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THE
KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU
CHRISTIANITY NOT AS A MYSTIC
RELIGION
BUT AS A NEW THEORY OF LIFE
by Count Leo Tolstoy
Chapters:
Preface 1
2
3 4
5 6
7 8
9 10
11 12
CHAPTER 2
The impression I gained of a desire to conceal,
to hush up, what I had tried to express in my book, led me to judge the book
itself afresh.
On its appearance it had, as I had anticipated,
been forbidden, and ought therefore by law to have been burnt. But, at the same
time, it was discussed among officials, and circulated in a great number of
manuscript and lithograph copies, and in translations printed abroad.
And very quickly after the book, criticisms, both
religious and secular in character, made their appearance, and these the
government tolerated, and even encouraged. So that the refutation of a book
which no one was supposed to know anything about was even chosen as the subject
for theological dissertations in the academies.
The criticisms of my book, Russian and foreign
alike, fall under two general divisions--the religious criticisms of men who
regard themselves as believers, and secular criticisms, that is, those of
freethinkers.
I will begin with the first class. In my book I
made it an accusation against the teachers of the Church that their teaching is
opposed to Christ's commands clearly and definitely expressed in the Sermon on
the Mount, and opposed in especial to his command in regard to resistance to
evil, and that in this way they deprive Christ's teaching of all value. The
Church authorities accept the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount on
non-resistance to evil by force as divine revelation; and therefore one would
have thought that if they felt called upon to write about my book at all, they
would have found it inevitable before everything else to reply to the principal
point of my charge against them, and to say plainly, do they or do they not
admit the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount and the commandment of
non-resistance to evil as binding on a Christian. And they were bound to answer
this question, not after the usual fashion (i. e., "that although on the
one side one cannot absolutely deny, yet on the other side one cannot main fully
assent, all the more seeing that," etc., etc.). No; they should have
answered the question as plainly as it was put in my book--Did Christ really
demand from his disciples that they should carry out what he taught them in the
Sermon on the Mount? And can a Christian, then, or can he not, always remaining
a Christian, go to law or make any use of the law, or seek his own protection in
the law? And can the Christian, or can he not, remaining a Christian, take part
in the administration of government, using compulsion against his neighbors?
And--the most important question hanging over the heads of all of us in these
days of universal military service--can the Christian, or can he not, remaining
a Christian, against Christ's direct prohibition, promise obedience in future
actions directly opposed to his teaching? And can he, by taking his share of
service in the army, prepare himself to murder men, and even actually murder
them?
These questions were put plainly and directly,
and seemed to require a plain and direct answer; but in all the criticisms of my
book there was no such plain and direct answer. No; my book received precisely
the same treatment as all the attacks upon the teachers of the Church for their
defection from the Law of Christ of which history from the days of Constantine
is full.
A very great deal was said in connection with my
book of my having incorrectly interpreted this and other passages of the Gospel,
of my being in error in not recognizing the Trinity, the redemption, and the
immortality of the soul. A very great deal was said, but not a word about the
one thing which for every Christian is the most essential question in life--how
to reconcile the duty of forgiveness, meekness, patience, and love for all,
neighbors and enemies alike, which is so clearly expressed in the words of our
teacher, and in the heart of each of us--how to reconcile this duty with the
obligation of using force in war upon men of our own or a foreign people.
All that are worth calling answers to this
question can be brought under the following five heads. I have tried to bring
together in this connection all I could, not only from the criticisms on my
book, but from what has been written in past times on this theme.
The first and crudest form of reply consists in
the bold assertion that the use of force is not opposed by the teaching of
Christ; that it is permitted, and even enjoined, on the Christian by the Old and
New Testaments.
