I simply found
that there were none. Science knows nothing whatever about prehistoric
man; for the excellent reason that he is prehistoric A few professors
choose to conjecture that such things as human sacrifice were once innocent
and general and that they gradually dwindled; but there is no direct
evidence of it, and the small amount of indirect evidence is very much
the other way. In the earliest legends we have, such as the tales of
Isaac and of Iphigenia, human sacrifice is not introduced as something
old, but rather as something new; as a strange and frightful exception
darkly demanded by the gods. History says nothing; and legends all say
that the earth was kinder in its earliest time. There is no tradition
of progress; but the whole human race has a tradition of the Fall. Amusingly
enough, indeed, the very dissemination of this idea is used against
its authenticity. Learned men literally say that this prehistoric calamity
cannot be true because every race of mankind remembers it. I cannot
keep pace with these paradoxes.
And if we took the third chance instance,
it would be the same; the view that priests darken and embitter the
world. I look at the world and simply discover that they don't. Those
countries in Europe which are still influenced by priests, are exactly
the countries where there is still singing and dancing and colored dresses
and art in the open-air. Catholic doctrine and discipline may be walls;
but they are the walls of a playground. Christianity is the only frame
which has preserved the pleasure of Paganism. We might fancy some children
playing on the flat grassy top of some tall island in the sea. So long
as there was a wall round the cliff's edge they could fling themselves
into every frantic game and make the place the noisiest of nurseries.
But the walls were knocked down, leaving the naked peril of the precipice.
They did not fall over; but when their friends returned to them they
were all huddled in terror in the centre of the island; and their song
had ceased.
Thus these three facts of experience,
such facts as go to make an agnostic, are, in this view, turned totally
round. I am left saying, "Give me an explanation, first, of the
towering eccentricity of man among the brutes; second, of the vast human
tradition of some ancient happiness; third, of the partial perpetuation
of such pagan joy in the countries of the Catholic Church." One
explanation, at any rate, covers all three: the theory that twice was
the natural order interrupted by some explosion or revelation such as
people now call "psychic." Once Heaven came upon the earth
with a power or seal called the image of God, whereby man took command
of Nature; and once again (when in empire after empire men had been
found wanting) Heaven came to save mankind in the awful shape of a man.
This would explain why the mass of men always look backwards; and why
the only corner where they in any sense look forwards is the little
continent where Christ has His Church. I know it will be said that Japan
has become progressive. But how can this be an answer when even in saying
"Japan has become progressive," we really only mean, "Japan
has become European"? But I wish here not so much to insist on
my own explanation as to insist on my original remark. I agree with
the ordinary unbelieving man in the street in being guided by three
or four odd facts all pointing to something; only when I came to look
at the facts I always found they pointed to something else.
I have given an imaginary triad of such
ordinary anti-Christian arguments; if that be too narrow a basis I will
give on the spur of the moment another. These are the kind of thoughts
which in combination create the impression that Christianity is something
weak and diseased. First, for instance, that Jesus was a gentle creature,
sheepish and unworldly, a mere ineffectual appeal to the world; second,
that Christianity arose and flourished in the dark ages of ignorance,
and that to these the Church would drag us back; third, that the people
still strongly religious or (if you will) superstitious -- such people
as the Irish -- are weak, unpractical, and behind the times. I only
mention these ideas to affirm the same thing: that when I looked into
them independently I found, not that the conclusions were unphilosophical,
but simply that the facts were not facts. Instead of looking at books
and pictures about the New Testament I looked at the New Testament.
