It has sometimes been remarked how much has been
written, both by friends and enemies, concerning the truth of
religion, and how little, at least in the way of discussion or controversy,
concerning its usefulness. This, however,
might have been expected; for the truth, in matters which so deeply
affect us, is our first concernment. If religion, or
any particular form of it, is true, its usefulness follows without
other proof. If to know authentically in what order of
things, under what government of the universe it is our destiny to
live, were not useful, it is difficult to imagine what
could be considered so. Whether a person is in a pleasant or in an
unpleasant place, a palace or a prison, it cannot be
otherwise than useful to him to know where he is. So long, therefore,
as men accepted the teachings Of their religion
as positive facts, no more a matter of doubt than their own existence
or the existence of the objects around them, to
ask the use of believing it could not possibly occur to them. The utility
of religion did not need to be asserted until the
arguments for its truth bad in a great measure ceased to convince.
People must either have ceased to believe, or
have ceased to rely on the belief of others, before they could take
that inferior ground of defence without a
consciousness of lowering what they were endeavouring to raise. An
argument for the utility of religion is an appeal
to unbelievers, to induce them to practise a well meant hypocrisy,
or to semi-believers to make them avert their
eyes from what might possibly shake their unstable belief, or finally
to persons in general to abstain from expressing
any doubts they may feel, since a fabric of immense importance to mankind
is so insecure at its foundations, that
men must hold their breath in its neighbourhood for fear of blowing
it down.
In the present period of history, however, we seem
to have arrived at a time when, among the arguments for and
against religion, those which relate to its usefulness assume an important
place. We are in an age of weak beliefs,
and in which such belief as men have is much more determined by their
wish to believe than by any mental
appreciation of evidence. The wish to believe does not arise only from
selfish but often from the most disinterested
feelings; and though it cannot produce the unwavering and perfect reliance
which once existed, it fences round all
that to ask the use of believing it could not possibly occur to them.
The utility of religion did not need to be asserted
until the arguments for its truth bad in a great measure ceased to
convince. People must either have ceased to
believe, or have ceased to rely on the belief of others, before they
could take that inferior ground of defence without
a consciousness of lowering what they were endeavouring to raise. An
argument for the utility of religion is an
appeal to unbelievers, to induce them to practise a well meant hypocrisy,
or to semi-believers to make them avert
their eyes from what might possibly shake their unstable belief, or
finally to persons in general to abstain from
expressing any doubts they may feel, since a fabric of immense importance
to mankind is so insecure at its
foundations, that men must hold their breath in its neighbourhood for
fear of blowing it down.
If religious belief be indeed so necessary to mankind,
as we are continually assured that it is, there is great reason to lament,
that the intellectual grounds of it should require to be backed by moral
bribery or subornation of the
understanding. Such a state of things is most uncomfortable even for
those who may, without actual insincerity,
describe themselves as believers; and still worse as regards those
who, having consciously ceased to find the
evidences of religion convincing, are withheld from saying so lest
they should aid in doing an irreparable injury to
mankind. It is a most painful position to a conscientious and cultivated
mind, to be drawn in contrary directions by
the two noblest of all objects of pursuit, truth, and the general good.
Such a conflict must inevitably produce a
growing indifference to one or other of these objects, most probably
to both. Many who could render giant's service
both to truth and to mankind if they believed that they could serve
the one without loss to the other, are either totally
paralysed, or led to confine their exertions to matters of minor detail,
by the apprehension that any real freedom of
speculation, or any considerable strengthening or enlargement of the
thinking faculties of mankind at large, might,
by making them unbelievers, be the surest way to render them vicious
and miserable. Many, again, having observed
in others or experienced in themselves elevated feelings which they
imagine incapable of emanating from any other
source than religion, have an honest, aversion to anything tending,
as they think, to dry up the fountain of such
feelings. They, therefore, either dislike and disparage all philosophy,
or addict themselves with intolerant zeal to
those forms of it in which intuition usurps the place of evidence,
and internal feeling is made the test of objective
truth. The whole of the prevalent metaphysics of the present century
is one tissue of suborned evidence in favour of
religion; often of Deism only, but in any case involving a misapplication
of noble impulses and speculative capacities,
among the most deplorable of those wretched wastes of human faculties
which make us wonder that enough is left
to keep mankind progressive, at however slow a pace. It is time to
consider, more impartially and therefore more
deliberately than is usually done, whether all this straining to prop
up beliefs which require so great an expense of
intellectual toil and ingenuity to keep them standing, yields any sufficient
return in human well being; and whether
that end would not be better served by a frank recognition that certain
subjects are inaccessible to our faculties, and
by the application of the same mental powers to the strengthening and
enlargement of those other sources of virtue
and happiness which stand in no need of the support or sanction of
supernatural beliefs and inducements.
Neither, on the other hand, can the difficulties
of the question be so promptly disposed of, as sceptical philosophers
are sometimes inclined to believe. It is not enough to aver, in general
terms, that there never can be any conflict
between truth and utility; that if religion be false, nothing but good
can be the consequence of rejecting it. For, though
the knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition, this
doctrine cannot without reservation be applied to
negative truth. When the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can
be known, we do not, by this knowledge, gain
any new fact by which to guide ourselves; we are, at best, only disabused
of our trust in some former guide-mark,
which, though itself fallacious, may have pointed in the same direction
with the best indications we have, and if it
happens to be more conspicuous and legible, may have kept us right
when they might have been overlooked. It is, in
short, perfectly conceivable that religion may be morally useful without
being intellectually sustainable: and it would
be a proof of great prejudice in any unbeliever to deny, that there
have been ages, and that there are still both
nations and individuals, with regard to whom this is actually the case.
Whether it is the case generally, and with
reference to the future, it is the object of this paper to examine.
We propose to inquire whether the belief in religion,
considered as a mere persuasion, apart from the question of its truth,
is really indispensable to the temporal welfare
of mankind; whether the usefulness of the belief is intrinsic and universal,
or local, temporary, and, in some sense,
accidental; and whether the benefits which it yields might not be obtained
otherwise, without the very large alloy of
evil, by which, even in the best form of the belief, those benefits
are qualified.
With the arguments on one side of the question we
all are familiar: religious writers have not neglected to celebrate to
the utmost the advantages both of religion in general and 'of their own
religious faith in particular. But those who have held the contrary opinion
have generally contented themselves with insisting on the more obvious
and flagrant of the positive evils which have been engendered by past and
present forms of religious belief. And, in truth, mankind have been so
unremittingly occupied in doing evil to one another in the name of religion,
from the sacrifice of Iphigenia to the Dragonnades of Louis XIV. (not to
descend lower), that for any immediate purpose there was little need to
seek arguments further off. These odious consequences, however, do not
belong to religion in itself, but to particular forms of it, and afford
no argument against the usefulness of any religions except those by which
such enormities are encouraged Moreover, the worst of these evils are already
in a great measure extirpated from the more improved forms of religion;
and as mankind advance in ideas and in feelings, this process of extirpation
continually goes on: the immoral, or otherwise mischievous consequences
which have been drawn. from religion,
are, one by one, abandoned, and, after having been long fought for
as of its very essence, are discovered to be easily
separable from it. These mischiefs, indeed, after they are past, though
no longer arguments against religion, remain
valid as large abatements from its beneficial influence, by showing
that some of the greatest improvements ever
made in the moral sentiments of mankind have taken place without it
and in spite of it, and that what we are taught
to regard as the chief of all improving influences, has in practice
fallen so far short of such a character, that one of
the hardest burdens laid upon the other good influences of human nature
has been that of improving religion itself.