Assertions of this kind proceed, for the most
part, from men who have attained the highest ranks in the governing or
ecclesiastical hierarchy, and who are consequently perfectly assured that no one
will dare to contradict their assertion, and that if anyone does contradict it
they will hear nothing of the contradiction. These men have, for the most part,
through the intoxication of power, so lost the right idea of what that
Christianity is in the name of which they hold their position that what is
Christian in Christianity presents itself to them as heresy, while everything in
the Old and New Testaments which can be distorted into an antichristian and
heathen meaning they regard as the foundation of Christianity. In support of
their assertion that Christianity is not opposed to the use of force, these men
usually, with the greatest audacity, bring together all the most obscure
passages from the Old and New Testaments, interpreting them in the most
unchristian way--the punishment of Ananias and Sapphira, of Simon the Sorcerer,
etc. They quote all those sayings of Christ's which can possibly be interpreted
as justification of cruelty: the expulsion from the Temple; "It shall be
more tolerable for the land of Sodom than for this city," etc., etc.
According to these people's notions, a Christian government is not in the least
bound to be guided by the spirit of peace, forgiveness of injuries, and love for
enemies.
To refute such an assertion is useless, because
the very people who make this assertion refute themselves, or, rather, renounce
Christ, inventing a Christianity and a Christ of their own in the place of him
in whose name the Church itself exists, as well as their office in it. If all
men were to learn that the Church professes to believe in a Christ of punishment
and warfare, not of forgiveness, no one would believe in the Church and it could
not prove to anyone what it is trying to prove. The second, somewhat less gross,
form of argument consists in declaring that, though Christ did indeed preach
that we should turn the left cheek, and give the cloak also, and this is the
highest moral duty, yet that there are wicked men in the world, and if these
wicked men mere not restrained by force, the whole world and all good men would
come to ruin through them. This argument I found for the first time in John
Chrysostom, and I slow how he is mistaken in my book "What I believe."
This argument is ill grounded, because if we
allow ourselves to regard any men as intrinsically wicked men, then in the first
place we annul, by so doing, the whole idea of the Christian teaching, according
to which we are all equals and brothers, as sons of one father in heaven.
Secondly, it is ill founded, because even if to use force against wicked men had
been permitted by God, since it is impossible to find a perfect and unfailing
distinction by which one could positively know the wicked from the good, so it
would come to all individual men and societies of men mutually regarding each
other as wicked men, as is the case now. Thirdly, even if it were possible to
distinguish the wicked from the good unfailingly, even then it would be
impossible to kill or injure or shut up in prison these wicked men, because
there would be no one in a Christian society to carry out such punishment, since
every Christian, as a Christian, has been commanded to use no force against the
wicked.
The third kind of answer, still more subtle than
the preceding, consists in asserting that though the command of non-resistance
to evil by force is binding on the Christian when the evil is directed against
himself personally, it ceases to be binding when the evil is directed against
his neighbors, and that then the Christian is not only not bound to fulfill the
commandment, but is even bound to act in opposition to it in defense of his
neighbors, and to use force against transgressors by force. This assertion is an
absolute assumption, and one cannot find in all Christ's teaching any
confirmation of such an argument. Such an argument is not only a limitation, but
a direct contradiction and negation of the commandment. If every man has the
right to have recourse to force in face of a danger threatening an other, the
question of the use of force is reduced to a question of the definition of
danger for another. If my private judgment is to decide the question of what is
danger for another, there is no occasion for the use of force which could not be
justified on the ground of danger threatening some other man. They killed and
burnt witches, they killed aristocrats and girondists, they killed their enemies
because those who were in authority regarded them as dangerous for the people.
If this important limitation, which fundamentally
undermines the whole value of the commandment, had entered into Christ's
meaning, there must have been mention of it somewhere. This restriction is made
nowhere in our Saviour's life or preaching. On the contrary, warning is given
precisely against this treacherous and scandalous restriction which nullifies
the commandment. The error and impossibility of such a limitation is shown in
the Gospel with special clearness in the account of the judgment of Caiaphas,
who makes precisely this distinction. He acknowledged that it was wrong to
punish the innocent Jesus, but he saw in him a source of danger not for himself,
but for the whole people, and therefore he said: It is better for one man to
die, that the whole people perish not. And the erroneousness of such a
limitation is still more clearly expressed in the words spoken to Peter when he
tried to resist by force evil directed against Jesus (Matt. xxvi. 52). Peter was
not defending himself, but his beloved and heavenly Master. And Christ at once
reproved him for this, saying, that he who takes up the sword shall perish by
the sword.