There I found an account, not in the least of a person with his hair
parted in the middle or his hands clasped in appeal, but of an extraordinary
being with lips of thunder and acts of lurid decision, flinging down
tables, casting out devils, passing with the wild secrecy of the wind
from mountain isolation to a sort of dreadful demagogy; a being who
often acted like an angry god -- and always like a god. Christ had even
a literary style of his own, not to be found, I think, elsewhere; it
consists of an almost furious use of the A FORTIORI. His "how much
more" is piled one upon another like castle upon castle in the
clouds. The diction used ABOUT Christ has been, and perhaps wisely,
sweet and submissive. But the diction used by Christ is quite curiously
gigantesque; it is full of camels leaping through needles and mountains
hurled into the sea. Morally it is equally terrific; he called himself
a sword of slaughter, and told men to buy swords if they sold their
coats for them. That he used other even wilder words on the side of
nonresistance greatly increases the mystery; but it also, if anything,
rather increases the violence. We cannot even explain it by calling
such a being insane; for insanity is usually along one consistent channel.
The maniac is generally a monomaniac. Here we must remember the difficult
definition of Christianity already given; Christianity is a superhuman
paradox whereby two opposite passions may blaze beside each other. The
one explanation of the Gospel language that does explain it, is that
it is the survey of one who from some supernatural height beholds some
more startling synthesis.
I take in order the next instance offered:
the idea that Christianity belongs to the Dark Ages. Here I did not
satisfy myself with reading modern generalizations; I read a little
history. And in history I found that Christianity, so far from belonging
to the Dark Ages, was the one path across the Dark Ages that was not
dark. It was a shining bridge connecting two shining civilizations.
If any one says that the faith arose in ignorance and savagery the answer
is simple: it didn't. It arose in the Mediterranean civilization in
the full summer of the Roman Empire. The world was swarming with skeptics,
and pantheism was as plain as the sun, when Constantine nailed the cross
to the mast. It is perfectly true that afterwards the ship sank; but
it is far more extraordinary that the ship came up again: repainted
and glittering, with the cross still at the top. This is the amazing
thing the religion did: it turned a sunken ship into a submarine. The
ark lived under the load of waters; after being buried under the debris
of dynasties and clans, we arose and remembered Rome. If our faith had
been a mere fad of the fading empire, fad would have followed fad in
the twilight, and if the civilization ever reemerged (and many such
have never reemerged) it would have been under some new barbaric flag.
But the Christian Church was the last life of the old society and was
also the first life of the new. She took the people who were forgetting
how to make an arch and she taught them to invent the Gothic arch. In
a word, the most absurd thing that could be said of the Church is the
thing we have all heard said of it. How can we say that the Church wishes
to bring us back into the Dark Ages? The Church was the only thing that
ever brought us out of them.
I added in this second trinity of objections
an idle instance taken from those who feel such people as the Irish
to be weakened or made stagnant by superstition. I only added it because
this is a peculiar case of a statement of fact that turns out to be
a statement of falsehood. It is constantly said of the Irish that they
are impractical. But if we refrain for a moment from looking at what
is said about them and look at what is DONE about them, we shall see
that the Irish are not only practical, but quite painfully successful.
The poverty of their country, the minority of their members are simply
the conditions under which they were asked to work; but no other group
in the British Empire has done so much with such conditions. The Nationalists
were the only minority that ever succeeded in twisting the whole British
Parliament sharply out of its path. The Irish peasants are the only
poor men in these islands who have forced their masters to disgorge.
These people, whom we call priest-ridden, are the only Britons who will
not be squire-ridden. And when I came to look at the actual Irish character,
the case was the same. Irishmen are best at the specially HARD professions
-- the trades of iron, the lawyer, and the soldier. In all these cases,
therefore, I came back to the same conclusion: the skeptic was quite
right to go by the facts, only he had not looked at the facts. The skeptic
is too credulous; he believes in newspapers or even in encyclopedias.
Again the three questions left me with three very antagonistic questions.
The average skeptic wanted to know how I explained the namby-pamby note
in the Gospel, the connection of the creed with mediaeval darkness and
the political impracticability of the Celtic Christians. But I wanted
to ask, and to ask with an earnestness amounting to urgency, "What
is this incomparable energy which appears first in one walking the earth
like a living judgment and this energy which can die with a dying civilization
and yet force it to a resurrection from the dead; this energy which
last of all can inflame a bankrupt peasantry with so fixed a faith in
justice that they get what they ask, while others go empty away; so
that the most helpless island of the Empire can actually help itself?"
