REASON AND INGERSOLLISM DOWLING B 27 075 REASON AND INGERSOLLISM. ***-* نے کسی کا چھو خیر ھوں جان کیسے ہو *A*>* * ཏི པ བོ', ' ས མ ་ གར་ཅན་ * ARTES LIBRARY 1837 VERITAS SCIENTIA OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN TUEBOR QUERIS PENINSULAM-AMⱭNAM CIRCUMSPICE LEVI L. BARBOUR BEQUEST ་ ན་ 14 2727 .D75 Compliments of the author to his extramed acquantand Levi L. Barbour Esp. Behirt Apil 25.1884. M. E. Dowling M. E. DOWLING. REASON AND INGERSOLLISM. BY MORGAN E. DOWLING, Author of “Southern Prisons, or Josie, the Heroine of Florence." DETROIT: WILLIAM GRAHAM, PRINTER, 1882. 445 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1882, by MORGAN E. DOWLING, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. ΤΟ THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, HER ARDENT SUPPORTERS AND ZEALOUS DEFENDERS, THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. Bequest of Lir harbour 4-14-26 INTRODUCTION. "If circumstances lead me, I will find Where truth is hid, though it were hid indeed Within the centre of the earth.” The replies heretofore made to Robert G. Ingersoll, have been based principally either upon theology or science, and have strictly adhered to the theory of the divine origin of the Christian Church; while on the other hand, Mr. Ingersoll has stoutly maintained that the Church is merely a human institution. All the discussions, therefore, that have taken place between Mr. Ingersoll and his opponents have been purely of a religious tone and char- acter. The object of this book, is to answer the false and slanderous imputations made 6 INTRODUCTION. against the Church by Mr. Ingersoll, from a new standpoint, by casting aside all discussion of a scientific or theological nature, taking a broad common sense view of the whole sub- ject, basing all that may be said upon facts and reason, and, for the sake of argument, considering the Church simply as a human in- stitution. I write, simply in the interest of truth and justice. I propose to show how far a man may go, and to what extremes he may be carried, when blinded by prejudice, and biased by his opinions, believing himself to be in the right, when in fact, he is all the time in the wrong. And this is the position in which Mr. Ingersoll unfortunately stands in his attitude toward the Church. I do not propose to de- fend the Church. The Church is able to defend She needs no defender. herself. I propose Neither do to abuse Mr. Ingersoll. My argu- INTRODUCTION. ing ment will be founded upon indisputable facts. My chief weapon will be that of majestic reason. I shall not follow Mr. Ingersoll through all his pessimistic ramblings, because such a course would not only be imprudent, but tedious. Neither shall I heed his rhetoric, or observe his hyperbolical statements, which are as unsubstantial as moonbeams. I must also decline to follow him through his many idiosyncrasies, or to respond to his plausible and ingenious, but specious arguments. I shall pass by his false insinuations, innuendoes, and illogical asseverations, because I have no desire to grapple with a thousand phantoms, or to waste my time in scattering a sea of bubbles, that are floated only by the foul air of the most infamous calumnies. My chief aim will be to ascertain the truth to expose Mr. Ingersoll's errors, and in examining what he has to say about the Church, to separate 8 INTRODUCTION. "the gold from the dross, in the sacred cru- cible of reason," and give the unalloyed metal to the people. Mr. Ingersoll has charged the Church with appealing to prejudice. I intend to indicate beyond all controversy, that Mr. Ingersoll has not only resorted to prejudice in his attack upon the Church, but that he has descended to sophistry and slander. There is much in Mr. Ingersoll's utterances that I believe in, and much in his character that I admire. If he were to advocate the reformation of those doctrines of the Church, that are obnoxious to the good sense and intelligence of the age, instead of advocating her abolition or destruction, I should have no words to offer except those of kindness and good cheer. There is no doubt, but that Mr. Ingersoll is one of the greatest living rhetor- icians in America. His wonderful vocabulary, when considered in connection with his inci- INTRODUCTION. sive thrusts, his rare ingenuity, and his great natural endowments and splendid oratorical ability, make him a powerful antagonist. And the prejudice which his eloquence and plaus- ible arguments have created against the Church in the minds of many, have made him the most popular, and the most formidable, as he is certainly the most brilliant of all her opponents. So far as Mr. Ingersoll's opposition to the Church is based upon reason and facts, I en- tirely agree with him. I am opposed to the inquisition, the rack, the thumbscrew, to cruelty in every form, to ignorance, to slav- ery either of the body or the mind, to mon- archy, despotism, and every sort of wrong and oppression. I believe in the greatest freedom of thought and action, and the fullest liberty of the human mind. I hate and de- spise from the bottom of my heart, and with Tributi to Lazercell 10 INTRODUCTION. all my strength, veiled hypocrisy. I detest any man who will fawn or cringe before either priest or king. I admire the man who dares to stand erect before the world, and in the pure air of liberty and independence, ex- press his candid and honest opinions, without either fear or favor. I have nothing but loathing and contempt for the coward. And I execrate with my whole heart, and with my whole soul, that most infamous of all human monsters, the habitual liar. I am the enemy of calumny, slander, and brazen-faced audacity, and I abhor the slimy, serpentine obsequious- ness of the soulless hypocrite. But I believe with Lucretius, the Roman poet and philos- opher, that while "It is a pleasure to stand upon the shore, and to see ships tossed upon the sea; a pleasure to stand in the window of a castle, and to see a battle, and the adventures thereof below; yet no pleasure is comparable INTRODUCTION. 11 to the standing upon the vantage-ground of truth, and to see the errors, and wanderings, and mists, and tempests in the vale below." I believe in truth, wherever it may be found. I believe in it, no matter whether it be dis- covered in the lonely wilderness, in the desert, upon the plains, in the white bosom of the Church, or in the heart of infidelity. ,, Mr. Ingersoll charges the Church with ap- pealing, "Not to reason, but to prejudice; not to facts, but to passages of Scripture." If this be true, Mr. Ingersoll is guilty of a sim- ilar offense. He appeals neither to "reason nor the "facts." I shall prove before I get through that he respects neither. In this regard, I intend to accommodate Mr. Inger- soll, by a strict adherence to both. For I shall not only confine myself to "reason" and the "facts," but I shall not permit him to escape the irresistible force of the former, 12 INTRODUCTION. Purpose Criteria nor evade the incontrovertible truth of the latter. Of course, if I were to assert that the Bible was an inspired work, and the Church a divine institution, these questions would in- evitably involve a polemical discussion, that would be absolutely interminable. This I do not propose to do. I intend, on the contrary, to meet Mr. Ingersoll upon his own ground, and to admit for the sake of argument, that the Bible is simply the work of man, and the Church a human institution. And, having stripped the Bible of its divine origin, and divested the Church of her divine authority, I shall consider the Church simply as a human institution, just as I would any of the other inventions of man, created for social, political or religious purposes, and I shall apply to the Church the same inexorable rules of logic, that I would apply to any other human insti- INTRODUCTION. 13 tution, as the true test of her intellectual genius, her great utility, and her surpassing virtues. And now, having placed myself on the same plane with Mr. Ingersoll: having met the issues which he raises, fairly, and having conceded to Mr. Ingersoll's proposition, that the Church is merely a human institution, I now ask him, what are your grounds of oppo- sition to the Church, considering her, as you do, simply as a human institution ? Mr. Ingersoll replies, that he has good rea- sons for opposing the Church, and he gives us the following: He says, "I am opposed to the Church because: 1. "She is the enemy of liberty. 2. "She fosters ignorance." 3. "She laughs at good works, and resorts to falsehood and slander." 4. "Her pulpit and pews no longer represent the culture and morality of the world." 14 INTRODUCTION. Very well; having stated Mr. Ingersoll's reasons for opposing the Church, let us now proceed to discuss those reasons in the order in which they are specified, that we may ascer- tain whether or not Mr. Ingersoll's opposition to the Church is based either upon "reason or "facts." The reader will bear in mind, of course, that so far as Mr. Ingersoll's opposi- tion to the Church as a divine institution, and the Bible as an inspired book, is concerned, there is to be no discussion in this work. Other writers have discussed the questions involving the divine authority of the Church and the inspiration of the Holy Scriptures. And as Mr. Ingersoll has been fully answered upon these questions, it simply remains for me to inquire, whether or not Mr. Ingersoll's attitude towards the Church can be maintained in the light of surrounding "facts," consider- ing the Church merely as a human institution. INTRODUCTION. 15 Mr. Ingersoll denies the divine authority of the Church. He declares the Church to be nothing but a human institution. And for the sake of argument, I say to Mr. Ingersoll, all right, I will admit that the Church is a human institution. And being such, I ask him why he opposes her? He assigns the reasons I have just mentioned, and now I pro- pose to show that the grounds which he assigns are untenable. If I succeed in supporting my position, it logically follows that Mr. Inger- soll's opposition to the Church is not only un- supported by "reason" and the "facts," but it is based upon specious argument, slander, calumny and invective, and is utterly without foundation. I hold it to be sound logic, and sound rea- son, that when any man undertakes to cry down, to oppose, or to advocate the suppres- sion of any institution established for the use 16 INTRODUCTION. of man, it is not only a right, but a duty, to inquire as to the object and present utility of the institution thus assailed, and into the mo tives of the assailant as well, and the grounds. of his hostility. To begin with, the Church has the vantage ground; she is in possession; she "holds the fort;" her moral value is affirmed by the posi- tion she has held down the line of the ages, and still holds. If Mr. Ingersoll advances to the attack, he must come with force enough to dislodge her, or his attack fails and recoils on his own head. Mr. Ingersoll's war upon the Church is in the nature of an action in ejectment. If he cannot show a clear title he has no standing in court. If he cannot show that the Church, as a mere human insti- tution, produces a preponderance of evil, he must retire discomfited and overwhelmed. On the contrary, if it is shown beyond all dispu- INTRODUCTION. 