Besides, apologies for violence used against
one's neighbor in defense of another neighbor from greater violence are always
untrustworthy, because when force is used against one who has not yet carried
out his evil intent, I can never know which would be greater--the evil of my act
of violence or of the act I want to prevent. We kill the criminal that society
may be rid of him, and we never know whether the criminal of to-day would not
have been a changed man tomorrow, and whether our punishment of him is not
useless cruelty. We shut up the dangerous--as we think--member of society, but
the next day this man might cease to be dangerous and his imprisonment might be
for nothing. I see that a man I know to be a ruffian is pursuing a young girl. I
have a gun in my hand--I kill the ruffian and save the girl. But the death or
the wounding of the ruffian has positively taken place, while what would have
happened if this had not been I cannot know. And what an immense mass of evil
must result, and indeed does result, from allowing men to assume the right of
anticipating what may happen. Ninety- nine per cent of the evil of the world is
founded on this reasoning--from the Inquisition to dynamite bombs, and the
executions or punishments of tens of thousands of political criminals.
A fourth, still more refined, reply to the
question, What ought to be the Christian's attitude to Christ's command of
non-resistance to evil by force? consists in declaring that they do not deny the
command of non-resisting evil, but recognize it; but they only do not ascribe to
this command the special exclusive value attached to it by sectarians. To regard
this command as the indispensable condition of Christian life, as Garrison,
Ballou, Dymond, the Quakers, the Mennonites and the Shakers do now, and as the
Moravian brothers, the Waldenses, the Albigenses, the Bogomilites, and the
Paulicians did in the past, is a one-sided heresy. This command has neither more
nor less value than all the other commands, and the man who through weakness
transgresses any command whatever, the command of non-resistance included, does
not cease to be a Christian if he hold the true faith. This is a very skillful
device, and many people who wish to be deceived are easily deceived by it. The
device consists in reducing a direct conscious denial of a command to a casual
breach of it. But one need only compare the attitude of the teachers of the
Church to this and to other commands which they really do recognize, to be
convinced that their attitude to this is completely different from their
attitude to other duties.
The command against fornication they do really
recognize, and consequently they do not admit that in any case fornication can
cease to be wrong. The Church preachers never point out cases in which the
command against fornication can be broken, and always teach that we must avoid
seductions which lead to temptation to fornication. But not so with the command
of non-resistance. All church preachers recognize cases in which that command
can be broken, and teach the people accordingly. And they not only do not teach
teat we should avoid temptations to break it, chief of which is the military
oath, but they themselves administer it. The preachers of the Church never in
any other case advocate the breaking of any other commandment. But in connection
with the commandment of non-resistance they openly teach that we must not
understand it too literally, but that there are conditions and circumstances in
which we must do the direct opposite, that is, go to law, fight, punish. So that
occasions for fulfilling the commandment of nonresistance to evil by force are
taught for the most part as occasions for not fulfilling it. The fulfillment of
this command, they say, is very difficult and pertains only to perfection. And
how can it not be difficult, when the breach of it is not only not forbidden,
but law courts, prisons, cannons, guns, armies, and wars are under the immediate
sanction of the Church? It cannot be true, then, that this command is recognized
by the preachers of the Church as on a level with other commands.
The preachers of the Church clearly, do not
recognize it; only not daring to acknowledge this, they try to conceal their not
recognizing it.
So much for the fourth reply.
The fifth kind of answer, which is the subtlest,
the most often used, and the most effective, consists in avoiding answering, in
making believe that this question is one which has long ago been decided
perfectly clearly and satisfactorily, and that it is not worth while to talk
about it. This method of reply is employed by all the more or less cultivated
religious writers, that is to say, those who feel the laws of Christ binding for
themselves. Knowing that the contradiction existing between the teaching of
Christ which we profess with our lips and the whole order of our lives cannot be
removed by words, and that touching upon it can only make it more obvious, they,
with more or less ingenuity, evade it, pretending that the question of
reconciling Christianity with the use of force has been decided already, or does
not exist at all.
