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orthodoxy-第23部分
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Here is another case of the same kind。 I felt that a strong
case against Christianity lay in the charge that there is something
timid; monkish; and unmanly about all that is called 〃Christian;〃
especially in its attitude towards resistance and fighting。
The great sceptics of the nineteenth century were largely virile。
Bradlaugh in an expansive way; Huxley; in a reticent way;
were decidedly men。 In comparison; it did seem tenable that there
was something weak and over patient about Christian counsels。
The Gospel paradox about the other cheek; the fact that priests
never fought; a hundred things made plausible the accusation
that Christianity was an attempt to make a man too like a sheep。
I read it and believed it; and if I had read nothing different;
I should have gone on believing it。 But I read something very different。
I turned the next page in my agnostic manual; and my brain turned
up…side down。 Now I found that I was to hate Christianity not for
fighting too little; but for fighting too much。 Christianity; it seemed;
was the mother of wars。 Christianity had deluged the world with blood。
I had got thoroughly angry with the Christian; because he never
was angry。 And now I was told to be angry with him because his
anger had been the most huge and horrible thing in human history;
because his anger had soaked the earth and smoked to the sun。
The very people who reproached Christianity with the meekness and
non…resistance of the monasteries were the very people who reproached
it also with the violence and valour of the Crusades。 It was the
fault of poor old Christianity (somehow or other) both that Edward
the Confessor did not fight and that Richard Coeur de Leon did。
The Quakers (we were told) were the only characteristic Christians;
and yet the massacres of Cromwell and Alva were characteristic
Christian crimes。 What could it all mean? What was this Christianity
which always forbade war and always produced wars? What could
be the nature of the thing which one could abuse first because it
would not fight; and second because it was always fighting?
In what world of riddles was born this monstrous murder and this
monstrous meekness? The shape of Christianity grew a queerer shape
every instant。
I take a third case; the strangest of all; because it involves
the one real objection to the faith。 The one real objection to the
Christian religion is simply that it is one religion。 The world is
a big place; full of very different kinds of people。 Christianity (it
may reasonably be said) is one thing confined to one kind of people;
it began in Palestine; it has practically stopped with Europe。
I was duly impressed with this argument in my youth; and I was much
drawn towards the doctrine often preached in Ethical Societies
I mean the doctrine that there is one great unconscious church of
all humanity founded on the omnipresence of the human conscience。
Creeds; it was said; divided men; but at least morals united them。
The soul might seek the strangest and most remote lands and ages
and still find essential ethical common sense。 It might find
Confucius under Eastern trees; and he would be writing 〃Thou
shalt not steal。〃 It might decipher the darkest hieroglyphic on
the most primeval desert; and the meaning when deciphered would
be 〃Little boys should tell the truth。〃 I believed this doctrine
of the brotherhood of all men in the possession of a moral sense;
and I believe it stillwith other things。 And I was thoroughly
annoyed with Christianity for suggesting (as I supposed)
that whole ages and empires of men had utterly escaped this light
of justice and reason。 But then I found an astonishing thing。
I found that the very people who said that mankind was one church
from Plato to Emerson were the very people who said that morality
had changed altogether; and that what was right in one age was wrong
in another。 If I asked; say; for an altar; I was told that we
needed none; for men our brothers gave us clear oracles and one creed
in their universal customs and ideals。 But if I mildly pointed
out that one of men's universal customs was to have an altar;
then my agnostic teachers turned clean round and told me that men
had always been in darkness and the superstitions of savages。
I found it was their daily taunt against Christianity that it was
the light of one people and had left all others to die in the dark。
But I also found that it was their special boast for themselves
that science and progress were the discovery of one people;
and that all other peoples had died in the dark。 Their chief insult
to Christianity was actually their chief compliment to themselves;
and there seemed to be a strange unfairness about all their relative
insistence on the two things。 When considering some pagan or agnostic;
we were to remember that all men had one religion; when considering
some mystic or spiritualist; we were only to consider what absurd
religions some men had。 We could trust the ethics of Epictetus;
because ethics had never changed。 We must not trust the ethics
of Bossuet; because ethics had changed。 They changed in two
hundred years; but not in two thousand。
This began to be alarming。 It looked not so much as if
Christianity was bad enough to include any vices; but rather
as if any stick was good enough to beat Christianity with。
What again could this astonishing thing be like which people
were so anxious to contradict; that in doing so they did not mind
contradicting themselves? I saw the same thing on every side。
I can give no further space to this discussion of it in detail;
but lest any one supposes that I have unfairly selected three
accidental cases I will run briefly through a few others。
Thus; certain sceptics wrote that the great crime of Christianity
had been its attack on the family; it had dragged women to the
loneliness and contemplation of the cloister; away from their homes
and their children。 But; then; other sceptics (slightly more advanced)
said that the great crime of Christianity was forcing the family
and marriage upon us; that it doomed women to the drudgery of their
homes and children; and forbade them loneliness and contemplation。
The charge was actually reversed。 Or; again; certain phrases in the
Epistles or the marriage service; were said by the anti…Christians
to show contempt for woman's intellect。 But I found that the
anti…Christians themselves had a contempt for woman's intellect;
for it was their great sneer at the Church on the Continent that
〃only women〃 went to it。 Or again; Christianity was reproached
with its naked and hungry habits; with its sackcloth and dried peas。
But the next minute Christianity was being reproached with its pomp
and its ritualism; its shrines of porphyry and its robes of gold。
It was abused for being too plain and for being too coloured。
Again Christianity had always been accused of restraining sexuality
too much; when Bradlaugh the Malthusian discovered that it restrained
it too little。 It is often accused in the same breath of prim
respectability and of religious extravagance。 Between the covers
of the same atheistic pamphlet I have found the faith rebuked
for its disunion; 〃One thinks one thing; and one another;〃
and rebuked also for its union; 〃It is difference of opinion
that prevents the world from going to the dogs。〃 In the same
conversation a free…thinker; a friend of mine; blamed Christianity
for despising Jews; and then despised it himself for being Jewish。
I wished to be quite fair then; and I wish to be quite fair now;
and I did not conclude that the attack on Christianity was all wrong。
I only concluded that if Christianity was wrong; it was very
wrong indeed。 Such hostile horrors might be combined in one thing;
but that thing must be very strange and solitary。 There are men
who are misers; and also spendthrifts; but they are rare。 There are
men sensual and also ascetic; but they are rare。 But if this mass
of mad contradictions really existed; quakerish and bloodthirsty;
too gorgeous and too thread…bare; austere; yet pandering preposterously
to the lust of the eye; the enemy of women and their foolish refuge;
a solemn pessimist and a silly optimist; if this evil existed;
then there was in this evil something quite supreme and unique。
For I found in my rationalist teachers no explanation of s
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