17 tation that the Church is one of the grandest and most prolific sources of inestimable good, the question very naturally arises, why should such an institution be opposed or abolished? Why should it not be preserved? Would not "reason" and the "facts" demand that it be supported and maintained for the benefit of mankind? If so, the Church is right, and Mr. Ingersoll is wrong. And the former should be sustained, and the objections of the latter exposed and refuted—not on religious grounds, but for the good of society, upon the broad ground of common sense and the welfare of humanity. 18 REASON AND CHAPTER I. No quotes IS THE CHURCH "THE ENEMY OF LIBERTY"? "This is all true. Nay, it is ten times true; for truth is truth To the end of reckoning." Mr. Ingersoll says, the Church is "the enemy of liberty;" but in what respect or particular, or_in_what_country or countries, he has failed to designate. He simply makes the broad assertion. He gives us no evidence of the fact. If he were to name his reasons for making this grave charge, they might be answered specifically. But this he has not done. He makes the imputation, involves it in a cloud of glittering generalities, verifies it by innuendo and ingenious insinuation, and INGERSOLLISM. 19 heralds it forth with a flourish of trumpets, a storm of words, and a whirlwind of rhetoric. Hence I shall have to be somewhat general and rambling in my reply. I shall endeavor, however, to say nothing that is not substanti- ated by the "facts" and history. Wherever, and in all countries where the Christian Church exists, and especially where she is in the ascendancy or numerically in the majority, there will be found the greatest amount of both "physical" and "intellectual" liberty, and the greatest freedom of thought and action. This is true, not only in England, but in France and the United States, and these countries are indisputably the foremost and_most_cnlightened of all other nations. On the other hand, wherever scepticism largely prevails, and especially in communities where it is in the ascendancy, there will be found Nihilism, Communism, and the greatest amount 20 REASON AND of despotism. Wherever, and in all countries. where Christianity prevails, intelligence rules. In all other countries the people are ruled by the iron hand of force and tyranny. In every country and in every land where the Chris- tian Church does not exist, there you will still find man in a semi-barbarous condition, phy- sically and mentally. And why is it? Is it not because in those countries man has not had the advantages which the Church affords, to civilize, to educate, to refine, and to de- velop him intellectually? And is it not true, that where the barbarous nations have had these advantages, it has taken centuries to leven half civilize them? Just as it took cen- turies to civilize the nations that now enjoy Christianity and the highest state of civiliza- tion? When Christianity first bloomed into exist- ence, man was in a state of semi-barbarism. INGERSOLLISM. 22 h 21 Dark Ages? ади Since then he has enjoyed civilization, and civilization has advanced just in proportion to the advancement of Christianity, and with the progress of Christianity man's conven- iences of life have been improved, his power and wealth increased, and his influence for good extended over the broad acres of every nation on the earth. . If the most highly civilized and intelligent people, the most just and reasonable laws, and the broadest liberty, are to be found only in those countries where the Church exists, and in those countries where the church does not exist the people are generally ignorant, Spa, their laws crude and oppressive, and their lisia rulers despots; can it justly be said that the Church is "the enemy of liberty?" If there is no true liberty where there is no Church, if liberty is to be found only where the Church exists, does it not logically follow that the تم 22 REASON AND Church and liberty are friends and not enemics? If both flourish together, while neither exists or flourishes alone to any great extent, there must be some reason for it. What is the reason? The fact is that the Tesis Church and liberty are mutual friends, and wherever they have associated together, cach has aided the other, and accelerated and in- creased the growth and progress of both. Suppose, for instance, that Mr. Ingersoll was to allege that the Czar and government of Russia were the friends of "liberty," and an investigation proved that in Russia there was no "liberty" at all; that at all; that on the con- trary, tyranny reigned there in a greater de- gree than in any other country, would you believe Mr. Ingersoll's assertion? Mr. Inger- soll asserts that the Church is opposed to "liberty," and yet we find that in every country where the Church exists, there INGERSOLLISM. 23 "liberty" is to be seen in all her power and glory; while on the other hand, wherever the Church does not exist, tyranny and slavery prevail. This being the case, does it not logically follow that Mr. Ingersoll's assertion is unsupported by the "facts," and therefore untrue? This evidence proves, if it proves anything, curliving that the Church is the great civilizing power power of the world. It proves, that to her we owe haahberty more for the “liberty” which we enjoy, than weity to any other source or power. {{ If intelli-Qurch's gence, liberty" and civilization, only existsyre in the highest sense where the Church is to be found, what guarantee have we, that if the Church be destroyed, these things which we love and admire more than anything else in the world, will not vanish with her? Is not this nation a Christian nation ? And has not Mr. Ingersoll said that, "All who + 24 REASON AND Why ded Wided The Ploum come stand beneath our banner are free. Ours is the only flag that has in reality written upon it: "Liberty, Fraternity, Equality—the three grandest words in all the languages of men?" Was not this great republic established by Christians? Have we not as a nation, openly declared our belief in Christianity? And have we not inscribed upon the face of the "mighty dollar" of this land, the word "liberty," and upon its back the words "In God we Trust?" Every now and then, in Mr. Ingersoll's attack upon the Church, a grain of truth ac- cidentally drops from his pen and gives a glare of falsehood to his charges against the Church, sufficient to make his soulless bosom heave with mortification and self-contempt. Now, Mr. Ingersoll, what have you to say to these facts? Is there any escape from them? Are they not incontrovertible? And INGERSOLLISM. 25 in a shameful do they not place you in dilemma? If these facts are true, and you were not aware of them, your ignorance is remarkable. If they are true, and you knew it, then you have deliberately and maliciously slandered the holy Church. If the latter is true, you knew when you charged the Church with be- ing "the enemy of liberty," that you 'wrote across the forehead of your reputation the word liar," and at the same time added insult to the injured feelings of millions of Christian people. It became a question at one time among the Romans, as to whether or not a person was justified in telling a lie. Cicero, the great Roman orator, discussed the question in pub- lic, before the people, and the conclusion arrived at was, that in all cases where a person could tell a lie without injuring any- 26 REASON AND Roman one and profit thereby himself, he was just- ified in doing so, but that in all other cases it was wrong and despicably wicked to tell a lie. Perhaps, Mr. Ingersoll will justify his position, upon the ground that it was utterly impossible that anything he might say against. the Church, could in any way harm her, while on the other hand, he could acquire a large fortune by lying about her. There can be no question, but that civiliz - ation and liberty have always, and must always dizate be found together. Whatever promotes the Dark love sone Age Appeal Xe stimulates and helps to perpetuate and invigorate the other. It is impossible that they should live apart. The natural order of things unites them. Wherever the highest nature lawrate of civilization is found, there also will be found the greatest amount of liberty. And wherever there is no civilization, liberty is unknown. To promote civilization therefore, Currization Byzantium high but libert за is low CORPORASLE ST INGERSOLLISM. 27 is to promote the cause of liberty. If it can be shown that the Church has in the highest degree promoted civilization, it naturally fol- lows that she has worked to promote liberty. In order to comprehend what the Church has done to promote civilization, it will be necessary to briefly review a little of her past history. The first four centuries of the existence of the Christian Church constitute one of the most remarkable periods in her whole career. "Never were its trials greater, or its triumphs more glorious. It was buffeted by tempests so mighty and so terrible, that if it had been a mere human society, it must inevitably have become a wreck. From an object of loathing and contempt, emerging from the waves of the most terrible persecutions, covered with the blood of its martyrs," at the close of the fourth century, "it became an object of royal 28 REASON AND patronage,—fostered, nourished, adorned, and richly endowed by the munificence of one of the most powerful monarchs that ever ruled the Roman empire." Through these dark ages the Church not only survived the innumerable conflicts in which she was engaged, but she made won- She built without number, to detunetterful progress. of serat Progress C) Religious civilized nations. A high regard was paid to some of the most magnificent churches. "She Christianized numerous barbarous and un- Wars learning; the human mind was cultivated. onl morasteres عال Reyted Unsuical Schools were encouraged and their number greatly increased. Libraries were endowed and multiplied, and the study of the fine arts and philosophy was patronized with a noble and generous spirit." "In this state we find the church at the conclusion of the fourth century. Her tri- umphs over all her foes; her continued growth INGERSOLLISM. 29 amidst the combined and deadly oppression of Jews, infidels, and heathen; the fact of her growing with renewed vigor after being del- uged with the fires of persecution; the firm- ness with which she endured the dangerous shock of internal foes,-all these things com- bined must have impressed the minds of intel ligent unbelievers with the utter futility of any human attempts to destroy the Church, or even arrest her progress. "" Thus it was that the Christian Church con- tinued her conquests. She found the people of Europe in a state of barbarism; she con- verted them to Christianity and lifted them up to a civilized condition, and made nations of them. The first dawn of a higher civilization was the establishment of Christianity, which "be- fore the close of the tenth century was the -dominant religion in all the western, central, 30 REASON AND and southern parts of Europe save Spain," and all the "beneficent changes since its ap- pearance in the world have occurred under its dominion." The immense power and influ- ence of the Church, in the civilization and advancement of man, cannot be successfully disputed. The Church has gradually elevated man to the high plain of intellectual develop- ment which he now occupies. Next came the crusades, instituted by the Church in the eleventh century, to rescue the Holy Land from the Saracens, which was the means of promoting a higher civilization. The crusades of course, were carried on at the sac- rifice of hundreds of thousands of lives, and maintained with a brutality unsurpassed in history, but their final effect upon civilization was magical and of inestimable value to the "The crusades brought the people This redentafe The Crusa Open West Europe world. 