The improvement, however, has taken place; it is still proceeding,
and for the sake of fairness it should be assumed to
be complete. We ought to suppose religion to have accepted the best
human morality which reason and goodness
can work out, from philosophical, christian, or any other elements.
When it has thus freed itself from the pernicious
consequences which result from its identification with any bad moral
doctrine, the ground is clear for considering
whether its useful properties are exclusively inherent in it, or their
benefits can be obtained without it.
This essential portion of the inquiry into the temporal usefulness of religion, is the subject of the present Essay. It is a part which has been little treated of by sceptical writers. The only direct discussion of it with which I am acquainted, is in a short treatise, understood to have been partly compiled from manuscripts of Mr. Bentham, and abounding in just and profound views; but which, as it appears to me, presses many parts of the argument too hard. This treatise, and the incidental remarks scattered through the writings of M. Comte, are the only sources known to me from which anything very pertinent to the subject can be made available for the sceptical side of the argument. I shall use both of them freely in the sequel of the present discourse.
The inquiry divides itself into two parts, corresponding
to the double aspect of the subject; its social, and its
individual aspect. What does religion do for society, and what for
the individual? What amount of benefit to social
interests, in the ordinary sense of the phrase, arises from. religious
belief? And what influence has it in improving
and ennobling individual human nature?
The first question is interesting to everybody; the
latter only to the best; but to them it is, if there be any difference,
the more important of the two. We shall begin with the former, as being
that which best admits of being easily
brought to a precise issue.
To speak first, then, of religious belief as an instrument
of social good. We must commence by drawing a distinction
most commonly overlooked. It is usual to credit religion as such with
the whole of the power inherent in any
system of moral duties inculcated by education and enforced by opinion.
Undoubtedly mankind would be in a
deplorable state if no principles or precepts of justice, veracity,
beneficence, were taught publicly or privately, and if
these virtues were not encouraged, and the opposite vices repressed,
by the praise and blame, the favourable and
unfavourable sentiments, of mankind. And since nearly everything of
this sort which does take place, takes place in
the name of religion; since almost all who are taught any morality
whatever, have it taught to them as religion, and
inculcated on them through life principally in that character; the
effect which the teaching produces as teaching, it is
supposed to produce as religious teaching, and religion receives the
credit of all the influence in human affairs which
belongs to any generally accepted system of rules for the guidance
and government of human life.
Few persons have sufficiently considered how great
an influence this is; what vast efficacy belongs naturally to any
doctrine received with tolerable unanimity as true, and impressed on
the mind from the earliest childhood as duty. A
little reflection will, I think, lead us to the conclusion that it
is this which is the great moral power in human affairs,
and that religion only seems so powerful because this mighty power
has been under its command.
Consider first, the enormous influence of authority
on the human mind. I am now speaking of involuntary influence;
effect on men's conviction, on their persuasion, on their involuntary
sentiments. Authority is the evidence on which
the mass of mankind believe everything which they are said to know,
except facts of which their own senses have
taken cognizance. It is the evidence on which even the wisest receive
all those truths of science, or facts in history or
in life, of which they have not personally examined the proofs. Over
the immense majority of human beings, the
concurrence of mankind, in any matter of opinion, is all powerful.
Whatever is thus certified to them, they believe with
a fullness of assurance which they do not accord even to the evidence
of their senses when the general opinion of
mankind stands ,in opposition to it. When, therefore, any rule of life
and duty, whether grounded or not on religion,
has conspicuously received the general assent, it obtains a hold on
the belief of every individual, stronger than it
would have even if he had arrived at it by the inherent force of his
own understanding. If Novalis could say, not
without a real meaning, ``My belief has gained infinitely to me from
the moment when one other human being has
began to believe the same'', how much more when it is not one other
person, but all the human beings whom one
knows of. Some may urge it as an objection, that no scheme of morality
has this universal assent, and that none,
therefore can be indebted to this source for whatever power it possesses
over the mind. So far as relates to the
present age, the assertion is true, and strengthens the argument which
it might at first seem to controvert; for
exactly in proportion as the received systems of belief have been contested,
and it has become known that they have
many dissentients, their hold on the general belief has been loosened,
and their practical influence on conduct has
declined: and since this has happened to them notwithstanding the religious
sanction which attached to them, there
can be no stronger evidence that they were powerful not as religion,
but as beliefs generally accepted by mankind.
To find people who believe their religion as a person believes that
fire will burn his hand when thrust into it, we must
seek them in those Oriental countries where Europeans do not yet predominate,
or in the European world when it
was still universally Catholic. Men often disobeyed their religion
in those times, because their human passions and
appetites were too strong for it, or because the religion itself afforded
means of indulgence to breaches of its
obligations; but though they disobeyed, they, for the most part, did
not doubt. There was in those days an absolute
and unquestioning completeness of belief, never since general in Europe.
Such being the empire exercised over mankind by simple
authority, the mere belief and testimony of their fellow
creatures; consider next how tremendous is the power of education;
how unspeakable is the effect of bringing
people up from infancy in a belief, and in habits founded on it. Consider
also that in all countries, and from the earliest
ages down to the present, not merely those who are called, in a restricted
sense of the term, the educated, but all or
nearly all who have been brought up by parents, or by any one interested
in them, have been taught from their
earliest years some kind of religious belief, and some precepts as
the commands of the heavenly powers to them and
to mankind. And as it cannot be imagined that the commands of God are
to young children anything more than the
commands of their parents, it is reasonable to think that any system
of social duty which mankind might adopt, even
though divorced from religion, would have the same advantage of being
inculcated from childhood, and would have it
hereafter much more perfectly than any doctrine has it at present,
society being far more disposed than formerly to
take pains for the moral tuition of those numerous classes whose education
it has hitherto left very much to chance.
Now it is especially characteristic of the impressions of early education,
that they possess what it is so much more
difficult for later convictions to obtain-command over the feelings.
We see daily how powerful a hold these first
impressions retain over the feelings even of those, who have given
up the opinions which they were early taught.
While on the other hand, it is only persons of a much higher degree
of natural sensibility and intellect combined than
it is at all common to meet with, whose feelings entwine themselves
with anything like the same force round
opinions which they have adopted from their own investigations later
in life; and even when they do, we may say with
truth that it is because the strong sense of moral duty, the sincerity,
courage and self-devotion which enabled them
to do so, were themselves the fruits of early impressions.
The power of education is almost boundless: there
is not one natural inclination which it is not strong enough to
coerce, and, if needful, to destroy by disuse. In the greatest recorded
victory which education has ever achieved over
a whole host of natural inclinations in an entire people---the maintenance
through centuries of the institutions of
Lycurgus,---it was very little, if even at all, indebted to religion:
for the Gods of the Spartans were the same as those
of other Greek states; and though, no doubt, every state of Greece
believed that its particular polity bad at its first
establishment, some sort of divine sanction (mostly that of the Delphian
oracle), there was seldom any difficulty in
obtaining the same or an equally powerful sanction for a change. It
was not religion which formed the strength of the
Spartan institutions: the root of the system was devotion to Sparta,
to the ideal of the country or State: which
transformed into ideal devotion to a greater country, the world, would
be equal to that and far nobler achievements.