There is an answer: it is an answer
to say that the energy is truly from outside the world; that it is psychic,
or at least one of the results of a real psychical disturbance. The
highest gratitude and respect are due to the great human civilizations
such as the old Egyptian or the existing Chinese. Nevertheless it is
no injustice for them to say that only modern Europe has exhibited incessantly
a power of self-renewal recurring often at the shortest intervals and
descending to the smallest facts of building or costume. All other societies
die finally and with dignity. We die daily. We are always being born
again with almost indecent obstetrics. It is hardly an exaggeration
to say that there is in historic Christendom a sort of unnatural life:
it could be explained as a supernatural life. It could be explained
as an awful galvanic life working in what would have been a corpse.
For our civilization OUGHT to have died, by all parallels, by all sociological
probability, in the Ragnorak of the end of Rome. That is the weird inspiration
of our estate: you and I have no business to be here at all. We are
all REVENANTS; all living Christians are dead pagans walking about.
Just as Europe was about to be gathered in silence to Assyria and Babylon,
something entered into its body. And Europe has had a strange life --
it is not too much to say that it has had the JUMPS -- ever since.
I have dealt at length with such typical
triads of doubt in order to convey the main contention -- that my own
case for Christianity is rational; but it is not simple. It is an accumulation
of varied facts, like the attitude of the ordinary agnostic. But the
ordinary agnostic has got his facts all wrong. He is a nonbeliever for
a multitude of reasons; but they are untrue reasons. He doubts because
the Middle Ages were barbaric, but they weren't; because Darwinism is
demonstrated, but it isn't; because miracles do not happen, but they
do; because monks were lazy, but they were very industrious; because
nuns are unhappy, but they are particularly cheerful; because Christian
art was sad and pale, but it was picked out in peculiarly bright colors
and gay with gold; because modern science is moving away from the supernatural,
but it isn't, it is moving towards the supernatural with the rapidity
of a railway train.
But among these million facts all flowing
one way there is, of course, one question sufficiently solid and separate
to be treated briefly, but by itself; I mean the objective occurrence
of the supernatural. In another chapter I have indicated the fallacy
of the ordinary supposition that the world must be impersonal because
it is orderly. A person is just as likely to desire an orderly thing
as a disorderly thing. But my own positive conviction that personal
creation is more conceivable than material fate, is, I admit, in a sense,
undiscussable. I will not call it a faith or an intuition, for those
words are mixed up with mere emotion, it is strictly an intellectual
conviction; but it is a PRIMARY intellectual conviction like the certainty
of self of the good of living. Any one who likes, therefore, may call
my belief in God merely mystical; the phrase is not worth fighting about.
But my belief that miracles have happened in human history is not a
mystical belief at all; I believe in them upon human evidences as I
do in the discovery of America. Upon this point there is a simple logical
fact that only requires to be stated and cleared up. Somehow or other
an extraordinary idea has arisen that the disbelievers in miracles consider
them coldly and fairly, while believers in miracles accept them only
in connection with some dogma. The fact is quite the other way. The
believers in miracles accept them (rightly or wrongly) because they
have evidence for them. The disbelievers in miracles deny them (rightly
or wrongly) because they have a doctrine against them. The open, obvious,
democratic thing is to believe an old apple-woman when she bears testimony
to a miracle, just as you believe an old apple-woman when she bears
testimony to a murder. The plain, popular course is to trust the peasant's
word about the ghost exactly as far as you trust the peasant's word
about the landlord. Being a peasant he will probably have a great deal
of healthy agnosticism about both. Still you could fill the British
Museum with evidence uttered by the peasant, and given in favor of the
ghost. If it comes to human testimony there is a choking cataract of
human testimony in favor of the supernatural. If you reject it, you
can only mean one of two things. You reject the peasant's story about
the ghost either because the man is a peasant or because the story is
a ghost story. That is, you either deny the main principle of democracy,
or you affirm the main principle of materialism -- the abstract impossibility
of miracle. You have a perfect right to do so; but in that case you
are the dogmatist. It is we Christians who accept all actual evidence
-- it is you rationalists who refuse actual evidence being constrained
to do so by your creed. But I am not constrained by any creed in the
matter, and looking impartially into certain miracles of mediaeval and
modern times, I have come to the conclusion that they occurred. All
argument against these plain facts is always argument in a circle. If
I say, "Mediaeval documents attest certain miracles as much as
they attest certain battles," they answer, "But mediaevals
were superstitious"; if I want to know in what they were superstitious,
the only ultimate answer is that they believed in the miracles. If I
say "a peasant saw a ghost," I am told, "But peasants
are so credulous." If I ask, "Why credulous?" the only
answer is -- that they see ghosts. Iceland is impossible because only
stupid sailors have seen it; and the sailors are only stupid because
they say they have seen Iceland. It is only fair to add that there is
another argument that the unbeliever may rationally use against miracles,
though he himself generally forgets to use it.