1 posslichto Europe together, enabled those of the more малювалее . INGERSOLLISM. 31 backward districts to learn from the more civilized, stimulated industry, diffused skill in the useful arts, developed man's genius, made a demand for shipping, enriched many of the Italian republics, strengthened the towns, weakened the feudal system, and prepared the way for the consolidation of the leading na- tionalities." It is true these things were ob- tained, by a great sacrifice of human life. But the ultimate benefit to mankind will show that the sacrifice was well made. The liberty And of Englishmen, the freedom of Americans, and the establishment of the French Republic, cost hundreds of thousands of lives. yet, who will say that mankind has not been benefited by the sacrifice? The bloody horrors of the late Rebellion between the North and the South, threw this whole nation into mourning and tears. But that Rebellion placed all men equal before the law. It 32 REASON AND destroyed slavery, and gave liberty to millions of human souls. Guizot, in speaking of the crusades in his History of Civilization," says: (( Such, in my opinion, are the real effects of the crusades: Tigancipation on the one hand the extension of ideas and the emancipation of thought; on the other a Thought general enlargement of the social sphere, and the opening of a wider field for every sort of activity; they produced, at the same time, more individual freedom and more political unity. They tended to the independence of man and the centralization of society. Many inquiries have been made respecting the means of civilization which were directly im- ported from the East. It has been said that the largest part of the great discoveries which, in the course of the fourteenth and fif teenth centuries, contributed to the progress of European civilization-such as the compass, INGERSOLLISM. 33 printing, and gunpowder-were known in the East, and that the Crusaders brought them into Europe. This is true to a certain extent; though some of these assertions may be dis- puted. But what cannot be disputed is this influence, this general effect of the crusades. upon the human mind on the one hand, and the state of society on the other. They drew society out of a very narrow road and threw it into new and infinitely broader paths; they began that transformation of the various elements of European society into govern- ments and nations, which is the characteristic ,, didi "Yes, ball from Exteyon Shimulus of modern civilization. Then came the dawn of a still higher and mightier civilization, in that grand event called the Reformation, which was one of the sublimest uprisings in the whole history of the human race. The Reformation, has undoubt- edly been of inestimable value to society and 3 34 REASON AND the world. It promoted civilization. It pro- moted the welfare of society. It developed and how the human mind. had superstitions come in: It made men more liberal. destroyed in a measure, superstition. It created a revolution in religious belief, which in importance, was unquestionably of equal value to mankind, to that of the various revolutions that have changed the forms of governments. During the three centuries preceding the Reformation, there were three serious popular rebellions against the Church of Rome. The first was that of the Albigenses, in South France, in the thirteenth century. The next was that of Wycliffe, in England, in the four- teenth century. The third was that of Huss, in Bohemia, in the first quarter of the fifteenth century. These several rebellions against the Church finally culminated in the Reformation. Protestantism therefore, is the out-growth INGERSOLLISM. 35 of Catholicism, just as Christianity was the outgrowth of Judaism. what about Since the Reformation, both the Catholic and Protestant Churches have become more liberal in their views and teachings, espe- cially the latter. And as Protestantism is the out-growth of Catholicism, so are Unitarian- ism and Universalism, the offspring of Pro- testantism. The rapid development of the bio human mind, since the Reformation, and the subsequent liberal view; engendered thereby, have destroyed the temporal and political power of the Church, and the doctrine of separation of Church and state is now fully confirmed and accepted. Thus it will be seen, that the first step towards a higher civilization, was the establish- ment of the Christian Church. Then came the crusades, instituted by the Church, and then came the Reformation of the Church by her Reparosance was a secular influence reacting agat. азар: 36 REASON AND own members; the confirmation of the right of private judgment, and the modification and liberalization of Church doctrines. All of which contributed largely to the amelioration of man's condition, his mental development, his independence, and his advancement to a higher life, and a nobler state of civilization. Of course, the Church like all other human institutions, has not always been free from error. She has often supported principles that were not the most legitimate and salu- tary. But who can say that the course she has pursued has not only promoted civiliz- ation, but inured to the general welfare and prosperity of mankind? Mr. Guizot points out very distinctly the utility of the Church in this direction. He says: "A single glance will be sufficient to convince us, that there existed in the fifth century an immense difference between the state of the Church INGERSOLLISM. 37 and that of the other elements of European civilization. You will remember that I have pointed out, as primary elements of our civil- ization, the municipal system, the feudal sy stem, monarchy, and the Church. The municipal system, in the fifth century, was no more than a fragment of the Roman empire, a shadow without life, or definite form. The feudal system was still a chaos. Monarchy existed only in name. All the civil elements in modern society were either in their decline or infancy. The Church alone possessed youth and vigor; she alone possessed at the same time a definite form, with activity and strength; she alone possessed at once movement and order, energy and system; that is to say, the two greatest means of influence. Is it not, let me ask you, by mental vigor, by intel- lectual movement on one side, and by order and discipline on the other, that all institu- 38 REASON AND tions acquire their power and influence over society? The Church, moreover, awakened attention to, and agitated all the great ques- tions which interest man; she busied herself with all the great problems of his nature, with all he had to hope or fear for futurity. Hence her influence upon modern civilization has been so powerful-more powerful, per- haps, than its most violent adversaries, or its most zealous defenders, have supposed. They, eager to advance or abuse her, have only regarded the Church in a contentious point of view; and with that contracted spirit which controversy engenders, how could they do her justice, or grasp the full scope of her sway? ,, "To us, the Church, in the fifth century, appears as an organized and independent society, interposed between the masters of the world, the sovereigns, the possessors of INGERSOLLISM. 39 temporal power, and the people, serving as a connecting link between them, and exercising its influence over all." "In a word, the government of the Church did not, like our modern governments, direct her attention to the outward man, or to the purely civil relations of men among them- selves; she addressed herself to the inward man, to the thought, to the conscience; in fact, to that which of all things is most hidden and secure, most free, and which spurns the least restraint. The Church, then, by the very nature of its undertaking, combined with the nature of some of the principles - upon which its government was founded, stood in great peril of falling into tyranny; of an ille- gitimate employment of force. In the mean- time this force was encountered by a resist- ance within the Church itself, which it could never overcome. Human thought and liberty, 40 REASON AND ! however fettered, however confined for room and space in which to exercise their faculties, oppose with so much energy every attempt to enslave them, that their re-action makes even despotism itself to yield, and give up something every moment. This took place in the very bosom of the Christian Church. We have seen heresy proscribed; the right of free inquiry condemned; a contempt shown for individual reason; the principle of the impera- tive transmission of doctrines by human au- thority established. And yet where can wel find a society in which individual reason more boldly developed itself than in the Church? What are sects and heresies, if not the fruit of individual opinions? These sects, these heresies, all these oppositions which arose in the Christian Church, are the most decisive proof of the life and moral activity which reigned within her; a life stormy, painful, INGERSOLLISM. 41 sown with perils, with errors and crimes-yet splendid and mighty, and which has given place to the noblest developments of intelli- gence and mind. But leaving the opposition, and looking to the ecclesiastical government itself how does the case stand here? You will find it constituted, you will find it acting, in a manner quite opposite to what you would expect from some of its principles. It denies the right of inquiry, it wishes to deprive indi- vidual reason of its liberty; yet it appeals to reason incessantly; practical liberty actually predominates in its affairs. What are its in- stitutions, its means of action? Provincial councils, national councils, general councils; a perpetual correspondence, a perpetual pub- lication of letters, of admonitions, of writings. No government ever went so far in discus- sions and open deliberations. One might fancy one's self in the midst of the philosoph- 42 REASON AND ical schools of Greece. But it was not here a mere discussion, it was not a simple search. after truth that here occupied the attention; it was questions of authority, of measures to be taken, of decrees to be drawn up, in short, the business of a government. Such indeed was the energy of intellectual life in the bosom of this government, that it became its pre- dominant, universal character; to this all others gave way, and that which shone forth from all its parts was the exercise of reason · and liberty.' 99 "Having now run over the principal points to which I wished to draw attention respect- ing the relations of the Church to the people; having now considered it under the three aspects which I proposed to do, we know it within and without; in its interior constitu- tion, and in its twofold relations with society. It remains with us to deduce from what we INGERSOLLISM. 