Among the Greeks generally, social morality was extremely independent
of religion. The inverse relation was rather
that which existed between them; the worship of the Gods was inculcated
chiefly as a social duty, inasmuch as if they
were neglected or insulted, it was believed that their displeasure
would fall not more upon the offending individual
than upon the state or community which bred and tolerated him. Such
moral teaching as existed in Greece had very
little to do with religion. The Gods were not supposed to concern themselves
much with men's conduct to one
another, except when men had contrived to make the Gods themselves
an interested party, by placing an assertion
or an engagement under the sanction of a solemn appeal to them, by
oath or vow. I grant that the sophists and
philosophers, and even popular orators, did their best to press religion
into the service of their special objects, and
to make it be thought that the sentiments of whatever kind, which they
were engaged in inculcating, were
particularly acceptable to the Gods, but this never seems the primary
consideration in any case save those of direct
offence to the dignity of the Gods themselves. For the enforcement
of human moralities secular inducements were
almost exclusively relied on. The case of Greece is, I believe, the
only one in which any teaching, other than religious,
has had the unspeakable advantage of forming the basis of education:
and though much may be said against the
quality of some part of the teaching very little can be said against
its effectiveness. The most memorable example of
the power of education over conduct, is afforded (as I have just remarked)
by this exceptional case; constituting a,
strong presumption that in other cases, early religious teaching has
owed its power over mankind rather to its being
early than to its being religious.
We have now considered two powers, that of authority,
and that of early education, which operate through men's
involuntary beliefs, feelings and desires, and which religion has hitherto
held as its almost exclusive appanage. Let
us now consider a third power which operates directly on their actions,
whether their involuntary sentiments are
carried with it or not. This is the power of public opinion; of the
praise and blame, the favour and disfavour, of their
fellow creatures; and is a source of strength inherent in any system
of moral belief which is generally adopted,
whether connected with religion or not.
Men are so much accustomed to give to the motives
that decide their actions, more flattering names than justly
belong to them, that they are generally quite unconscious how much
those parts of their conduct which they most
pride themselves on (as well as some which they are ashamed of), are
determined by the motive of public opinion. Of
course public opinion for the most part enjoins the same things which
are enjoined by the received social morality;
that morality being, in truth, the summary of the conduct which each
one of the multitude, whether he himself
observes it with any conduct which each one of the multitude, whether
he himself observes it with any strictness or
not, desires that others should observe towards him. People are therefore
easily able to flatter themselves that they
are acting from the motive of conscience when they are doing in obedience
to the inferior motive, things which their
conscience approves. We continually see how great is the power of opinion
in opposition to conscience; how men
"follow a multitude to do evil''; how often opinion induces them to
do what their conscience disapproves, and still
oftener prevents them from doing what it commands. But when the motive
of public opinion acts in the same
direction with conscience, which, since it has usually itself made
the conscience in the first instance, it for the most
part naturally does; it is then, of all motives which operate on the
bulk of mankind, the most overpowering
The names of all the strongest passions (except the
merely animal ones) manifested by human nature, are each of
them a name for some one part only of the motive derived from what
I here call public opinion. The love of glory; the
love of praise; the love of admiration; the love of respect and deference;
even the love of sympathy, are portions of its attractive power. Vanity
is a vituperative name for its attractive influence generally, when considered
excessive in degree. The fear of shame, the dread of ill repute or of being
disliked or hated, are the direct and simple forms of its
deterring power. But the deterring force of the unfavourable sentiments
of mankind does not consist solely in the
painfulness of knowing oneself to be the object of those sentiments;
it includes all the penalties which they can
inflict: exclusion from social intercourse and from the innumerable
good offices which human beings require from
one another; the forfeiture of all that is called success in life;
often the great diminution or total loss of means of
subsistence; positive ill offices of various kinds, sufficient to render
life miserable, and reaching in some states of
society as far as actual persecution to death. And again the attractive,
or impelling influence of public opinion,
includes the whole range of what is commonly meant by ambition: for,
except in times of lawless military violence,
the objects of social ambition can only be attained by means of the
good opinion and favourable disposition of our
fellow creatures; nor, in nine cases out of ten, would those objects
be even desired, were it not for the power they
confer over the sentiments of mankind. Even the pleasure of self-approbation,
in the great majority, is mainly
dependent on the opinion of others. Such is the involuntary influence
of authority on ordinary minds, that persons
must be of a better than ordinary mould to be capable of a full assurance
that they are in the right, when the world,
that is, when their world, thinks them wrong: nor is there, to most
men, any proof so demonstrative of their own
virtue or talent as that people in general seem to believe in it. Through
all departments of human affairs, regard for
the sentiments of our fellow creatures is in one shape or other, in
nearly all characters, the pervading motive. And
we ought to note that this motive is naturally strongest in the most
sensitive natures, which are the most promising
material for the formation of great virtues. How far its power reaches
is known by too familiar experience to require
either proof or illustration here. When once the means of living have
been obtained, the far greater part of the
remaining labour and effort which takes place on the earth, has for
its object to acquire the respect or the favourable
regard of mankind; to be looked up to, or at all events, not to be
looked down upon by them. The industrial and
commercial activity which advance civilization, the frivolity, prodigality,
and selfish thirst of aggrandizement which
retard it, flow equally from that source. While as an instance of the
power exercised by the terrors derived from
public opinion, we know how many murders have been committed merely
to remove a witness who know and was
likely to disclose some secret that would bring disgrace upon his murderer.
Any one who fairly and impartially considers the
subject, will see reason to believe that those great effects on human conduct,
which are commonly ascribed to motives derived directly from religion,
have mostly for their proximate cause the influence of human opinion. Religion
has been powerful not by its intrinsic force, but because it has wielded
that additional and more mighty power. The effect of religion has been
immense in giving a direction to public opinion: which has, in many most
important respects, been wholly determined by it. But without the sanctions
superadded by public opinion, its own proper sanctions have never,
save in exceptional characters or in peculiar
moods of mind, exercised a very potent influence, after the times had
gone by, in which divine agency was supposed
habitually to employ temporal rewards and punishments. When a man firmly
believed that if lie violated the
sacredness of a particular sanctuary he would be struck dead on the
spot, or smitten suddenly with a mortal disease,
he doubtless took care not to incur the penalty: but when any one.