He may say that there has been in many
miraculous stories a notion of spiritual preparation and acceptance:
in short, that the miracle could only come to him who believed in it.
It may be so, and if it is so how are we to test it? If we are inquiring
whether certain results follow faith, it is useless to repeat wearily
that (if they happen) they do follow faith. If faith is one of the conditions,
those without faith have a most healthy right to laugh. But they have
no right to judge. Being a believer may be, if you like, as bad as being
drunk; still if we were extracting psychological facts from drunkards,
it would be absurd to be always taunting them with having been drunk.
Suppose we were investigating whether angry men really saw a red mist
before their eyes. Suppose sixty excellent householders swore that when
angry they had seen this crimson cloud: surely it would be absurd to
answer "Oh, but you admit you were angry at the time." They
might reasonably rejoin (in a stentorian chorus), "How the blazes
could we discover, without being angry, whether angry people see red?"
So the saints and ascetics might rationally reply, "Suppose that
the question is whether believers can see visions -- even then, if you
are interested in visions it is no point to object to believers."
You are still arguing in a circle -- in that old mad circle with which
this book began.
The question of whether miracles ever
occur is a question of common sense and of ordinary historical imagination:
not of any final physical experiment. One may here surely dismiss that
quite brainless piece of pedantry which talks about the need for "scientific
conditions" in connection with alleged spiritual phenomena. If
we are asking whether a dead soul can communicate with a living it is
ludicrous to insist that it shall be under conditions in which no two
living souls in their senses would seriously communicate with each other.
The fact that ghosts prefer darkness no more disproves the existence
of ghosts than the fact that lovers prefer darkness disproves the existence
of love. If you choose to say, "I will believe that Miss Brown
called her fianceea periwinkle or, any other endearing term, if she
will repeat the word before seventeen psychologists," then I shall
reply, "Very well, if those are your conditions, you will never
get the truth, for she certainly will not say it." It is just as
unscientific as it is unphilosophical to be surprised that in an unsympathetic
atmosphere certain extraordinary sympathies do not arise. It is as if
I said that I could not tell if there was a fog because the air was
not clear enough; or as if I insisted on perfect sunlight in order to
see a solar eclipse.
As a commonsense conclusion, such as
those to which we come about sex or about midnight (well knowing that
many details must in their own nature be concealed) I conclude that
miracles do happen. I am forced to it by a conspiracy of facts: the
fact that the men who encounter elves or angels are not the mystics
and the morbid dreamers, but fishermen, farmers, and all men at once
coarse and cautious; the fact that we all know men who testify to spiritualistic
incidents but are not spiritualists, the fact that science itself admits
such things more and more every day. Science will even admit the Ascension
if you call it Levitation, and will very likely admit the Resurrection
when it has thought of another word for it. I suggest the Regalvanisation.