43 No have learned by way of inference, by way of conjecture, its general influence upon Euro- pean civilization. This is almost done at our hands. The simple recital of the facts of the predominant principles of the Church, both reveals and explains its influence; the results have in a manner been brought before us with the causes. If however, we endeavor to sum them up, we shall be led, I think, to two general conclusions." "The first is, that the Church has exercised a vast and important influence upon the moral and intellectual order of Europe; upon the notions, sentiments, and manners of society. This fact is evident; the intellectual and moral progress of Europe has been essen- tially theological. Look at its history from up to 3th cent Kat before the fifth to the sixteenth century, and you'll tur will find that theology has possessed and directed the human mind; every idea is маша dubrovs wall REASON AND 44 impressed with theology; every question that has been started, whether philosophical, pol- itical, or historical, has been considered in a religious point of view. So powerful, indeed, has been the authority of the Church in mat- ters of intellect, that even the mathematical Toranges and physical sciences have been obliged to of heresy submit to its doctrines. The spirit of theology quates has been as it were, the blood which has cir- родил byver with phas culated in the veins of the European world goodness down to the time of Bacon and Descartes. Bacon in England and Descartes in France, were the first who carried the human mind. out of the pale of theology." "We shall find the same fact hold if we travel through the regions of literature; the habits, the sentiments, the language of theo- logy there show themselves at every step." "This influence, taken together, has been salutary. It not only kept up and ministered INGERSOLLISM. 45 to the intellectual movement in Europe, but the system of doctrines and precepts, by whose authority it stamped its impress upon that movement, was incalculably superior to any which the ancient world had known.' 19 "The influence of the Church, moreover, has given to the development of the human mind, in our modern world, an extent and variety which it never possessed elsewhere. In the East, intelligence was altogether religious; among the Greeks, it was almost exclusively human: there human culture-humanity, pro- perly so called, its nature and destiny- actually disappeared; here it was man alone, his passions, his feelings, his present interests, which occupied the field. In our world the spirit of religion mixes itself with all, but excludes nothing. Human feelings, human interests, occupy a considerable space in every branch of our literature; yet the religious 46 REASON AND character of man, that portion of his being which connects him with another world, ap- pears at every turn in them all. Could modern intelligence assume a visible shape, we should recognize at once, in its mixed character, the finger of man and the finger of God. Thus the two great sources of human development, humanity and religion, have been open at the same time and flowed in plenteous streams. Notwithstanding all the evil, all the abuses, which may have crept into the Church-notwithstanding all the acts. of tyranny of which she has been guilty, we must still acknowledge her influence upon the progress and culture of the human intellect to have been beneficial; that she has assisted in its development rather than its compression, in its extention rather than its confinement." Thus it will be seen, that from the establish- ment of the Christian Church down to the INGERSOLLISM. 47 twelfth century, she was always active, pro- gressive, and her influence upon the affairs of the world, and the advancement of civiliza- tion from the earliest times, as well as the intellectual development of man, has been very great. From the twelfth century to the Reformation it was still greater. The influ- ence of her teachings upon the morals of man- kind and for the general good of humanity, has been something immeasurable. have "alleviated the horrors of war." have "moderated the insolence of conquest.' They They 19. They have done more to preserve the peace and equilibrium of the world, than all the institutions that now exist or that have ever existed. Besides, it is impossible to deny the immense superiority of the "notions of the dubious Church in matters of jurisprudence, justice, witness and legislation, in all relating to the dis-Sev severity & Oral codes covery of truth, and a knowledge of human ga yu Capital unschmen 48 REASON AND nature," and the great benefits her learning upon these subjects have conferred upon the human race. And if we consider the work of the Church from the time of the Reformation down to the present day, we will find that it has surpassed all former ages. The Reformation of itself has benefited mankind more than any other thing that ever took place among men. It is the happiest and sublimest event in the whole history of man. It gave an impulse to human thought and action such as the world never enjoyed before. It is the crowning glory of man's highest achievements. And strange to relate, this grand event was brought about by Christians. It was the work of that genius which the Church had nurtured and devel- oped in man. Protestantism has been to the Christian world, in some respects, what Christianity was to the Pagan. And it can- INGERSOLLISM. 49 not be disputed, that mankind has made greater progress under Christianity as a form of religion, than any other that ever cxisted. As an illustration of the wonderful influ- ence of the Church, as a civilizing power, let us take a simple example. Here is a small settlement in the backwoods, consisting we will say of about thirty or fifty families, scattered over a large area of territory. Upon examination, it will be discovered that the social, physical and mental condition of these people, is but little removed from that of the semi-barbarian. Build a church among these people, and that church will soon have a library and a school. The people are now brought together and formed into a society, which affords them ample opportunity to ex- change their views on all topics of interest. The people gradually begin to think, to read, to change their manners, their dress, to culti- 4 50 REASON AND vate themselves. formation of a town. Plans are drawn up for the Soon the modern style house takes the place of the log-cabin. Streets are opened, trees are set out, gardens are made, lawns and flowers appear. After a while a railroad is built. Telegraphic com- munication is then established with the metro- is started. polis of the State. In a few years a newspaper Then debating societies and social clubs are organized on every hand for social entertainments. The current literature of the times is now to be found in almost every house in the community. The people become refined and elegant in their manners and tastes. They are industrious, frugal, pros- perous and happy. What but a few years ago was simply a disorganized settlement of a rude, uncultivated people, has been suddenly transformed into that of an intelligent, enterprising, well-regulated, flourishing town, Sus Chined not one as bastion of wilzation - butger ongenater of all civilizing secular influences. целя INGERSOLLISM. 51 whose inhabitants are refined, well educated, and enjoy all the conveniences of the highest civilization. And all this is the result of planting a church in their midst. But there is still another fact which proves conclusively that the Church is not "the enemy of liberty." It will not be disputed that intelligence and liberty are inseparable. That wherever you find the greatest amount of intelligence, there will be found the great- est amount of liberty. Mr. Ingersoll admits agera так Mr. Ingersoll admits used himself that "liberty is the child of intelliati gence. The Church, considered as ruleducation "" educational institution, is absolutely peerless. Finkeld di not flourd Sind the Men--it If the Church was opposed to liberty, would she not be opposed to education? Education promotes intelligence; intelligence promotes liberty. And if she was opposed to education, do you suppose she would support tens of thousands of schools, colleges, seminaries, and лал اللہ 52 REASON AND the myriad of other institutions of learning, which she fosters and maintains, with the greatest zeal and jealousy, and the most ostentatious pride? It seems to me, that further argument would be superfluous. I have shown that the Chris- tian Church found man in a state of barbarism. That wherever he became converted to Chris- tianity, he became civilized. That wherever he has failed to embrace Christianity, he still remains in a semi-barbarous condition. That from the hour of his conversion down to the present day, his life has been one of progress. That under the influence of the Christian Church, man has lifted himself up to a higher state of civilization and progress than he ever enjoyed before. His progress has been slow, it is true, but yet he has accomplished more in nineteen hundred years, under the guidance and influence of the Christian Church, than INGERSOLLISM. 53 he did in all the millions of centuries which preceded her birth. I have shown that wherever the highest intelligence, the great- est amount of liberty, the best laws, and the best governments exist, there Christianity predominates. That education promotes in- telligence, that intelligence promotes civiliza- tion, that civilization promotes liberty, and that the Church always has been and is now the most ardent supporter of all. Not strictly in accordance with the notions of Mr. Inger- soll perhaps, but the fact is nevertheless. incontestably true. And for the intellectual development of man, the advanced state of civilization and the glorious liberty which man now enjoys, we owe more to the Christian Church, than to all other human institutions. This subject involves a series of mighty questions. Questions upon which the warm- est friends of the Church, as well as the most : 54 REASON AND earnest investigators and lovers of truth, might honestly differ in their opinions. But the "facts," circumstances, and "reason, clearly indicate, that whatever have been, or are the faults of the Church, she never has been, nor is she now, "the enemy of liberty," either in a "physical" or "intellectual" sense. But this is not all. Has Mr. Ingersoll for- gotten that little episode that took place in England in the beginning of the thirteenth century, between the English barons and King John? Has he forgotten how the barons wrenched "liberty" from the grasp of this haughty tyrant? And that too, at a time when England was under a cloud of ignor- ance and tyranny, and the benighted people of Europe enjoyed about as much "liberty" as a horde of savages. Who was it that led the English barons when they arose in arms Chust №1200 years after Quit Now, de adouts a wouversal stats of ignorance } 11 11 C min The Barons in the Abbey of St. Edmund's Swearing upon the Altar of the Church to obtain the Great Charter, the Foundation of English Liberty. 