had had the courage to defy the danger, and
escaped with impunity, the spell was broken. If ever any people were
taught that they were under a divine
government, and that unfaithfulness to their religion and law would
be visited from above with temporal
chastisements, the Jews were so. Yet their history was a mere succession
of lapses into Paganism. Their prophets
and historians, who held fast to the ancient beliefs (though they gave
them so liberal an interpretation as to think it a
sufficient manifestation of God's displeasure towards a king if any
evil happened to his great grandson), never
ceased to complain that their countrymen turned a deaf ear to their
vaticinations; and hence, with the faith they held
in a divine government operating by temporal penalties, they could
not fail to anticipate (as Mirabeau's father
without such prompting, was able to do on the eve of the French Revolution)
la culbute générale; an expectation
which, luckily for the credit of their prophetic powers, was fulfilled;
unlike that of the Apostle John, who in the only
intelligible prophecy in the Revelations, foretold to the city of the
seven hills a fate like that of Nineveh and Babylon;
which prediction remains to this hour unaccomplished. Unquestionably
the conviction which experience in time
forced on all but the very ignorant, that divine punishments were not
to be confidently expected in a temporal form,
contributed much to the downfall of the old religions, and the general
adoption of one which without absolutely
excluding providential interferences in this life for the punishment
of guilt or the reward of merit, removed the
principal scene of divine retribution to a world after death. But rewards
and punishments postponed to that distance
of time, and never seen by the eye, are not calculated, even when infinite
and eternal, to have, on ordinary minds, a
very powerful effect in opposition to strong temptation. Their remoteness
alone is a prodigious deduction from their
efficacy, on such minds as those which most require the restraint of
punishment. A still greater abatement is their
uncertainty, which belongs to them from the very nature of the case:
for rewards and punishments administered
after death, must be awarded not definitely to particular actions,
but on a general survey of the person's whole life,
and he easily persuades himself that whatever may have been his peccadilloes,
there will be a balance in his favour
at the last. All positive religions aid this self-delusion. Bad religions
teach that divine vengeance may be bought off,
by offerings, or personal abasement; the better religious, not to drive
sinners to despair, dwell so much on the divine
mercy, that hardly any one is compelled to think himself irrevocably
condemned. The sole quality in these
punishments which might seem calculated to make them efficacious, their
overpowering magnitude, is itself a
reason why nobody (except a hypochondriac here and there) ever really
believes that he is in any very serious
danger of incurring them. Even the worst malefactor is hardly able
to think that any crime he has bad it in his power
to commit, any evil he can have inflicted in this short space of existence,
can have deserved torture extending
through an eternity. Accordingly religious writers and preachers are
never tired of complaining how little effect
religious motives have on men's lives and conduct, notwithstanding
the tremendous penalties denounced.
Mr. Bentham, whom I have already mentioned as one
of the few authors who have written anything to the purpose on the efficacy
of the religious sanction, adduces several cases to prove that religious
obligation, when not enforced by public opinion, produces scarcely any
effect on conduct. His first example is that of oaths. The oaths taken
in courts of justice, and any others which from the manifest importance
to society of their being kept, public opinion rigidly
enforces, are felt as real and binding obligations. But university
oaths and custom-house oaths, though in a religious
point of view equally obligatory, are in practice utterly disregarded
even by men in other respects honourable. The
university oath to obey the statutes has been for centuries, with universal
acquiescence, set at nought: and utterly
false statements are (or used to be) daily and unblushingly sworn to
at the Custom-house, by persons as attentive as
other people to all the ordinary obligations of life. The explanation
being, that veracity in these cases was not
enforced by public opinion. The second case which Bentham cites is
duelling; a practice now, in this country, obsolete,
but in full vigour in several other christian countries; deemed and
admitted to be a sin by almost all who,
nevertheless, in obedience to opinion, and to escape from personal
humiliation, are guilty of it. The third case is that
of illicit sexual intercourse; which in both sexes, stands in the very
highest rank of religious sins, yet not being
severely censured by opinion in the male sex, they have in general
very little scruple in committing it; while in the
case of women, though the religious obligation is not stronger, yet
being backed in real earnest by public opinion, it
is commonly effectual.
Some objection may doubtless be taken to Bentham's
instances, considered as crucial experiments on the power of
the religious sanction; for (it may be said) people do not really believe
that in these cases they shall be punished by
God, any more than by man. And this is certainly true in the case of
those university and other oaths, which are
habitually taken without any intention of keeping them. The oath, in
these cases, is regarded as a mere formality,
destitute of any serious meaning in the sight of the Deity; and the
most scrupulous person, even if he does reproach
himself for having taken an on, even if he does reproach himself for
having taken an oath which nobody deems fit to
be kept, does not in his conscience tax himself with the guilt of perjury,
but only with the profanation of a ceremony.
This, therefore, is not a good example of the weakness of the religious
motive when divorced from that of human
opinion. The point which it illustrates is rather the tendency of the
one motive to come and go with the other, so that
where the penalties of public opinion cease, the religious motive ceases
also. The same criticism, however, is not
equally applicable to Bentham's other examples, duelling, and sexual
irregularities. Those who do these acts, the
first by the command of public opinion, the latter with its indulgence,
really do, in most cases, believe that they are
offending God. Doubtless, they do not think that they are offending
him in such a degree as very seriously to endanger
their salvation. Their reliance on his mercy prevails over their dread
of his resentment; affording an exemplification
of the remark already made, that the unavoidable uncertainty of religious
penalties makes them feeble as a
deterring motive. They are so, even in the case of acts which human
opinion condemns: much more, with those to
which it is indulgent. What mankind think venial, it is hardly ever
supposed that God looks upon in a serious light: at
least by those who feel in themselves any inclination to practise it.
I do not for a moment think of denying that there
are states of mind in which the idea of religious punishment acts
with the most overwhelming force. In hypochondriacal disease, and in
those with whom, from great disappointments
or other moral causes, the thoughts and imagination have assumed an
habitually melancholy complexion, that topic,
falling in with the pre-existing tendency of the mind, supplies images
well fitted to drive the unfortunate sufferer
even to madness. Often, during a temporary state of depression, these
ideas take such a hold of the mind as to give a
permanent turn to the character; being the most common case of what,
in sectarian phraseology, is called
conversion. But if the depressed state ceases after the conversion,
as it commonly does, and the convert does not
relapse, but perseveres in his new course of life, the principal difference
between it and the old is usually found to be,
that the man now guides his life by the public opinion of his religious
associates, as he before guided it by that of the
profane world. At all events, there is one clear proof how little the
generality of mankind, either religious or worldly,
really dread eternal punishments, when we see how, even at the approach
of death, when the remoteness which
took so much from their effect has been exchanged for the closest proximity,
almost all persons who have not been
guilty of some enormous crime (and many who have) are quite free from
uneasiness as to their prospects in another
world, and never for a moment seem to think themselves in any real
danger of eternal punishment.
With regard to the cruel deaths and bodily tortures,
which confessors and martyrs have so often undergone for the
sake of religion, I would not depreciate them by attributing any part
of this admirable courage and constancy to the
influence of human opinion. Human opinion indeed has shown itself quite
equal to the production of similar firmness
in persons not otherwise distinguished by moral excellence; such as
the North American Indian at the stake. But if it
was not the thought of glory in the eyes of their fellow-religionists,
which upheld these heroic sufferers in their
agony, as little do I believe that it was, generally speaking, that
of the pleasures of heaven or the pains of hell. Their
impulse was a divine enthusiasm---a self-forgetting devotion to an
idea: a state of exalted feeling, by no means
peculiar to religion, but which it is the privilege of every great
cause to inspire; a phenomenon belonging to the
critical moments of existence, not to the ordinary play of human motives,
and from which nothing can be inferred as
to the efficacy of the ideas which it sprung from, whether religious
or any other, in overcoming ordinary temptations,
and regulating the course of daily life.
We may now have done with this branch of the subject, which is, after all, the vulgarest part of it. The value of religion as a supplement to human laws, a more cunning sort of police, an auxiliary to the thief-catcher and the hangman, is not that part of its claims which the more highminded of its votaries are fondest of insisting on: and they would probably be as ready as any one to admit, that if the nobler offices of religion in the soul could be dispensed with, a substitute might be found for so coarse and selfish a social instrument as the fear of hell. In their view of the matter, the best of mankind absolutely require religion for the perfection of their own character, even though the coercion of the worst might possibly be accomplished without its aid.