[Footnote: I only know one work which differs
somewhat from this general definition, and that is not a criticism in the
precise meaning of the word, but an article treating of the same subject and
having my book in view. I mean the pamphlet of Mr. Troizky (published at Kazan),
"A Sermon for the People." The author obviously accepts Christ's
teaching in its true meaning. He says that the prohibition of resistance to evil
by force means exactly what it does mean; and the same with the prohibition of
swearing. He does not, as others do, deny the meaning of Christ's teaching, but
unfortunately he does not draw from this admission the inevitable deductions
which present themselves spontaneously in our life when we understand Christ's
teaching in that way. If we must not oppose evil by force, nor swear, everyone
naturally asks, "How, then, about military service? and the oath of
obedience?" To this question the author gives no reply; but it must be
answered. And if he cannot answer, then he would do better no to speak on the
subject at all, as such silence leads to error.]
The majority of religious critics of my book use
this fifth method of replying to it. I could quote dozens of such critics, in
all of whom, without exception, we find the same thing repeated: everything is
discussed except what constitutes the principal subject of the book. As a
characteristic example of such criticisms, I will quote the article of a
well-known and ingenious English writer and preacher--Farrar--who, like many
learned theologians, is a great master of the art of circuitously evading a
question. The article was published in an American journal, the FORUM, in
October, 1888.
After conscientiously explaining in brief the
contents of my book, Farrar says:
"Tolstoy came to the conclusion that a
coarse deceit had been palmed upon the world when these words 'Resist not evil,'
were held by civil society to be compatible with war, courts of justice, capital
punishment, divorce, oaths, national prejudice, and, indeed, with most of the
institutions of civil and social life. He now believes that the kingdom of God
would come if all men kept these five commandments of Christ, viz.: 1. Live in
peace with all men. 2. Be pure. 3. Take no oaths. 4. Resist not evil. 5.
Renounce national distinctions.
"Tolstoy," he says, "rejects the
inspiration of the Old Testament; hence he rejects the chief doctrines of the
Church-- that of the Atonement by blood, the Trinity, the descent of the Holy
Ghost on the Apostles, and his transmission through the priesthood." And he
recognizes only the words and commands of Christ. "But is this
interpretation of Christ a true one?" he says. "Are all men bound to
act as Tolstoy teaches--i. e., to carry out these five commandments of
Christ?"
You expect, then, that in answer to this
essential question, which is the only one that could induce a man to write an
article about the book, he will say either that this interpretation of Christ's
teaching is true and we ought to follow it, or he will say that such an
interpretation is untrue, will show why, and will give some other correct
interpretation of those words which I interpret incorrectly. But nothing of this
kind is done. Farrar only expresses his "belief" that,
"although actuated by the noblest
sincerity, Count Tolstoy has been misled by partial and one-sided
interpretations of the meaning of the Gospel and the mind and will of
Christ." What this error consists in is not made clear; it is only said:
"To enter into the proof of this is impossible in this article, for I have
already exceeded the space at my command."
And he concludes in a tranquil spirit:
"Meanwhile, the reader who feels troubled
lest it should be his duty also to forsake all the conditions of his life and to
take up the position and work of a common laborer, may rest for the present on
the principle, SECURUS JUDICAT ORBIS TERRARUM. With few and rare
exceptions," he continues, "the whole of Christendom, from the days of
the Apostles down to our own, has come to the firm conclusion that it was the
object of Christ to lay down great eternal principles, but not to disturb the
bases and revolutionize the institutions of all human society, which themselves
rest on divine sanctions as well as on inevitable conditions. Were it my object
to prove how untenable is the doctrine of communism, based by Count Tolstoy upon
the divine paradoxes [sic], which can be interpreted only on historical
principles in accordance with the whole method of the teaching of Jesus, it
would require an ampler canvas than I have here at my disposal."