2017 INGERSOLLISM 55 แ against King John and compelled him to sign Magna Charta," the foundation of the liber- mysinterpret ties of Englishman? Was he an infidel, or a member of the Christian Church? Was not the first meeting that was held by the barons Mana Charter to decide upon a plan to secure English liberty, held at St. Paul's? Did not Arch- bishop Langton address the barons at that meeting and produce before them the charter Did not this same of Henry the First? bishop threaten King John with "excommu- nication if he assailed his subjects by any but due process of law?" And when the barons subsequently met at the abbey of St. Edmunds, did they not each take a solemn oath, with their hands placed upon the altar of the Church, to withdraw their allegiance to King John if he rejected their claims, and to levy war upon him, till he should grant them? Did not the barons proclaim themselves and their 56 REASON AND adherents in this historical struggle for liberty, to be "the army of God and of the holy church," and with Robert Fitz-Walter as their commander, force the King to accede to their demands at the point of the sword? If Mr. Ingersoll will only take the trouble to examine history, he will discover that instead of the Church being "the enemy of liberty" the champions of liberty first met in her sacred temple, and that liberty herself "crowned and jeweled" was born upon her holy altar. But Mr. Ingersoll has said, that man has progressed and obtained his liberty, despite the efforts of the Church to keep him in a state of slavery and mental darkness. I deny that the Church has tried to keep man in either slavery or ignorance. If this were true, why is it that man has progressed so much more rapidly since the establishment of и 57 дрі INGERSOLLISM. man's the Church than he did before? And if it is true that the Church has always tried to keep man in ignorance, why was it that man pro- gressed so slowly before the Church was established, and so rapidly since? Is it not a strange coincidence, that the inception of 's progress, should have been contempo- raneous with the birth of Christianity? That during all the millions of ages before that event, man was unable to lift himself above a state of semi-barbarism, or throw off the yoke of ignorance and slavery? And if the Church is the enemy of progress, is it not a singular chculou fact that man has progressed only in Christian denus all countries? And why is it that man remainsror progress in the same state of semi-barbarism to-day that he did when the Church was first insti- tuted, in every country where Christianity has not been adopted by him? The truth is, that "liberty" finds no resting place in heathen or 58 REASON AND barbarous lands. Her place of abode is to be found only in Christian countries. She feeds and thrives upon Christianity. Her susten- ance is the Christian Church. Her resting place her sacred bosom. She worships at her august shrine, and bows with imperial gran- deur before her majestic throne. 1. Aumerous historical omissions of 2. Completed snorer Classical Civil 3. Reverses value of Crusades- & ignores Dark Ages. х INGERSOLLISM. 59 CHAPTER II. DOES THE CHURCH "FOSTER IGNORANCE"? "Truth crushed to earth shall rise again." Mr. Ingersoll says, that he opposes the Church because "She fosters ignorance." I deny the charge most emphatically. Mr. Ingersoll makes this imputation against the Church in the same sweeping general way that he has all the other charges which he has This made against her, without stating a single oss fact to support it. The charge, therefore, is erros a mere assertion. If there were any facts почет upon which to base the imputation, they fall's all Jack 9 lectives 60 REASON AND should have been given. And it is but rea- sonable to suppose that Mr. Ingersoll would have produced them if they existed. Had this been done, then the denial could have been made specifically. As it is, I am placed under the necessity of disproving an allega- tion that has not been proved, and has no existence, except in the luminous imagination of Mr. Ingersoll. Suppose as an illustration, that Mr. Stupid- ity should be discourteous enough to call Mr. Ingersoll an ass, nobody would believe for a moment that Mr. Ingersoll was an ass, without some proof to sustain the charge. And yet, Mr. Ingersoll expects everybody to believe that the Church "fosters ignorance" without giving us a single fact to prove it, simply because he makes the imputation. Of course, if Mr. Stupidity was to actually prove that Mr. Ingersoll was a quadruped of the genus INGERSOLLISM. 61 equus, and had a peculiarly harsh bray, long slouching ears, and was dull and slow, but sure-footed, this would shift the burden of proof upon Mr Ingersoll. And if he failed to indicate that the facts shown by Mr. Stupidity were false, it is clear that the charge would have to be sustained. To be sure there are a few men in this world who would not believe Mr. Ingersoll was an ass upon this proof, even if it were uncontradicted, but they are few in number, and belong to that school of eminently wise and eccentric indiv- iduals, who doubt everything, believe nothing, and are known as skeptics. When Mr. Inger- soll produces the proof to support the charge that the Church "fosters ignorance" the bur- den of the proof will be shifted upon the Church, but until he does, the world must inevitably consider the charge as a false, malicious, and absurd assertion. Basic assumpten is that dagersall produces no proof for des charges 62 REASON AND Thus it will be seen, that it is just as easy for Mr. Ingersoll to charge the Church with "fostering ignorance," as it would be for Mr. Stupidity to call Mr. Ingersoll an ass. But in either case, if the proof is called for, the falsity of the charge becomes apparent at once, even to the dullest comprehension. It is a universal law, that if a man is. apprehended on the charge of murder, or for any other offense, on the trial a prima facie case must be made out against him, by the introduction of competent testimony, before he is obliged to offer any testimony in his de- fense. If this cannot be done, his case is sum- marily dismissed by the Court for the want of sufficient evidence. Now, Mr. Ingersoll has produced no evidence to sustain this charge. against the Church, and in accordance with the general rule, the Church should be dis- missed. But Mr. Ingersoll says, "No, I will INGERSOLLISM. 63 make the Church an an exception to the general rule, I have made the charge and you must prove her innocence." Very well sir, I will give you the proof. That education is the chief enemy of ignor- ance, is too conspicuous and refulgent a truth for any rational being to even momentarily dispute it. If it can be shown therefore, that the Church promotes education, it logically and inevitably follows, that she does not "foster ignorance." Now, what what are are the "facts"? Let us take a single Christian country. Let us see what the Christian people of the United States are doing to "foster ignorance." In the United States I find that we have to-day: 358 Universities and Colleges. 125 Theological Seminaries. 106 Medical Schools. 50 Law Schools. 64 REASON AND 159 Kindergarten Schools. 156 Normal Schools. 129 Commercial Schools. 76 Schools of Science. 30 Schools for the Blind. 68 Reform Schools. 96,585 Churches. 76,300 Ministers and Priests. 577 Instructors of Theology. 272,686 School Teachers. 1,227 Normal School Teachers. 82,261 Sunday Schools. 886,000 Sunday School Teachers. 200,000 Common Schools. 100 Public Libraries that contain from 25,000 to 260,000 vols., and about 4,000 Small Public Libraries. The Theological Schools have 4,320 stu- dents. 6,623,124 children attend the Sunday schools. And 9,424,086 children attend our INGERSOLLISM. 65 schools and academies. It costs $100,000,000 a year to run our public schools alone. This is what 38,000,000 of Christians are doing in the United States to crush ignorance, and Besides stamp out everything that fosters it. all this, think of the innumerable bible classes, debating societies, literary and reading clubs, religious newspapers, magazines, and publish- ing companies that exist in the United States, that have been organized by the Church for the purpose of circulating Church literature, and the general dissemination of knowledge. These institutions are all supported either directly by the Church or her adherents, and all of them have grown up under her magical power and educational influence. But Mr. Ingersoll may say that he referred more particularly to the Catholic Church. In 1875, the Catholic Church in this country supported and maintained at her own expense 5 66 REASON AND thirty-three theological seminaries, sixty-three colleges, five hundred and fifty-seven acad- amies and select schools, and sixteen hundred and forty-five parochial schools. And these institutions are not supported and kept up for the purpose of making skeptics of a few educated men, but for the general diffusion of knowledge among the masses of the people, for the purpose of making them better citizens and teaching them charity and humanity among men. Upon this question the Church cordially shakes hands with Mr. Ingersoll and exclaims, "Give me the storm and tempest of of thought and action, rather than the dead calm of ignorance," and in support of this sen- timent, she is building schools all over the world. What are the infidels doing in this direction? any schools? Nothing. Not one! Are they building And it is a well-known fact, that the pro- INGERSOLLISM. 67 for years testants of this country have for advocated an amendment to the constitution of the United States, by which the mainten- ance of our public schools shall be made man- datory under the organic law of the " queen of nations." Now, Mr. Ingersoll, how many schools have been established in this country by infidels? And where are they? Is it not a fact that most of the children of infidels are educated either in our public schools or in colleges established and supported by Christians? And why is it that more schools and institu- tions of learning are to be found in Christian countries than in countries that are not Chris- tian? Is it because the Christian Church "fosters ignorance"? Why is it that the most intelligent people in the world are to be found in Christian countries? While the most ignorant people are to be found in 68 REASON AND those countries that have not as yet been Christianized? Why is it, if it be true that the Church "fosters ignorance," that the people of those countries where the Church does not exist, are not more enlightened? Why is it, that they do not throw off the yoke of ignorance and make some progress? The Church found man in a state of ignorance and slavery. She has severed the bond that held him in ignorance. She has broken the man- acles that bound him in slavery. She found him in a state of semi-barbarism, she has civil- ized him, educated him, mantled him with the royal robe of liberty and crowned him like a god. Of course, the world has produced a great many infidel writers. some of whom were men of extensive learning and splendid genius, every one of whom I respect and admire. But what have these men done in the cause of Church is pumary Educational influen INGERSOLLISM. 69 education, and for the suppression of ignor-A read Why weren't of Kensorship Trepression ance? They were mostly philosophical or scientific writers, who wrote upon subjects that were studied only by scholars. How many of their books were ever written for or read by the masses of the people? The great masses of the people, the teeming millions who labor outside of the professions, are educated either in the public schools, or the schools established by the Christian Church. They know nothing whatever about your famous infidel authors, and have received no substantial benefit from their literary produc- tions, except in a very indirect and remote way. Their books may have enlarged the minds of scholars, but they have done com- paratively nothing to suppress ignorance among the uneducated masses of the people. If it were not for the Church and her in- fluence as an educational, refining and moral- 70 REASON AND izing institution, man's condition to-day would be but little removed from that of the wild beast or the untutored savage. As long ago as the days when Rome and Greece flourished and softly basked in the sunlight of their pros- perity and splendor, the skeptics talked just as they do now. They were going to work wonders and reform the world, but as yet they have accomplished nothing, and the daz- zling fame and glittering grandeur of Rome and Greece have gone, and our ancient skeptical friends have quietly passed away. The Church alone remains. Not in a state of decay, but in all the freshness and beauty of her youth, "in the full meridian of her glory," shedding the lustre of a new born star upon the millions of people who support and admire her. Now, Mr. Ingersoll, what have you to say to these "facts"? Are they not notorious INGERSOLLISM. 