But the strongest of all is the dilemma above mentioned, that these
supernatural things are never denied except on the basis either of anti-democracy
or of materialist dogmatism -- I may say materialist mysticism. The
skeptic always takes one of the two positions; either an ordinary man
need not be believed, or an extraordinary event must not be believed.
For I hope we may dismiss the argument against wonders attempted in
the mere recapitulation of frauds, of swindling mediums or trick miracles.
That is not an argument at all, good or bad. A false ghost disproves
the reality of ghosts exactly as much as a forged bank note disproves
the existence of the Bank of England -- if anything, it proves its existence.
Given this conviction that the spiritual
phenomena do occur (my evidence for which is complex but rational),
we then collide with one of the worst mental evils of the age. The greatest
disaster of the nineteenth century was this: that men began to use the
word "spiritual" as the same as the word "good."
They thought that to grow in refinement and uncorporeality was to grow
in virtue. When scientific evolution was announced, some feared that
it would encourage mere animality. It did worse: it encouraged mere
spirituality. It taught men to think that so long as they were passing
from the ape they were going to the angel. But you can pass from the
ape and go to the devil. A man of genius, very typical of that time
of bewilderment, expressed it perfectly. Benjamin Disraeli was right
when he said he was on the side of the angels. He was indeed; he was
on the side of the fallen angels. He was not on the side of any mere
appetite or animal brutality; but he was on the side of all the imperialism
of the princes of the abyss; he was on the side of arrogance and mystery,
and contempt of all obvious good. Between this sunken pride and the
towering humilities of heaven there are, one must suppose, spirits of
shapes and sizes. Man, in encountering them, must make much the same
mistakes that he makes in encountering any other varied types in any
other distant continent. It must be hard at first to know who is supreme
and who is subordinate. If a shade arose from the under world, and stared
at Piccadilly, that shade would not quite understand the idea of an
ordinary closed carriage. He would suppose that the coachman on the
box was a triumphant conqueror, dragging behind him a kicking and imprisoned
captive. So, if we see spiritual facts for the first time, we may mistake
who is uppermost. It is not enough to find the gods; they are obvious;
we must find God, the real chief of the gods. We must have a long historic
experience in supernatural phenomena -- in order to discover which are
really natural. In this light I find the history of Christianity, and
even of its Hebrew origins, quite practical and clear. It does not trouble
me to be told that the Hebrew god was one among many. I know he was,
without any research to tell me so. Jehovah and Baal looked equally
important, just as the sun and the moon looked the same size. It is
only slowly that we learn that the sun is immeasurably our master, and
the small moon only our satellite. Believing that there is a world of
spirits, I shall walk in it as I do in the world of men, looking for
the thing that I like and think good. Just as I should seek in a desert
for clean water, or toil at the North Pole to make a comfortable fire,
so I shall search the land of void and vision until I find something
fresh like water, and comforting like fire; until I find some place
in eternity, where I am literally at home. And there is only one such
place to be found.
I have now said enough to show (to any
one to whom such an explanation is essential) that I have in the ordinary
arena of apologetics, a ground of belief. In pure records of experiment
(if these be taken democratically without contempt or favor) there is
evidence first, that miracles happen, and second that the nobler miracles
belong to our tradition. But I will not pretend that this curt discussion
is my real reason for accepting Christianity instead of taking the moral
good of Christianity as I should take it out of Confucianism.
I have another far more solid and central
ground for submitting to it as a faith, instead of merely picking up
hints from it as a scheme. And that is this: that the Christian Church
in its practical relation to my soul is a living teacher, not a dead
one. It not only certainly taught me yesterday, but will almost certainly
teach me tomorrow. Once I saw suddenly the meaning of the shape of the
cross; some day I may see suddenly the meaning of the shape of the mitre.