What a pity he has not an "ampler canvas at
his disposal"! And what a strange thing it is that for all these last
fifteen centuries no one has had a "canvas ample enough" to prove that
Christ, whom we profess to believe in, says something utterly unlike what he
does say! Still, they could prove it if they wanted to. But it is not worth
while to prove what everyone knows; it is enough to say "SECURUS JUDICAT
ORBIS TERRARUM."
And of this kind, without exception, are all the
criticisms of educated believers, who must, as such, understand the danger of
their position. The sole escape from it for them lies in their hope that they
may be able, by using the authority of the Church, of antiquity, and of their
sacred office, to overawe the reader and draw him away from the idea of reading
the Gospel for himself and thinking out the question in his own mind for
himself. And in this they are successful; for, indeed, how could the notion
occur to any one that all that has been repeated from century to century with
such earnestness and solemnity by all those archdeacons, bishops, archbishops,
holy synods, and popes, is all of it a base lie and a calumny foisted upon
Christ by them for the sake of keeping safe the money they must have to live
luxuriously on the necks of other men? And it is a lie and a calumny so
transparent that the only way of keeping it up consists in overawing people by
their earnestness, their conscientiousness. It is just what has taken place of
late years at recruiting sessions; at a table before the zertzal--the symbol of
the Tzars authority--in the seat of honor under the life-size portrait of the
Tzar, sit dignified old officials, wearing decorations, conversing freely and
easily, writing notes, summoning men before them, and giving orders. Here,
wearing a cross on his breast, near them, is prosperous- looking old Priest in a
silken cassock, with long gray hair flowing on to his cope; before a lectern who
wears the golden cross and has a Gospel bound in gold.
They summon Iran Petroff. A young man comes in,
wretchedly, shabbily dressed, and in terror, the muscles of his face working,
his eyes bright and restless; and in a broken voice, hardly above a whisper, he
says: "I--by Christ's law--as a Christian--I cannot." "What is he
muttering?" asks the president, frowning impatiently and raising his eyes
from his book to listen. "Speak louder," the colonel with shining
epaulets shouts to him. "I--I as a Christian--" And at last it appears
that the young man refuses to serve in the army because he is a Christian.
"Don't talk nonsense. Stand to be measured. Doctor, may I trouble you to
measure him. He is all right?" "Yes." "Reverend father,
administer the oath to him."
No one is the least disturbed by what the poor
scared young man is muttering. They do not even pay attention to it. "They
all mutter something, but we've no time to listen to it, we have to enroll so
many."
The recruit tries to say something still.
"It's opposed to the law of Christ." "Go along, go along; we know
without your help what is opposed to the law and what's not; and you soothe his
mind, reverend father, soothe him. Next: Vassily Nikitin." And they lead
the trembling youth away. And it does not strike anyone --the guards, or Vassily
Nikitin, whom they are bringing in, or any of the spectators of this scene--that
these inarticulate words of the young man, at once suppressed by the
authorities, contain the truth, and that the loud, solemnly uttered sentences of
the calm, self-confident official and the priest are a lie and a deception.
Such is the impression produced not only by
Farrar's article, but by all those solemn sermons, articles, and books which
make their appearance from all sides directly there is anywhere a glimpse of
truth exposing a predominant falsehood. At once begins the series of long,
clever, ingenious, and solemn speeches and writings, which deal with questions
nearly related to the subject, but skillfully avoid touching the subject itself.
That is the essence of the fifth and most
effective means of getting out of the contradictions in which Church
Christianity has placed itself, by professing its faith in Christ's teaching in
words, while it denies it in its life, and teaches people to do the same.
Those who justify themselves by the first method,
directly, crudely asserting that Christ sanctioned violence, wars, and murder,
repudiate Christ's doctrine directly; those who find their defense in the
second, the third, or the fourth method are confused and can easily be convicted
of error; but this last class, who do not argue, who do not condescend to argue
about it, but take shelter behind their own grandeur, and make a show of all
this having been decided by them or at least by someone long ago, and no longer
offering a possibility of doubt to anyone--they seem safe from attack, and will
be beyond attack till men come to realize that they are under the narcotic
influence exerted on them by governments and churches, and are no longer
affected by it.