Even in the social point of view, however, under
its most elevated aspect, these nobler spirits generally assert the
necessity of religion, as a teacher, if not as an enforcer, of social
morality. They say, that religion alone can teach us
what morality is; that all the high morality ever recognized by mankind,
was learnt from religion; that the greatest
uninspired philosophers in their sublimest flights, stopt far short
of the christian morality, and whatever inferior
morality they may have attained to (by the assistance, as many think,
of dim traditions derived from the Hebrew
books, or from a primaeval revelation) they never could induce the
common mass of their fellow citizens to accept it
from them. That, only when a morality is understood to come from the
Gods, do men in general adopt it, rally round it,
and lend their human sanctions for its enforcement. That granting the
sufficiency of human motives to make the rule
obeyed, were it not for the religious idea we should not have had the
rule itself.
There is truth in much of this, considered as matter
of history. Ancient peoples have generally, if not always, received their
morals, their laws, their intellectual beliefs, and even their practical
arts of life, all in short which tended either to guide or to discipline
them, as revelations from the superior powers, and in any other way could
not easily have been induced to accept them. This was partly the effect
of their hopes and fears from those powers, which were of much greater
and more universal potency in early times, when the agency of the Gods
was seen in the daily events of life, experience not having yet disclosed
the fixed laws according to which physical phenomena succeed one another.
Independently, too, of personal hopes and fears, the involuntary deference
felt by these rude minds for
power superior to their own, and the tendency to suppose that beings
of superhuman power must also be of
superhuman knowledge and wisdom, made them disinterestedly desire to
conform their conduct to the presumed
preferences of these powerful beings, and to adopt no new practice
without their authorization either spontaneously
given, or solicited and obtained.
But because, when men were still savages, they, would
not have received either moral or scientific truths unless they bad supposed
them to be supernaturally imparted, does it follow that they would now
give up moral truths any more than scientific, because they believed them
to have no higher origin than wise and noble human hearts? Are not moral
truths strong enough in their own evidence, at all events to retain the
belief of mankind when once they have acquired it? I grant that some of
the precepts of Christ as exhibited in the Gospels---rising far above the
Paulism which is the foundation of ordinary Christianity---carry some kinds
of moral goodness to a greater height than had ever been attained before,
though much even of what is supposed to be peculiar to them is equalled
in the
Meditations of Marcus Antoninus, which we have no ground for believing
to have been in any way indebted to
Christianity. But this benefit, whatever it amounts to, has been gained.
Mankind have entered into the possession of
it. It has become the Property of humanity, and cannot now be lost
by anything short of a return to primaeval
barbarism. The ``new commandment to love one another''; the recognition
that the greatest are those who serve, not
who are served by, others; the reverence for the weak and humble, which
is the foundation of chivalry, they and not
the strong being pointed out as having the first place in God's regard,
and the first claim on their fellow men; the
lesson of the parable of the Good Samaritan; that of ``he that is without
sin let him throw the first stone''; the precept
of doing as we would be done by; and such other noble moralities as
are to be found, mixed with some poetical
exaggerations, and some maxims of which it is difficult to ascertain
the precise object; in the authentic sayings, of
Jesus of -Nazareth; these are surely in sufficient harmony with the
intellect and feelings of every good man or
woman, to be in no danger of being let go, after having been once acknowledged
as the creed of the best and
foremost portion of our species. There will be, as there have been,
shortcomings enough for a long time to come in
acting, on them; but that they should be forgotten, or cease to be
operative on the human conscience, while human
beings remain cultivated or civilized, may be pronounced, once for
all, impossible.
On the other hand, there is a very real evil consequent
on ascribing a supernatural origin to the received maxims of
morality. That origin consecrates the whole of them, and protects them
from being discussed or criticized. So that if
among the moral doctrines received as a part of religion, there be
any which are imperfect---which were either
erroneous from the first, or not properly limited and guarded in the
expression, or which, unexceptionable once, are
no longer suited to the changes that have taken place in human relations
(and it is my firm belief that in so-called
christian morality, instances of all these kinds are to be found) these
doctrines are considered equally binding on the
conscience with the noblest, most permanent and most universal precepts
of Christ. Wherever morality is supposed
to be of supernatural origin, morality is stereotyped; as law is, for
the same reason, among believers in the Koran.
Belief, then, in the supernatural, great as are the
services which it rendered in the early stages of human
development; cannot be considered to be any longer required, either
for enabling us to know what is right and wrong
in social morality, or for supplying us with motives to do right and
to abstain from wrong. Such belief, therefore, is not
necessary for social purposes, at least in the coarse way in which
these can be considered apart from the character
of the individual human being. That more elevated branch of the subject
now remains to be considered. If
supernatural beliefs are indeed necessary to the perfection of the
individual character, they are necessary also to
the highest excellence in social conduct: necessary in a far higher
sense than that vulgar one, which constitutes it
the great support of morality in common eyes.
Let us then consider, what it is in human nature which causes it to require a religion; what wants of the human mind religion supplies, and what qualities it developes. When we have understood this, we shall be better able to judge, how far these wants can be otherwise supplied and those qualities, or qualities equivalent to them, unfolded and brought to perfection by other means.
The old saying, Primus in orbe Deos fecit timor,
I hold to be untrue, or to contain, at most, only a small amount of
truth. Belief in Gods had, I conceive, even in the rudest minds, a
more honourable origin. Its universality has been
very rationally explained from the spontaneous tendency of the mind
to attribute life and volition, similar to what it
feels in itself, to all natural objects and phenomena which appear
to be self-moving. This was a plausible fancy, and
no better theory could be formed at first. It was naturally persisted
in so long as the motions and operations of these
objects seemed to be arbitrary, and incapable of being accounted for
but by the free choice of the Power itself. At
first, no doubt, the objects themselves were supposed to be alive;
and this belief still subsists among African
fetish-worshippers. But as it must soon have appeared absurd that things
which could do so much more than man,
could not or would not do what man does, as for example to speak, the
transition was made to supposing that the
object present to the senses was inanimate, but was the creature and
instrument of an invisible being with a form
and organs similar to the human.
These beings having first been believed in, fear
of them necessarily followed; since they were thought able to inflict
at pleasure on human beings great evils, which the sufferers neither
knew how to avert nor to foresee, but were left
dependent, for their chances of doing either, upon solicitations addressed
to the deities themselves. It is true,
therefore, that fear had much to do with religion: but belief in the
Gods evidently preceded, and did not arise from
fear: though the fear, when established, was a strong support to the
belief, nothing being conceived to be so great an
offence to the divinities as any doubt of their existence.
It is unnecessary to prosecute further the natural
history of religion, as we have not here to account for, its origin in
rude minds, but for its persistency in the cultivated, A sufficient explanation
of this will, I conceive, be found in the
small limits of man's certain, knowledge, and the boundlessness of
his desire to know. Human existence is girt round
with mystery: the narrow region of our experience is a small island
in the midst of a boundless sea, which at once
awes our feelings and stimulates our imagination by its vastness and
its obscurity. To add to the mystery, the domain
of our earthly existence is not only an island in infinite space, but
also in infinite time. The past and the future are
alike shrouded from us: we neither know the origin of anything which
is, nor, its final destination. If we feel deeply
interested in knowing that there are myriads of worlds at an immeasurable,
and to our faculties inconceivable,
distance from us in space; if we are eager to discover what little
we can about these worlds, and when we cannot
know what they are, can never satiate ourselves with speculating on
what they may be; is it not a matter of far
deeper interest to us to learn, or even to conjecture, from whence
came this nearer world which we inhabit; what
cause or agency made it what it is, and on what powers depend its future
fate? Who would not desire this more
ardently than any other conceivable knowledge, so long as there appeared
the slightest hope of attaining it? What
would not one give for any credible tidings from that mysterious region,
any glimpse into it which might enable us to
see the smallest light through its darkness, especially any theory
of it which we could believe, and which
represented it as tenanted by a benignant and not a hostile influence?