71 and indisputable? they not prove beyond all controversy, that instead of the Church "fostering ignorance' she is using her whole power and influence to suppress it? And this being true, do "" Mr. Ingersoll says, that "when people read they begin to reason, and when they reason they progress. If Mr. Ingersoll ever ex- pects to discover his own ignorance, he must soon commence to read. And it is to be hoped that he will then begin to reason and progress He is almost as ancient in his ideas as the man who paddled the "dugout" was in his, during the dark ages when the intellect of man was under a cloud. Certainly he has given no new ideas to the world. But Mr. Ingersoll is in the habit of saying a good many things and he sometimes forgets what he has said. In his lecture on "The he says, "Every school-house is a Ghosts" he says, 72 REASON AND temple. Education is the most radical thing in the world. To teach the alphabet is to inaugurate a revolution. To build a school- house is to construct a fort. Every library is an arsenal filled with the weapons and am- munition of progress, and every fact is a monitor with sides of iron and a turret of steel." Mr. Ingersoll first charges the Church with "fostering ignorance," and then relieves himself of this sudden burst of eloquence to prove that consistency is a jewel. Was stu- pidity ever more pure and simple? Is Mr. Ingersoll really in ignorance of the fact, that the Church has colleges and schools? That she has taught and is now teaching the "alph- abet" to millions of people? Does he not know that the Church, or her adherents, has erected "temples," "constructed forts," and built "arsenals" all over this broad and glorious land? Does he not know, what INGERSOLLISM. 73 everybody knows, that the surface of this Nation's domain, is studded with these em- blems of education, even as the vault of heaven is studded with luminous stars? One would think to hear him talk that he did not, and yet it is a fact, as absolutely impregnable as "a monitor with sides of iron and a turret of steel." The Church as a social institution is also a great educator. She brings the people to- gether at her social meetings, makes them acquainted with one another, and thereby affords them ample opportunity to exchange their ideas and impart their views on all subjects. Many other things might be mentioned to show that the Church does not "foster ignor- ance," but on the contrary is doing all that lies in her power to suppress it. But I think what I have already said will suffice to satisfy 174 REASON AND even the most fastidious, that Mr. Ingersoll's position is again untenable and must remain so until he gives us something more substantial to support it, than a mere assertion, "adorned with glittering embellishments;" an assertion born of hatred and bigotry, narrow-minded in its conception, fostered by ignorance and malice, proclaimed to the world in thundering tones and impotent threats, with all the art of an ostentatious declaimer; and yet, as harm- less as the roaring of the sea, as vapory as the air, as destitute of sense and meaning as the ravings of a maniac, and as ranting and as rambling as the incoherent speech of a brainless auctioneer, or the perennial song of the impecunious hawker of galvanized wares. INGERSOLLISM. 775 CHAPTER III. IS IT TRUE THAT THE CHURCH "LAUGHS AT GOOD WORKS AND RESORTS TO FALSEHOOD AND SLANDER"? "Think not, the good, The gentle deeds of mercy thou hast done, Shall die forgotten all; the poor, the pris'ner, The fatherless, the friendless, and the widow, Who daily own the bounty of thy hand, Shall cry to Heaven and pull a blessing on thee." This is the most ludicrous, as well as the most absurd and malicious, of all the charges made by Mr. Ingersoll against the Christian Church. The utter falsity of the charge, that the Church "laughs at good works," is too apparent to need answering and might very appropriately be treated with silent contempt. But Mr. Ingersoll has displayed such remark- able ignorance in all that he has said regard- 76 REASON AND ing the Church, that it is not unlikely his ig- norance upon this theme is just as dense and inexcusable, as it has proved to be on all other questions concerning the Church. And while Mr. Ingersoll does not deem the Church worthy of any respect or consideration at his hands, it would be very unchristianlike for me to do otherwise than to throw the mantle of charity over his faults, and treat him with the same courtesy that is due to all other anti- religious maniacs who have become blinded by their prejudice, and biased by their opinions, by respectfully pointing out his mis- takes, that he may behold his errors in the the mirror of his own stupidity. Has Mr. Ingersoll never heard of the Sisters of Charity, and the numerous charitable institutions over which they preside? Does he not know that they have vowed to devote their natural lives to the cause of His tons become increasingly Janatie INGERSOLLISM. ry ry charity and humanity? Has he never heard of their visiting the poor and afflicted in our crowded cities? Has he never heard of their taking care of the sick during the most virulent epidemics? Has he never heard of their heroic deeds, in our hospitals, in our almshouses, in our prisons, and among the wounded and dying on the glorious field of battle? Does he not know that every church provides for a large portion of the indigent and unfortunate who belong to it? Has he never heard of an Orphan Asylum? Has he never heard of a Home for the aged and decrepit who are helpless and unable to take care of themselves? Can he deny the fact that during the winter season, almost every church forms a charitable society, for the purpose of raising means to aid the needy? Has he never heard of a "Woman's Home or a "Home" for "innocent babes"? Does he not 78 REASON AND know that the Church, of all institutions, is the most charitable? And that leaving out of the account her work for the salvation of souls, she exists only to do good, to assist the unfortunate and to aid and comfort the op- pressed? Has he never heard of a church sewing society? Has he never heard of such a thing as a church social, a church festival, a church concert, a church musical, or a dram- atic entertainment, given by the church for charitable purposes? Has he never heard of ministers and priests visiting the sick, the poor and the imprisoned? Has he never heard of the Young Men's Christian Association? Has he never heard of the Church Missionaries on our frontiers? Has he never heard of a church collection being made to aid the suf- ferers by fire, by storm, or by epidemics such. as the cholera or yellow fever? Has he never heard of the millions of church pic-nics INGERSOLLISM. 179. and excursions that have been given for charitable causes? If Mr. Ingersoll pleads. ignorance of these facts, which are known to all the world, then truly there must be some wisdom in the maxim, "Where ignorance is bliss 'tis folly to be wise." The fact is, the Church has of men from vice and ruin. saved millions She has lifted nie agam reverse is alway millions of men out of the colossal jaws of use intemperance. She has saved millions opduffy quantit tament dis women from a life of shame and iniquity. She discuation She has fed millions of the starving_poor. has educated millions of the lowly and ignor- ant. She has cared for millions of widows. and orphans. She has provided homes for millions of the aged poor, the deaf, dumb and blind, and the penniless sick. She has fed, nurtured, and reared millions of fatherless babes. Her royal benevolence is to be seen on every hand. In the homes of the poor; 80 REASON AND in town and city; in prison and dungeon; amidst storm and tempest; on land and sea; in the forests as well as on the plains; upon the mountain top, and in the smiling valley below; in the thickest of battle in war; and in the heart of poverty and disease in peace. In every age, and in every land, she has dis- tributed her charity with a lavish hand and a tender spirit. Not alone among Christians, but among all men, regardless of the fact as to whether they professed to believe in any religious creed or not. Her charity and humanity have shed a lustre over her history that has dazzled the kings of the earth, and made her illustrious among all men, and all nations. She has stood robed and jeweled at the biers of the friendless dead, and strewed their lonely graves with wreaths of flowers. She has kissed the tears of sorrow from the of orphan children; she has pressed her eyes INGERSOLLISM. 81 loving lips against the pale shrunken cheeks of homeless women. She has raised the out- cast from the place where she had fainted upon the snow and frozen ice; she has res- cued her in the throes of death, from the savage waves of the boisterous sea. She has turned the house of woe into a house of joy. There is not, and there never has been, any form of human misery that she has not allevi- ated, no form of pain she has not assuaged. She has been to the unfortunate and distressed on land, what the life-boat has been to the shipwrecked at sea. So much hath this grand old institution done for humanity, that she has become the mightiest of all the mighty powers in the world. She holds the first place in the hearts of men. Her heroism, her deeds of charity, and the nobility of her countless good works, have not only sanctified her and made her name holy, but they have elevated 6 82 REASON AND her in the estimation of mankind, and crowned her with a halo of glory. She stands before mankind to-day, as graceful and as charming as a goddess, as pure as a lily, as fragrant as a rose, and as peerless as the morning star. She occupies a loftier plain than all other human institutions. She stands above them all. Firm as the rock of ages, majestic as the sun, like a pillar of fire by night, she illu- minates the earth, animates the souls of men, penetrates the darkest recesses of despair, carrying joy to every heart, and spans the valley of death and desolation with a rainbow of light that is marvelous and grand. And amidst all this Christian charity, which is going on unceasingly in all Christian coun- tries, where can you point to a single charit- able institution that is exclusively infidel? But Mr. Ingersoll says, that the Church "resorts to falsehood and slander." Does This obscession with gandile-quent phrases Appal te smollonaliam & "Jarativas ар INGERSOLLISM. 