Such was the attitude of the spiritual critics--i.
e., those professing faith in Christ--to my book. And their attitude could not
have been different. They are bound to take up this attitude by the
contradictory position in which they find themselves between belief in the
divinity of their Master and disbelief in his clearest utterances, and they want
to escape from this contradiction. So that one cannot expect from them free
discussion of the very essence of the question--that is, of the change in men's
life which must result from applying Christ's teaching to the existing order of
the world. Such free discussion I only expected from worldly, freethinking
critics who are not bound to Christ's teaching in any way, and can therefore
take an independent view of it. I had anticipated that freethinking writers
would look at Christ, not merely, like the Churchmen, as the founder of a
religion of personal salvation, but, to express it in their language, as a
reformer who laid down new principles of life and destroyed the old, and whose
reforms are not yet complete, but are still in progress even now.
Such a view of Christ and his teaching follows
from my book. But to my astonishment, out of the great number of critics of my
book there was not one, either Russian or foreign, who treated the subject from
the side from which it was approached in the book-- that is, who criticised
Christ's doctrines as philosophical, moral, and social principles, to use their
scientific expressions. This was not done in a single criticism. The
freethinking Russian critics taking my book as though its whole contents could
be reduced to non-resistance to evil, and understanding the doctrine of
non-resistance to evil itself (no doubt for greater convenience in refuting it)
as though it would prohibit every kind of conflict with evil, fell vehemently
upon this doctrine, and for some years past have been very successfully proving
that Christ's teaching is mistaken in so far as it forbids resistance to evil.
Their refutations of this hypothetical doctrine of Christ were all the more
successful since they knew beforehand that their arguments could not be
contested or corrected, for the censorship, not having passed the book, did not
pass articles in its defense.
It is a remarkable thing that among us, where one
cannot say a word about the Holy Scriptures without the prohibition of the
censorship, for some years past there have been in all the journals constant
attacks and criticisms on the command of Christ simply and directly stated in
Matt. v. 39. The Russian advanced critics, obviously unaware of all that has
been done to elucidate the question of non-resistance, and sometimes even
imagining apparently that the rule of non-resistance to evil had been invented
by me personally, fell foul of the very idea of it. They opposed it and attacked
it, and advancing with great heat arguments which had long ago been analyzed and
refuted from every point of view, they demonstrated that a man ought invariably
to defend (with violence) all the injured and oppressed, and that thus the
doctrine of non-resistance to evil is an immoral doctrine.
To all Russian critics the whole import of
Christ's command seemed reducible to the fact that it would hinder them from the
active opposition to evil to which they are accustomed. So that the principle of
non-resistance to evil by force has been attacked by two opposing camps: the
conservatives, because this principle would hinder their activity in resistance
to evil as applied to the revolutionists, in persecution and punishment of them;
the revolutionists, too, because this principle would hinder their resistance to
evil as applied to the conservatives and the overthrowing of them. The
conservatives were indignant at the doctrine of non-resistance to evil by force
hindering the energetic destruction of the revolutionary elements, which may
ruin the national prosperity; the revolutionists were indignant at the doctrine
of non-resistance to evil by force hindering the overthrow of the conservatives,
who are ruining the national prosperity. It is worthy of remark in this
connection that the revolutionists have attacked the principle of nonresistance
to evil by force, in spite of the fact that it is the greatest terror and danger
for every despotism. For ever since the beginning of the world, the use of
violence of every kind, from the Inquisition to the Schlüsselburg fortress, has
rested and still rests on the opposite principle of the necessity of resisting
evil by force.
Besides this, the Russian critics have pointed
out the fact that the application of the command of non-resistance to practical
life would turn mankind aside out of the path of civilization along which it is
moving. The path of civilization on which mankind in Europe is moving is in
their opinion the one along which all mankind ought always to move.
So much for the general character of the Russian
critics.
Foreign critics started from the same premises,
but their discussions of my book were somewhat different from those of Russian
critics, not only in being less bitter, and in showing more culture, but even in
the subject-matter.