One free morning I saw why windows were pointed; some fine morning I
may see why priests were shaven. Plato has told you a truth; but Plato
is dead. Shakespeare has startled you with an image; but Shakespeare
will not startle you with any more. But imagine what it would be to
live with such men still living, to know that Plato might break out
with an original lecture tomorrow., or that at any moment Shakespeare
might shatter everything with a single song. The man who lives in contact
with what he believes to be a living Church is a man always expecting
to meet Plato and Shakespeare tomorrow. at breakfast. He is always expecting
to see some truth that he has never seen before. There is one only other
parallel to this position; and that is the parallel of the life in which
we all began. When your father told you, walking about the garden, that
bees stung or that roses smelt sweet, you did not talk of taking the
best out of his philosophy. When the bees stung you, you did not call
it an entertaining coincidence. When the rose smelt sweet you did not
say "My father is a rude, barbaric symbol, enshrining (perhaps
unconsciously) the deep delicate truths that flowers smell." No:
you believed your father, because you had found him to be a living fountain
of facts, a thing that really knew more than you; a thing that would
tell you truth tomorrow., as well as today And if this was true of your
father, it was even truer of your mother; at least it was true of mine,
to whom this book is dedicated. Now, when society is in a rather futile
fuss about the subjection of women, will no one say how much every man
owes to the tyranny and privilege of women, to the fact that they alone
rule education until education becomes futile: for a boy is only sent
to be taught at school when it is too late to teach him anything. The
real thing has been done already, and thank God it is nearly always
done by women. Every man is womanized, merely by being born. They talk
of the masculine woman; but every man is a feminized man. And if ever
men walk to Westminster to protest against this female privilege, I
shall not join their procession.
For I remember with certainty this fixed
psychological fact; that the very time when I was most under a woman's
authority, I was most full of flame and adventure. Exactly because when
my mother said that ants bit they did bite, and because snow did come
in winter (as she said); therefore the whole world was to me a fairyland
of wonderful fulfilments, and it was like living in some Hebraic age,
when prophecy after prophecy came true. I went out as a child into the
garden, and it was a terrible place to me, precisely because I had a
clue to it: if I had held no clue it would not have been terrible, but
tame. A mere unmeaning wilderness is not even impressive. But the garden
of childhood was fascinating, exactly because everything had a fixed
meaning which could be found out in its turn. Inch by inch I might discover
what was the object of the ugly shape called a rake; or form some shadowy
conjecture as to why my parents kept a cat.
So, since I have accepted Christendom
as a mother and not merely as a chance example, I have found Europe
and the world once more like the little garden where I stared at the
symbolic shapes of cat and rake; I look at everything with the old elfish
ignorance and expectancy. This or that rite or doctrine may look as
ugly and extraordinary as a rake; but I have found by experience that
such things end somehow in grass and flowers. A clergyman may be apparently
as useless as a cat, but he is also as fascinating, for there must be
some strange reason for his existence. I give one instance out of a
hundred; I have not myself any instinctive kinship with that enthusiasm
for physical virginity, which has certainly been a note of historic
Christianity. But when I look not at myself but at the world, I perceive
that this enthusiasm is not only a note of Christianity, but a note
of Paganism, a note of high human nature in many spheres. The Greeks
felt virginity when they carved Artemis, the Romans when they robed
the vestals, the worst and wildest of the great Elizabethan playwrights
clung to the literal purity of a woman as to the central pillar of the
world. Above all, the modern world (even while mocking sexual innocence)
has flung itself into a generous idolatry of sexual innocence -- the
great modern worship of children. For any man who loves children will
agree that their peculiar beauty is hurt by a hint of physical sex.
With all this human experience, allied with the Christian authority,
I simply conclude that I am wrong, and the church right; or rather that
I am defective, while the church is universal. It takes all sorts to
make a church; she does not ask me to be celibate. But the fact that
I have no appreciation of the celibates, I accept like the fact that
I have no ear for music. The best human experience is against me, as
it is on the subject of Bach. Celibacy is one flower in my father's
garden, of which I have not been told the sweet or terrible name. But
I may be told it any day.