83. Mr. Ingersoll believe in slander Mr. Inger- soll has charged the Church with being "the enemy of liberty." He has denounced her for "fostering ignorance." He has charged her with "laughing at good works and resort- ing to falsehood and slander." He has alleged that "her pulpit and pews no longer repre- sent the culture and morality of the world." Have I not shown that each and every one of these charges are maliciously false? Who then is it that "resorts to falsehood and slan- der"? The Church or Mr. Ingersoll? „Mr. Ingersoll has not given us a single instance in which the Church has ever "resorted to falsehood and slander." He has based all of these charges upon mere assertions, and ex- pects the people to accept them as facts. And yet, Mr. Ingersoll has said, "Assertions 17 are base and spurious coins." That"There is nothing grander than to rescue from the · • REASON AND 84 leprosy of slander the reputation of a great 11 and generous name. On the other hand, it cannot be denied that the Church has been slandered and calumniated more than any other institution in Christendom, and by no one more than Mr. Ingersoll. Does Mr. In- gersoll not know, that one of the cardinal doctrines of the Church provides that "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neigh- bor"? And does he not know, that tens of thousands of sermons are preached from the Church pulpits annually in support of this doctrine? How any man, especially a man of Mr. Ingersoll's intelligence, can have the audacity or hardihood in this enlightened age, to charge the Church with "laughing at good works" or "resorting to falsehood and slan- der" with all these facts before him, is some- thing absolutely incomprehensible. It is one INGERSOLLISM. 85 of those strange phenomena, that can no more be explained than a mystery. There is no more reason or truth in the charge than there is in any of the accounts given by the Church to sustain miracles. It is as baseless as the idle tales of Munchausen. The Church is the mother of "good works," and the arch-enemy of "falsehood and slander." She loves the philanthropist. She loathes and despises the slanderer. 86 REASON AND CHAPTER IV. DOES MR. INGERSOLL SPEAK THE TRUTH, WHEN HE SAYS OF THE CHURCH, "HER PULPIT AND PEWS NO LONGER REPRESENT THE CULTURE AND MORALITY OF THE WORLD"? "Be thou as chaste as ice, As pure as snow, Thou shalt not escape calumny." In this instance, as in all others, this bold assertor makes the above affirmation, and relies upon mere assertion, unsustained either by argument or facts to support his position. That Mr. Ingersoll is laboring under a grievious mistake, no intelligent person will deny. Nor will it require an argument from me to refute a charge which everybody knows to be false. "Truth needs no flowers of speech." So far INGERSOLLISM. 87 as education, culture and morality are con- cerned, who can doubt for a moment that the ministers of the Christian Church, considered as a body, are the best educated, the most highly cultivated, and the most moral men in the world? Even the most fastidious unbe- lievers, as well as the most enthusiastic_ad- mirers of Mr Ingersoll, will admit this cogent fact, no matter how much they may differ in their opinions with ministers in their reli- gious views. Ministers as a rule, are not only well educated, but well informed, and most of them are linguists, and men of eru- dition and high accomplishments, as well as fine natural endowments. If ministers are wanting in any respect, it is in practical knowledge, practical experi- ence, and practical ability. There can be no question but what the Christian Church has often been forced into the most ridiculous and 88 REASON AND absurd positions, by the illogical and churlish statements of her ministers concerning her doctrines and her ethics. As a general rule, the ministers of the Christian Church, con- This Weeksidering their intelligence and education, are lisargumente junts most ignorant body of men upon all prac : treal subjects and worldly affairs, and know less about human nature and the true charac- ter of men than any other body of men in Christendom. Their position, socially and ministerially, necessarily makes this fact in- evitable. Ministers do not often mingle with the people like other men, and cannot do so under the present code of clerical ethics. This being the case, how are they to know anything about the practical affairs of life, the evil doings of men, and the wicked ways of the world? But notwithstanding their want of acquaintance with the ways of the world, the truth that the clergy are a culti- V Culture. Je clas&sonal progress are se recessitated by an under danding of predics subject- INGERSOLLISM. 89. vated body of men, is as incontrovertible as the fact that the earth revolves on its axis. And while some of the noblest and largest- hearted men in the world are to be found in the ministry, on the other hand, it contains some of the most pusillanimous, narrow- minded, bigoted fanatics that ever lived. In this profession, as in all others, these little fellows are to be found. This latter class of ministers were never known to do any good, or convert anybody to Christianity; they simply live on the Church like a lot of para- sites, and are as detrimental and disgraceful to her as the paupers of a city are to a well regulated community. They are to the min- istry what the pettifogging lawyer is to the legal fraternity, or the quack to the medical profession. And their bigotry and fanaticism, is only excelled by the bigotry and fanaticism of the most rampant infidels. educatio education yet dere leadus & conditions 1. Church supports rechical regels are ignorant 9 men? to their In enlightens them as spuitual needs, but leaves them in perpetual Confusion as to this worldly needs. 90 REASON AND So much for the pulpit. What about the pews? Will any rational human being dis- pute for a moment that the church-going people, as a rule, are the most intelligent and cultivated people in every country in the world? The fact is, that the culture, intelli- gence, and morality of every community, are to be found mainly in the Christian Church. Of course, there are a great many intelligent and elegantly cultivated people in every civil- ized community, that are not Christians. cannot be said that there are no cultivated people outside of the Church, because this would not be true. But take the majority of the people of culture in every civilized com- munity, and you will find them to be a church-going people. It So far as the morals of the ministers of the Church and the church-going people are con- cerned, they are immeasurably better than INGERSOLLISM. 91 those of the class who are never seen at Church. Of course, there are some excep- tions to this rule. But it is nevertheless a fact, that is perfectly patent to the mind of every intelligent, thinking man. It is for this reason that the Christian Church exists. Her chief aim is to cultivate the character and improve the morals of the people. And when Mr. Ingersoll says, that the Church no longer "represents the culture and morality of the world," he knows, as does everybody who possesses common sense, that he tells a deliberate and malicious falsehood. Why, Mr. Ingersoll, if you were to throw into the capacious ocean the Christian Church and all her paraphernalia and adherents, culture and morals would be at such a low ebb, that this world would not be fit for civilized man to live in. If, on the other hand, you were to throw all the infidels and their institutions 1 92 REASON AND イ ​into the Black Sea, they would hardly create a ripple on its surface as they went down, and the world would never be any the wiser, and would never miss them. INGERSOLLISM. 93 CHAPTER V. 1 INGERSOLL'S LECTURES. "He raves; his words are loose As heaps of sand, and scattering wide from sense: So high he's mounted on his airy throne, That now the wind has got into his head, And turns his brains to phrensy." A short time ago, I called on a friend who happened to have one of Mr. Ingersoll's books in his hand, and I asked him what he was reading. And my friend replied in the sar- castic but eloquent language of Hamlet to Polonius : "Words, Words, Words!" While Mr. Ingersoll is one of the vainest, most egotistical, self-conceited, self-opinioned. 94 REASON AND and dogmatic men that was ever born of woman, yet the fact cannot be denied, that in many many respects he holds a decided advantage over all of his opponents. His faultless and inimitable style, his plausibility, his keen satire, his brilliant wit, his scathing. invective, his wonderful power of persuasion, his superb manner of expression, his grand diction, and his sublime rhetoric, are qualities. which cannot fail to command the unqualified praise and admiration of even his bitterest enemies. In his opposition to the Church however, his most formidable weapons are specious argument, rose-tinted rose-tinted sentiment, false accusation and bold assertion. I say these are his most formidable weapons, because they confound the ignorant; they delight the simple-minded; they please the prejudiced; they mislead the unthinking; they carry the infidel by storm; they amuse the strategist; INGERSOLLISM. 95 they fascinate the sentimentalist; they win the applause of the dissolute, the irreligious and the blasphemous; they meet with the hearty approval of the parasite, the hireling, and the vicious habitue of the grog-shop and dens of iniquity and vice, and they represent the Church to the world, in a light that is not only false but preposterous. Of course, with the thoughtful, the man of common sense, the man of experience, the man of observation and cul- ture, who is familiar with history, and con- scious of what is going on in the world about him, this sort of argument can have no weight. It neither deceives nor persuades him, but is invariably treated by him with derision and contempt, as mere ridiculous flum- mery clothed in ostentatious words. But there are a few things in which Mr. Ingersoll excels. In the role of the sensationalist, the assertor, the denier, and the sentimentalist, he 96 REASON AND is the grandest success of the nineteenth cen- tury. He excels in all of these charming spe- cialties. Particularly in the capacity of the gushing sentimentalist. In this role the world has never produced his like, and probably never will. Mr. Ingersoll assumes to be a great lover of mankind, a benefactor of the human race, a grand specimen of humanity. He says: "We do not pretend to have circumnavigated everything, and to have solved all diffi culties, but we do believe that it is better to love men than to fear Gods." And again, in his lecture on "The Ghosts" he says: "Man is better than these phantoms. Humanity is grander than all the creeds, than all the books. Humanity is the great sea, and these creeds, and books, and religions, are but the waves of a day. Humanity is the sky, and these religions and dogmas and theories are but the INGERSOLLISM. 97 mists and clouds changing continually, des- tined finally to melt away." The sentiment is a very good one, and not at all objectionable. But Mr. Ingersoll, why don't you practice what you preach? Is it because you are a supercilious hypocrite, and prefer to sail under false colors? You know that you have spent the best part of your life thus far, in abusing the Church and insulting her adherents. And yet, the Church has done more good for humanity, and is doing more good to-day, than all the other institutions of man combined. If you are a true friend to mankind, why do you keep up an unceasing war against this grand old institution, the mother of humanity? But, says Mr. Ingersoll: "I will not invade the rights of others. * * Believe what you may; preach what you de- sire; have all the forms and ceremonies you 7 98 REASON AND please; exercise your liberty in your own way, but extend to all others the same right." And again: "Whosoever claims any right that he is unwilling to accord to his fellow- men is dishonest and infamous." And again: "The man who is not willing to give to every other the same intellectual rights he claims for himself, is dishonest, selfish and brutal.” If these principles were to be applied to Mr. Ingersoll, the facts would prove him to be, one of the most "dishonest, selfish and brutal" men that ever drew breath. Mr. Ingersoll believes he has the right to believe in athe- ism, but he does not believe that Christians have the right to believe in the existence of a God. If a Christian undertakes to exercise his belief in the divine origin of the Church, Mr. Ingersoll immediately denounces him as "a slave of superstition." And yet he claims an unqualified right to believe that the INGERSOLLISM. 