But since we are able to penetrate into that
region with the imagination only, assisted by specious but inconclusive
analogies derived from human agency and
design, imagination is free to fill up the vacancy with the imagery
most congenial to itself; sublime and elevating if it
be a lofty imagination low and mean if it be a grovelling one.
Religion and poetry address themselves, at least
in one of their aspects, to the same part of the human constitution: they
both supply the same want, that of ideal conceptions grander and more beautiful
than we see realized in the prose of human life. Religion, as distinguished
from poetry, is the product of the craving to know whether these imaginative
conceptions have realities answering to them in some other world than ours.
The mind, in this state, eagerly catches at any rumours respecting other
worlds, especially when delivered by persons whom it deems, wiser than
itself. To the poetry of the supernatural, comes to be thus added a positive
belief and expectation, which unpoetical minds can share with the poetical.
Belief in a God or Gods, and in a life after death becomes the canvas which
every mind, according to its capacity, covers with such ideal pictures
as it can either invent or copy. In that other life each hopes to find
the good which he has failed to find on earth, or the better which is suggested
to him by the good which on earth he has partially seen and known, More
especially, this belief supplies the finer minds with material for conceptions
of beings more awful than they can have known on earth, and more excellent
than they
probably have known. So long as human life is insufficient to satisfy
human aspirations, so long there will be a
craving for higher things, which finds its most obvious satisfaction
in religion. So long as earthly life is full of
sufferings, so long there will be need of consolations, which the hope
of heaven affords to the selfish, the love of God
to the tender and grateful.
The value, therefore, of religion to the individual,
both in the past and present, as a source of personal satisfaction
and of elevated feelings, is not to be disputed. But it has still to
be considered, whether in order to obtain this good, it
is necessary to travel beyond the boundaries of the world which we
inhabit; or whether the idealization of our
earthly life, the cultivation of a high conception of what it may be
made, is not capable of supplying a poetry, and, in
the best sense of the word, a religion, equally fitted to exalt the
feelings, and (with the same aid from education) still
better calculated to ennoble the conduct, than any belief respecting
the unseen powers.
At the bare suggestion of such a possibility, many
will exclaim, that the short duration, the smallness and
insignificance of life, if there is no prolongation of it beyond what
we see, makes it impossible that great and elevated
feelings can connect themselves with anything laid out on so small
a scale: that such a conception of life can match
with nothing higher than Epicurean feelings, and the Epicurean doctrine
``Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we
die.''
Unquestionably, within certain limits, the maxim
of the Epicureans is sound, and applicable to much higher things
than eating and drinking. To make the most of the present for all good
purposes, those of enjoyment among the rest;
to keep under control those mental dispositions which lead to undue
sacrifice of present good for a future which may
never arrive; to cultivate the habit of deriving pleasure from things
within our reach, rather than from the too eager
pursuit of objects at a distance; to think all time wasted which is
not spent either in personal pleasure or in doing
things useful to oneself or others; these are wise maxims, and the
``carpe diem'' doctrine, carried thus far, is a
rational and legitimate corollary from the shortness of life. But that
because life is short we should care for nothing
beyond it, is not a legitimate conclusion; and the supposition, that
human beings in general are not capable of feeling
deep and even the deepest interest in things which they will never
live to see, is a view of human nature as false as it
is abject. Let it be remembered that if individual life is short, the
life of the human species is not short---its indefinite
duration is practically equivalent to endlessness; and being combined
with indefinite capability of improvement, it
offers to the imagination and sympathies a large enough object to satisfy
any reasonable demand for grandeur of
aspiration, If such an object appears small to a mind accustomed to
dream of infinite and eternal beatitudes, it will
expand into far other dimensions when those baseless fancies shall
have receded into the past.
Nor let it be thought that only the more eminent
of our species, in mind and heart, are capable of identifying their
feelings with the entire life of the human race. This noble capability
implies indeed a certain cultivation, but not
superior to that which might be, and certainly will be if human improvement
continues, the lot of all. Objects far
smaller than this, and equally confined within the limits of the earth
though not within those of a single human life,
have been found sufficient to inspire large masses and long successions
of mankind with an enthusiasm capable of
ruling the conduct, and colouring the whole life. Rome was to the entire
Roman people, for many generations as much
a religion as Jehovah was to the Jews; nay, much more, for they never
fell off from their worship as the Jews did from
theirs. And the Romans, otherwise a selfish people, with no very remarkable
faculties of any kind except the purely
practical, derived nevertheless from this one idea a certain greatness
of soul, which manifests itself in all ,their
history where that idea is concerned and nowhere else, and has earned
for them the large share of admiration, in
other respects not at all deserved, which has been felt for them by
most noble-minded persons from that time to this.
When we consider how ardent a sentiment, in favourable
circumstances of education, the love of country has
become, we cannot judge it impossible that the love of that larger
country, the world, may be nursed into similar
strength, both as a source of elevated emotion and as a principle of
duty. He who needs any other lesson on this
subject than the whole course of ancient history affords, let him read
Cicero de Officiis. It cannot be said that the
standard of morals laid down in that celebrated treatise is a high
standard. To our notions it is on many points unduly
lax, and admits capitulations of conscience. But on the subject of
duty to our country there is no compromise. That
any man, with the smallest pretensions to virtue, could hesitate to
sacrifice life, reputation, family, everything
valuable to him, to the love of country is a supposition which this
eminent interpreter of Greek and Roman morality
cannot entertain for a moment. If, then, persons could be trained,
as we see they were, not only to believe in theory
that, the good of their country was an object to which all others ought
to yield, but to feel this practically as the grand
duty of life, so also may they be made to, feel the same absolute obligation
towards the universal good. A morality
grounded on large and wise views of the good of the whole, neither
sacrificing the individual to the aggregate nor
the aggregate to the individual, but giving to duty on the one hand
and to, freedom and spontaneity on the other their
proper province, would derive its power in the superior natures. from
sympathy and benevolence and the passion for
ideal excellence: in the inferior, from the same feelings cultivated
up to the measure of their capacity, with the
superadded force of shame. This exalted morality would not depend for
its ascendancy on any hope of reward; but
the reward which might be looked for, and the thought of which would
be a consolation in suffering, and a support in
moments of weakness, would not be a problematical future existence,
but the approbation, in this, of those whom we
respect, and ideally of all those, dead or living, whom we admire or
venerate. For, the thought that our dead parents
or friends would have approved our conduct duct is a scarcely less
powerful motive than the knowledge that our
living ones do approve it: and the idea that Socrates, or Howard or
Washington, or Antoninus, or Christ, would have
sympathized with us, or that we are attempting to do our part in the
spirit in which they did theirs, has operated on
the very best minds, as a strong incentive to act up to their highest
feelings and convictions.