This, therefore, is, in conclusion,
my reason for accepting the religion and not merely the scattered and
secular truths out of the religion. I do it because the thing has not
merely told this truth or that truth, but has revealed itself as a truth-telling
thing. All other philosophies say the things that plainly seem to be
true; only this philosophy has again and again said the thing that does
not seem to be true, but is true. Alone of all creeds it is convincing
where it is not attractive; it turns out to be right, like my father
in the garden. Theosophists for instance will preach an obviously attractive
idea like reincarnation; but if we wait for its logical results, they
are spiritual superciliousness and the cruelty of caste. For if a man
is a beggar by his own prenatal sins, people will tend to despise the
beggar. But Christianity preaches an obviously unattractive idea, such
as original sin; but when we wait for its results, they are pathos and
brotherhood, and a thunder of laughter and pity; for only with original
sin we can at once pity the beggar and distrust the king. Men of science
offer us health, an obvious benefit; it is only afterwards that we discover
that by health, they mean bodily slavery and spiritual tedium. Orthodoxy
makes us jump by the sudden brink of hell; it is only afterwards that
we realize that jumping was an athletic exercise highly beneficial to
our health. It is only afterwards that we realize that this danger is
the root of all drama and romance. The strongest argument for the divine
grace is simply its ungraciousness. The unpopular parts of Christianity
turn out when examined to be the very props of the people. The outer
ring of Christianity is a rigid guard of ethical abnegations and professional
priests; but inside that inhuman guard you will find the old human life
dancing like children, and drinking wine like men; for Christianity
is the only frame for pagan freedom. But in the modern philosophy the
case is opposite; it is its outer ring that is obviously artistic and
emancipated; its despair is within.
And its despair is this, that it does
not really believe that there is any meaning in the universe; therefore
it cannot hope to find any romance; its romances will have no plots.
A man cannot expect any adventures in the land of anarchy. But a man
can expect any number of adventures if he goes traveling in the land
of authority. One can find no meanings in a jungle of skepticism; but
the man will find more and more meanings who walks through a forest
of doctrine and design. Here everything has a story tied to its tail,
like the tools or pictures in my father's house; for it is my father's
house. I end where I began -- at the right end. I have entered at least
the gate of all good philosophy. I have come into my second childhood.
But this larger and more adventurous
Christian universe has one final mark difficult to express; yet as a
conclusion of the whole matter I will attempt to express it. All the
real argument about religion turns on the question of whether a man
who was born upside down can tell when he comes right way up. The primary
paradox of Christianity is that the ordinary condition of man is not
his sane or sensible condition; that the normal itself is an abnormality.
That is the inmost philosophy of the Fall. In Sir Oliver Lodge's interesting
new Catechism, the first two questions were: "What are you?"
and "What, then, is the meaning of the Fall of Man?" I remember
amusing myself by writing my own answers to the questions; but I soon
found that they were very broken and agnostic answers. To the question,
"What are you?" I could only answer, "God knows."
And to the question, "What is meant by the Fall?" I could
answer with complete sincerity, "That whatever I am, I am not myself."
This is the prime paradox of our religion; something that we have never
in any full sense known, is not only better than ourselves, but even
more natural to us than ourselves. And there is really no test of this
except the merely experimental one with which these pages began, the
test of the padded cell and the open door. It is only since I have known
orthodoxy that I have known mental emancipation. But, in conclusion,
it has one special application to the ultimate idea of joy.
It is said that Paganism is a religion
of joy and Christianity of sorrow; it would be just as easy to prove
that Paganism is pure sorrow and Christianity pure joy. Such conflicts
mean nothing and lead nowhere. Everything human must have in it both
joy and sorrow; the only matter of interest is the manner in which the
two things are balanced or divided. And the really interesting thing
is this, that the pagan was (in the main) happier and happier as he
approached the earth, but sadder and sadder as he approached the heavens.