In discussing my book and the Gospel teaching
generally, as it is expressed in the Sermon on the Mount, the foreign critics
maintained that such doctrine is not peculiarly Christian (Christian doctrine is
either Catholicism or Protestantism according to their views)--the teaching of
the Sermon on the Mount is only a string of very pretty impracticable dreams DU
CHARMANT DOCTEUR, as Reran says, fit for the simple and half-savage inhabitants
of Galilee who lived eighteen hundred years ago, and for the half-savage Russian
peasants--Sutaev and Bondarev--and the Russian mystic Tolstoy, but not at all
consistent with a high degree of European culture.
The foreign freethinking critics have tried in a
delicate manner, without being offensive to me, to give the impression that my
conviction that mankind could be guided by such a naïve doctrine as that of the
Sermon on the Mount proceeds from two causes: that such a conviction is partly
due to my want of knowledge, my ignorance of history, my ignorance of all the
vain attempts to apply the principles of the Sermon on the Mount to life, which
have been made in history and have led to nothing; and partly it is due to my
failing to appreciate the full value of the lofty civilization to which mankind
has attained at present, with its Krupp cannons, smokeless powder, colonization
of Africa, Irish Coercion Bill, parliamentary government, journalism, strikes,
and the Eiffel Tower.
So wrote de Vogüé and Leroy Beaulieu and
Matthew Arnold; so wrote the American author Savage, and Ingersoll, the popular
freethinking American preacher, and many others.
"Christ's teaching is no use, because it is
inconsistent with our industrial age," says Ingersoll naïvely, expressing
in this utterance, with perfect directness and simplicity, the exact notion of
Christ's teaching held by persons of refinement and culture of our times. The
teaching is no use for our industrial age, precisely as though the existence of
this industrial age were a sacred fact which ought not to and could not be
changed. It is just as though drunkards when advised how they could be brought
to habits of sobriety should answer that the advice is incompatible with their
habit of taking alcohol.
The arguments of all the freethinking critics,
Russian and foreign alike, different as they may be in tone and manner of
presentation, all amount essentially to the same strange
misapprehension--namely, that Christ's teaching, one of the consequences of
which is non-resistance to evil, is of no use to us because it requires a change
of our life.
Christ's teaching is useless because, if it were
carried into practice, life could not go on as at present; we must add: if we
have begun by living sinfully, as we do live and are accustomed to live. Not
only is the question of non-resistance to evil not discussed; the very mention
of the fact that the duty of non- resistance enters into Christ's teaching is
regarded as satisfactory proof of the impracticability of the whole teaching.
Meanwhile one would have thought it was necessary
to point out at least some kind of solution of the following question, since it
is at the root of almost everything that interests us.
The question amounts to this: In what way are we
to decide men's disputes, when some men consider evil what others consider good,
and VICE VERSA? And to reply that that is evil which I think evil, in spite of
the fact that my opponent thinks it good, is not a solution of the difficulty.
There can only be two solutions: either to find a real unquestionable criterion
of what is evil or not to resist evil by force.
The first course has been tried ever since the
beginning of historical times, and, as we all know, it has not hitherto led to
any successful results.
The second solution--not forcibly to resist what
we consider evil until we have found a universal criterion--that is the solution
given by Christ. We may consider the answer given by Christ unsatisfactory; we
may replace it by another and better, by finding a criterion by which evil could
be defined for all men unanimously and simultaneously; we may simply, like
savage nations, not recognize the existence of the question. But we cannot treat
the question as the learned critics of Christianity do. They pretend either that
no such question exists at all or that the question is solved by granting to
certain persons or assemblies of persons the right to define evil and to resist
it by force. But we know all the while that granting such a right to certain
persons does not decide the question (still less so when the are ourselves the
certain persons), since there are always people who do not recognize this right
in the authorized persons or assemblies.
But this assumption, that what seems evil to us
is really evil, shows a complete misunderstanding of the question, and lies at
the root of the argument of freethinking critics about the Christian religion.
In this way, then, the discussions of my book on the part of Churchmen and
freethinking critics alike showed me that the majority of men simply do not
understand either Christ's teaching or the questions which Christ's teaching
solves.
Top of
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Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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