To call these sentiments by the name morality, exclusively
of any other title, is claiming too little for them. They are a real religion;
of which, as of other religions, outward good works (the utmost meaning
usually suggested by the word morality) are only a part, and are indeed
rather the fruits of the religion than the religion itself The essence
of
religion is the strong and earnest direction of the emotions and desires
towards an ideal object, recognized as of the
highest excellence, and as rightfully paramount over all selfish objects
of desire. This condition is fulfilled by the
Religion of Humanity in as eminent a degree, and in as high a sense,
as by the supernatural religions even in their
best manifestations, and far more so than in any of their others.
Much more might be added on this topic; but enough has been said to convince any one, who can distinguish between the intrinsic capacities of human nature and the forms in which those capacities happen to have been historically developed, that the sense of unity with mankind, and a deep feeling for the general good, may be cultivated into a sentiment and a principle capable of fulfilling every important function of religion and itself justly entitled to the name. I will now further maintain, that it is not only capable of fulfilling these functions, but would fulfil them better than any form whatever of supernaturalism. It is not only entitled to be called a religion: it is a better religion than any of those which are ordinarily called by that title.
For, in the first place, it is disinterested. It
carries the thoughts and feelings out of self, and fixes them on an unselfish
object, loved and pursued as an end for its own sake. The religions which
deal in promises and threats regarding a future life, do exactly the contrary:
they fasten clown the thoughts to the person's own posthumous interests;
they tempt him to regard the performance of his duties to others mainly
as a means to his own personal salvation; andare one of the most serious
obstacles to the great purpose of moral culture, the strengthening of the
unselfish and weakening of the selfish element in our nature; since they
hold out to the imagination selfish good and evil of such tremendous magnitude,
that it is difficult for any one who fully believes in their reality, to
have feeling or interest to spare for any other distant and ideal object.
It is true, many of the most unselfish of mankind have been believers in
supernaturalism, because their minds have not dwelt on the threats and
promises of their religion, but chiefly on the idea of a Being to whom
they looked up with a confiding love, and in whose bands they willingly
left all that related especially to themselves. But in its effect on common
minds, what now goes by the name of religion operates mainly through the
feelings of self-interest. Even the Christ of the Gospels holds out the
direct promise of reward from heaven as a primary inducement to the noble
and beautiful beneficence towards our fellow-creatures which he so impressively
inculcates. This is a radical inferiority of the best supernatural religions,
compared with the Religion of Humanity; Since the greatest thing which
moral influences can do for the amelioration of human nature, is to cultivate
the unselfish feelings in the only mode in which any active principle in
human nature can be effectually
cultivated, namely by habitual exercise: but the habit of expecting
to be rewarded in another life for our conduct in
this, makes even virtue itself no longer an exercise of the unselfish
feelings.
Secondly, it is an immense abatement from the worth
of the old religions as means of elevating and improving human character,
that it is nearly, if not quite impossible for them to produce their best
moral effects, unless we suppose a certain torpidity, if not positive twist
in the intellectual faculties. For it is impossible that any one who habitually
thinks, and who is unable to blunt his inquiring intellect by sophistry,
should be able without misgiving to go on ascribing absolute perfection
to the author and ruler of so clumsily made and capriciously governed a
creation as this planet and the life of its inhabitants. The adoration
of such a being cannot be with the whole heart, unless the
heart is first considerably sophisticated. The worship must either
be greatly overclouded by doubt, and occasionally
quite darkened by it, or the moral sentiments must sink to the low
level of the ordinances of Nature: the worshipper
must learn to think blind partiality, atrocious cruelty, and reckless
injustice, not blemishes in an object of worship,
since all these abound to excess in the commonest phenomena of Nature.
It is true, the God who is worshipped is not,
generally speaking, the God of Nature only, but also the God of some
revelation; and the character of the revelation
will greatly modify and, it may be, improve the moral influences of
the religion. This is emphatically true of
Christianity; since the Author of the Sermon on the Mount is assuredly
a far more benignant Being than the Author of
Nature. But unfortunately, the believer in the christian revelation
is obliged to believe that the same being is the
author of both. This, unless he resolutely averts his mind from the
subject, or practises the act of quieting his
conscience by sophistry, involves him in moral perplexities without
end; since the ways of his Deity in Nature are on
many occasions totally at variance with the precepts, as lie believes,
of the same Deity in the Gospel. He who comes
out with least moral damage from this embarrassment, is probably the
one who never attempts to reconcile the two
standards with one another, but confesses to himself that the purposes
of Providence are mysterious, that its ways
are not our ways, that its justice and goodness are not the justice
and goodness which we can conceive and which it
befits us to practise. When, however, this is the feeling of the believer,
the worship of the Deity ceases to be the
adoration of abstract moral perfection. It becomes the bowing down
to a gigantic image of something not fit for us to
imitate. It is the worship of power only.
I say nothing of the moral difficulties and perversions
involved in revelation itself; though even in the Christianity of
the Gospels, at least in its ordinary interpretation, there are some
of so flagrant a character as almost to outweigh
all the beauty and benignity and moral greatness which so eminently
distinguish the sayings and character of Christ.
The recognition, for example, of the object of highest worship, in
a being who could make a Hell; and who could create
countless generations of human beings with the certain foreknowledge
that he was creating them for this fate. Is
there any moral enormity which might not be justified by imitation
of such a Deity? And is it possible to adore such a
one without a frightful distortion of the standard of right and wrong?
Any other of the outrages to the most ordinary
justice and humanity involved in the common christian conception of
the moral character of God, sinks into
insignificance beside this dreadful idealization of wickedness. Most
of them too, are happily not so, unequivocally
deducible from the very words of Christ as to be indisputably a part
of christian doctrine. It may be doubted, for
instance, whether Christianity is really responsible for atonement
and redemption, original sin and vicarious
punishment: and the same may be said respecting the doctrine which
makes belief in the divine mission of Christ a
necessary condition of salvation. It is nowhere represented that Christ
himself made this statement, except in the
huddled-up account of the Resurrection contained in the concluding
verses of St. Mark, which some critics (I believe
the best), consider to be an interpolation. Again, the proposition
that ``the powers that be are ordained of God'' and
the whole series of corollaries deduced from it in the Epistles, belong
to St. Paul, and must stand or fall with Paulism,
not with Christianity. But there is one moral contradiction inseparable
from every form of Christianity, which no
ingenuity can resolve, and no sophistry explain away. It is, that so
precious a gift, bestowed on a few, should have
been withheld from the many: that countless millions of human beings
should have been allowed to Eve and die, to
sin and suffer, without the one thing needful, the divine remedy for
sin and suffering, which it would have cost the
Divine Giver as little to have vouchsafed to all, as to have bestowed
by special grace upon a favoured minority. Add to
this, that the divine message, assuming it to be such, has been authenticated
by credentials so insufficient, that they
fail to convince a large proportion of the strongest and most cultivated
minds, and the tendency to disbelieve them
appears to grow with the growth of scientific knowledge and critical
discrimination. He who can believe these to be
the intentional shortcomings of a perfectly good Being, must impose
silence on every prompting of the sense of
goodness and justice as received among men.
It is, no doubt, possible (and there are many instances
of it) to worship with the devotion either Deity, that of Nature
or of the Gospel, without any perversion of the moral sentiments: but
this must be by fixing the attention exclusively
on what is beautiful and. beneficent in the precepts and spirit of
the Gospel and in the dispensations of Nature, and
putting all that is the reverse as entirely aside as if it did not
exist. Accordingly, this simple and innocent faith can
only, as I have said, co-exist with a torpid and inactive state of
the speculative faculties. For a person of exercised
intellect, there is no way of attaining anything equivalent to it,
save by sophistication and perversion, either of the
understanding or of the conscience. It may almost always be said both
of sects and of individuals, who derive their
morality from religion, that the better logicians they are, the worse
moralists.