The gaiety of the best Paganism, as in the playfulness of Catullus or
Theocritus, is, indeed, an eternal gaiety never to be forgotten by a
grateful humanity. But it is all a gaiety about the facts of life, not
about its origin. To the pagan the small things are as sweet as the
small brooks breaking out of the mountain; but the broad things are
as bitter as the sea. When the pagan looks at the very core of the cosmos
he is struck cold. Behind the gods, who are merely despotic, sit the
fates, who are deadly. Nay, the fates are worse than deadly; they are
dead. And when rationalists say that the ancient world was more enlightened
than the Christian, from their point of view they are right. For when
they say "enlightened" they mean darkened with incurable despair.
It is profoundly true that the ancient world was more modern than the
Christian. The common bond is in the fact that ancients and moderns
have both been miserable about existence, about everything, while mediaevals
were happy about that at least. I freely grant that the pagans, like
the moderns, were only miserable about everything -- they were quite
jolly about everything else. I concede that the Christians of the Middle
Ages were only at peace about everything -- they were at war about everything
else. But if the question turn on the primary pivot of the cosmos, then
there was more cosmic contentment in the narrow and bloody streets of
Florence than in the theater of Athens or the open garden of Epicurus.
Giotto lived in a gloomier town than Euripides, but he lived in a gayer
universe.
The mass of men have been forced to
be gay about the little things, but sad about the big ones. Nevertheless
(I offer my last dogma defiantly) it is not native to man to be so.
Man is more himself, man is more manlike, when joy is the fundamental
thing in him, and grief the superficial. Melancholy should be an innocent
interlude, a tender and fugitive frame of mind; praise should be the
permanent pulsation of the soul. Pessimism is at best an emotional half-holiday;
joy is the uproarious labor by which all things live. Yet, according
to the apparent estate of man as seen by the pagan or the agnostic,
this primary need of human nature can never be fulfilled. Joy ought
to be expansive; but for the agnostic it must be contracted, it must
cling to one comer of the world. Grief ought to be a concentration;
but for the agnostic its desolation is spread through an unthinkable
eternity. This is what I call being born upside down. The skeptic may
truly be said to be topsy-turvy; for his feet are dancing upwards in
idle ecstasies, while his brain is in the abyss. To the modern man the
heavens are actually below the earth. The explanation is simple; he
is standing on his head; which is a very weak pedestal to stand on.
But when he has found his feet again he knows it. Christianity satisfies
suddenly and perfectly man's ancestral instinct for being the right
way up; satisfies it supremely in this; that by its creed joy becomes
something gigantic and sadness something special and small. The vault
above us is not deaf because the universe is an idiot; the silence is
not the heartless silence of an endless and aimless world. Rather the
silence around us is a small and pitiful stillness like the prompt stillness
in a sickroom. We are perhaps permitted tragedy as a sort of merciful
comedy: because the frantic energy of divine things would knock us down
like a drunken farce. We can take our own tears more lightly than we
could take the tremendous levities of the angels. So we sit perhaps
in a starry chamber of silence, while the laughter of the heavens is
too loud for us to hear.
Joy, which was the small publicity of
the pagan, is the gigantic secret of the Christian. And as I close this
chaotic volume I open again the strange small book from which all Christianity
came; and I am again haunted by a kind of confirmation. The tremendous
figure which fills the Gospels towers in this respect, as in every other,
above all the thinkers who ever thought themselves tall. His pathos
was natural, almost casual. The Stoics, ancient and modern, were proud
of concealing their tears. He never concealed His tears; He showed them
plainly on His open face at any daily sight, such as the far sight of
His native city. Yet He concealed something. Solemn supermen and imperial
diplomatists are proud of restraining their anger. He never restrained
His anger. He flung furniture down the front steps of the Temple, and
asked men how they expected to escape the damnation of Hell. Yet He
restrained something. I say it with reverence; there was in that shattering
personality a thread that must be called shyness. There was something
that He hid from all men when He went up a mountain to pray. There was
something that He covered constantly by abrupt silence or impetuous
isolation. There was some one thing that was too great for God to show
us when He walked upon our earth; and I have sometimes fancied that
it was His mirth.
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