One only form of belief in the supernatural---one
only theory respecting the origin and government of the
universe---stands wholly clear both of intellectual contradiction and
of moral obliquity. It is that which, resigning
irrevocably the idea of an omnipotent creator, regards Nature and Life
not as the expression throughout of the moral
character and purpose of the Deity, but as the product of a struggle
between contriving goodness and an intractable
material, as was believed by Plato, or a Principle of Evil, as was
the doctrine of the Manicheans. A creed like this,
which I have known to be devoutly held by at least one cultivated and
conscientious person of our own day, allows it
to be believed that all the mass of evil which exists was undesigned
by, and exists not by the appointment of, but in
spite of the Being whom we are called upon to worship. A virtuous human
being assumes in this theory the exalted
character of a fellow-labourer with the Highest, a fellow combatant
in the great strife; contributing his little, which by
the aggregation of many like himself becomes much, towards that progressive
ascendancy, and ultimately complete
triumph of good over evil, which history points to, and which this
doctrine teaches us to regard as planned by the
Being to whom we owe all the benevolent contrivance we behold in Nature.
Against the moral tendency of this creed
no possible objection can lie: it can produce on whoever can succeed
in believing it, no other than an ennobling
effect. The evidence for it, indeed, if evidence it can be called,
is too shadowy and unsubstantial, and the promises it
holds out too distant and uncertain, to admit of its being a permanent
substitute for the religion of humanity; but the
two may be held in conjunction: and he to whom ideal good, and the
progress of the world towards it, are already a
religion, even though that other creed may seem to him a belief not
grounded on evidence, is at liberty to indulge the
pleasing and encouraging thought, that its truth is possible. Apart
from all dogmatic belief, there is for those who
need it, an ample domain in the region of the imagination which may
be planted with possibilities, with hypotheses
which cannot be known to be false; and when there is anything in the
appearances of nature to favour them, as in this
case there is (for whatever force we attach to the analogies of Nature
with the effects of human contrivance, there is
no disputing the remark of Paley, that what is good in nature exhibits
those analogies much oftener than what is evil),
the contemplation of these possibilities is a legitimate indulgence,
capable of bearing its part, with other influences,
in feeding and animating the tendency of the feelings and impulses
towards good.
One advantage, such as it is, the supernatural religions
must always possess over the Religion of Humanity; the prospect they hold
out to the individual of a life after death. For, though the skepticism
of the understanding does not necessarily exclude the Theism of the imagination
and feelings, and this, again, gives opportunity for a hope that the power
which has done so much for us may be able and willing to do this also,
such vague possibility must ever stop far short of a conviction. It remains
then to estimate the value of this element---the prospect of a world to
come--as
a constituent of earthly bappiness. I cannot but think that as the
condition of mankind becomes improved, as they
grow happier in their lives, and more capable of deriving happiness
from unselfish sources, they will care less and
less for this flattering expectation. It is not, naturally or generally,
the happy who are the most anxious either for a
prolongation of the present life, or for a life hereafter: it is those
who never have been happy. They who have had
their happiness can bear to part with existence: but it is hard to
die without ever having lived. When mankind cease
to need a future existence as a consolation for the sufferings of the
present, it will have lost its chief value to them,
for themselves. I am now speaking of the unselfish. Those who are so
wrapped up in self that they are unable to
identify their feelings with anything which will survive them, or to
feel their life prolonged in their younger
cotemporaries and in all who help to carry on the progressive movement
of human affairs, require the notion of
another selfish life beyond the grave, to enable them to keep up any
interest in existence, since the present life, as its
termination approaches, dwindles into something too insignificant to
be worth caring about. But if the Religion of
Humanity were as sedulously cultivated as the supernatural religions
are (and there is no difficulty in conceiving that
it might be much more so), all who had received the customary amount
of moral cultivation would up to the hour of
death live ideally in the life of those who are to follow them: and
though doubtless they would often willingly survive
as individuals for a much longer period than the present duration of
life, it appears to me probable that after a length
of time different in different persons, they would have had enough
of existence, and would gladly lie down and take
their eternal rest. Meanwhile and without looking so far forward, we
may remark, that those who believe tile
immortality of the soul, generally quit life with fully as much, if
not more, reluctance, as those who have no such
expectation. The mere cessation of existence is no evil to any one:
the idea is only formidable through the illusion of
imagination which makes one conceive oneself as if one were alive and
feeling oneself dead. What is odious in death
is not death itself, but the act of dying, and its lugubrious accompaniments:
all of which must be equally undergone by
the believer in immortality. Nor can I perceive that the septic loses
by his skepticism any real and valuable
consolation except one; the hope of reunion with those dear to him
who have ended their earthly life before him. That
loss, indeed, is neither to be denied nor extenuated In many cases
it is beyond the reach of comparison or estimate;
and will always suffice to keep alive, in the more sensitive natures,
the imaginative hope of a futurity which, if there is
nothing to prove, there is as little in our knowledge and experience
to contradict.
History, so far as we know it, bears out the opinion,
that mankind can perfectly well do without the belief in a heaven. The
Greeks had anything but a tempting idea of a future state. Their Elysian
fields held out very little attraction to their feelings and imagination.
Achilles in the Odyssey expressed a very natural, and no doubt a very common
sentiment, when he said that he would rather be on earth the serf of a
needy master, than reign over the whole kingdom of the dead. And the pensive
character so striking in the address of the dying emperor Hadrian to his
soul, gives evidence that the popular conception had not undergone much
variation during that long interval. Yet we
neither find that the Greeks enjoyed life less, nor feared death more,
than other people. The Buddhist religion counts
probably at this day a greater number of votaries than either the Christian
or the Mahomedan. The Buddhist creed
recognises many modes of punishment in a future life, or rather lives,
by the transmigration of the soul into new
bodies of men or animals. But the blessing from Heaven which it proposes
as a reward, to be earned by perseverance
in the highest order of virtuous life, is annihilation; the cessation,
at least, of all conscious or separate existence. It is
impossible to mistake in this religion, the work of legislators and
moralists endeavouring to supply supernatural
motives for the conduct which they were anxious to encourage; and they
could find nothing more transcendant to
hold out as the capital prize to be won by the mightiest efforts of
labour and self-denial, than what we are so often
told is the terrible idea of annihilation. Surely this is a proof that
the idea is not really or naturally terrible; that not
philosophers only, but the common order of mankind, can easily reconcile
themselves to it, and even consider it as a
good; and that it is no unnatural part of the idea of a happy life,
that life itself be laid down, after the best that it can
give has been fully enjoyed through a long lapse of time; when all
its pleasures, even those of benevolence, are
familiar, and nothing untasted and unknown is left to stimulate curiosity
and keep up the desire of prolonged
existence. It seems to me not only possible but probable, that in a
higher, and, above all, a happier condition of
human life, not annihilation but immortality may be the burdensome
idea; and that human nature, though pleased
with the present, and by no means impatient to quit it, would find
comfort and not sadness in the thought that it is not
chained through eternity to a conscious existence which it cannot be
assured that it will always wish to preserve.