99 Church is nothing but a human institution. Mr. Ingersoll does not believe that the Chris- tians have the right to believe in the Bible as an inspired work, and still he claims the right to declare it the work of man. Mr. Ingersoll asserts the right to "believe" what he pleases, to "preach" what he pleases, and to exer- cise his "liberty" as he pleases, but when Christians claim the same right, he denounces them as the enemies of the human race. Mr. Ingersoll claims the right to abuse the Church and her adherents, but he does not believe that the Church has the right to abuse him. Anybody who believes as Mr. Ingersoll believes is right. Anybody who disagrees with Mr. Ingersoll is wrong. Mr. Ingersoll does not believe in the right of the Church to question the truth of anything that he says, but he claims the right himself to declare everything that the Church utters to be false Then, why does Ingersoll invite open discussion, she were then de would Lever won Refore Refore the publ 100 REASON AND And yet Mr. Ingersoll has the audacity to say, "I will not invade the rights of others." Is not this an invasion of "the rights of others"? Mr. Ingersoll claims the right to criticise and denounce the Church, but he will not accord the same right to the Church to criticise and denounce him. Mr. Ingersoll's sentiments are high sounding, and all very nice in theory, but the trouble is, he never carries them out in practice. He applies them to all the rest of the world, but he never applies them to himself. He expects the Church to respect his rights, but he does not consider that the Church has any rights which he is bound to respect. Any one to read Mr. Ingersoll's lectures- this great lover of humanity-would naturally conclude that he is one of the most bitter haters of the human family that was ever born He believes that man came up from the lower INGERSOLLISM. 101 animals, from the orang-outang, chimpanzee or something of that sort. or or the And while he believes this, yet he denounces the whole human race for its crimes, and bewails the fact of its ignorance. While he believes that man was born of the lower animals, yet he upbraids him, because he was not born with a large well-shaped head, a massive brain, and a magnificent physique. He makes no allowance for the myriad of ages that man has been developing. He sees nothing grand in the brave struggles of man through the benighted ages. His advancement from the lower animal to a state of savagery. His pro- gress from savagery to a state of semi-barbar- ism, and from the latter to the civilized man and accomplished scholar. He can see noth- ing lofty in the heroic suffering and un- speakable trials that man has passed through, in his efforts to suppress savagery, barbarism, 102 REASON AND and ignorance, to lift himself up to the high state of intellectual development, and the noble manhood which he now enjoys. He can discover nothing creditable to man in the change in his dress, his habitation, his advanced social position, and his refined accomplish- ments. He talks as if these things cost nothing, were obtained without a struggle, and acquired in a day. In all these things he is unable to find a palliating circumstance, to soften the cruelty or mitigate the offenses of mankind in the shadowy past. It is quite evident that Mr. Ingersoll is not an optimist. His pessimistic, rambling views and ideas, inevitably stamp him as a Buddhist. Mr. Ingersoll has placed himself before the world, in the character of a great hydra- headed monster, whose time is principally spent in fretting and brooding over the dwarfed intellectuality and stupendous ignor- INGERSOLLISM. 103 ance of his dead ancestry. He has no charity for the dead, no respect for the feelings of the living. He abuses all antiquity, good and bad, without distinction. For him there is no hope in his vision of the future. To him all is gloom and darkness. Despair, like a grim spectre, beclouds his reason by day and haunts him in his dreams by night. He talks like a man who has been born in a cavern and has never seen the light of day, nor felt the soft warm rays of the summer's sun. From the depths of his gloomy soul he laments and moans over the desolation that filled the earth in the dark ages. He denounces Christianity as the fountain from which man's misery and mis- fortunes, and all existent evils have flowed. He can discover no glow of happiness in the past, nor can he see any joy in the future, to him all is obscurity, pain and sorrow. In speaking of the ancients, and the his- Vhow miserable 1 104 REASON AND tories of their times, Mr. Ingersoll says: "In all the histories of those days there is hardly a single truth. It is safe to say that every truth in the histories of those times is the result of accident or mistake." He then proceeds to prove every imputation of cruelty and ignor- ance for which he has arraigned mankind and the Church, by the same histories which he alleges do not contain a word of truth. This man, who seems to be utterly void of all humanity in considering the men of antiquity and the institutions of their times, throws the whole responsibility for man's con- dition upon the Church. For the Church he has nothing but loathing, contempt, and ever- lasting reproach. He assails her with all the energy and malignity of a viper. He attacks her with fire and tongs, and flaming sword. He cannot speak of her without falling into a consuming rage. He attacks her upon every INGERSOLLISM. 105 side with the fierceness and ferocity of a wild beast. With a thousand slanderous tongues, and a thousand vocabularies, he beats her with his vituperous invective and his masterly rhetoric. And when he has exhausted him- self he rests for a while, and then resumes his attack with renewed energy and violence. "From the quiver of his hatred darts a thousand arrows of slander and falsehood.' He slashes around like a toy ship upon the turbulent sea, without either compass or rud- der, until he is finally stranded upon the shore. He then rests again for a while, takes a new tack, launches his fragile bark upon the violent sea of his consuming wrath and implacable hatred, starts out with a new lec- ture, in which he repeats all that he ever said against the Church in all his previous lectures, and after vociferating the old story over and over again, like Don Quixote in his attack 106 REASON AND upon the wind-mills, "He roars and bellows, and charges in among the idols of the past with all the fury of the most illustrious sires of his species. And yet he is altogether harmless in these paroxysms, save to himself. Meeting no opposition save here and there. from the rocks of truth that lie in his way, over these he but stumbles and falls to rise again in redoubled fury, foaming and roaring and lashing his sides for another attack." Mr. Ingersoll's lecture on "The Ghosts" is simply a one-sided compilation of historic facts, which everybody knows and nobody disputes; which show the condition of the human intellect during the dark ages; the superstition of man; his belief in ghosts and witchcraft, the cruel forms of religious belief; the ferocious cruelty of man; his ignorance of the sciences and the arts; the sad, uncivil- INGERSOLLISM. 107 ized status of society; and the dense stupidity and ignorance with which the human mind was fettered, and encircled as if with a cloud of darkness, until it emerged from its prison upon the dawn of a higher and nobler civiliza- tion. Of course, for this condition of the human family, Mr. Ingersoll lays all the blame on the Church Mr. Ingersoll might with as much reason and propriety, blame the Church for the ignor- ance and superstition of the barbarous tribes. of Central Asia or Africa, where the Church does not exist. The fact is, this was the original condition of man, and it continued for many centuries until the Church educated him and ameliorated his condition. This lecture does great injustice to the Church, for while it indicates the prevailing evils of the Church, which were peculiar to the people. and times of which Mr. Ingersoll writes, yet 108 REASON AND it relates none of her good works, which largely predominated over those that were bad. Mr. Ingersoll's chief object seems to have been, that of parading before the world, all the horrors and iniquities peculiar to the dark and semi-barbarous ages, coloring and exaggerating them, leaving out everything in the history of mankind that was good or praiseworthy. This is not only unfair to the Church, but it is unkind and ungenerous_to humanity. I have often wondered how Mr. Ingersoll would like to be held up to the world, with all the mistakes and errors of his life laid bare, and there left without a single word being said of him as to his good deeds. What do you suppose he would say if this was done? Can there be any doubt but what Mr. Inger- soll would say, that to present him to the world in this light, would not only be an INGERSOLLISM. 109 unpardonable piece of injustice, but a most infamous outrage? And yet this is the very light in which he presents the Church to the world. He stigmatizes her for all that she has ever done that is reproachable, he gives her no praise for what she has done that is highly commendable. Mr. Ingersoll's lecture on "The Gods" is a rambling, incoherent dissertation upon a mul- tiplicity of subjects. In this lecture he con- demns the innumerable "Gods" feared and worshiped by the various peoples, tribes, and nations of the earth, from time immemorial down to the present day. He denies the existence of the supernatural. He denies the inspiration of the Bible. He denies the exist- ence of either hell or heaven, and denounces the "God" of the Christian, as the greatest monster of cruelty that man ever invented. He denies the divine authority of the Church. 110 REASON AND He denies the efficacy of prayer, and con- trasts the noble character and splendid bearing of the devil, with the despicable char- acter and the infamous and depraved cruelty of God, and awards magnificent praise to the former. He adverts to the Christian's God, as the "monarch of the sky," the "despot of the clouds," and the "aristocracy of the air." He characterizes God as the "phantom of the heavens," and denounces all who worship Him, as the "slaves of superstition." Every little while, he indulges his fancy in a light, fantastical digression, in which he either abuses all mankind or the Church, and then gives way to an eloquent eulogy on the superb qualities of the "devil," for whom he ex- presses the most affectionate partiality and the warmest admiration. He then renews his attack upon the Church, and metaphorically blisters her with INGERSOLLISM. 111 the merciless fire of his withering invect- ive. Of course, Mr. Ingersoll naturally feels very much chagrined, and very justly indignant, because the Church declines to notice him. All the little men in the world have applauded what he has said about her, and have laughed themselves into fits of extasy, in imagining what reply the Church would make, to what they considered the unanswerable arguments of Mr. Ingersoll. But as yet the Church has not manifested even the slightest interest in his denunciatory declamation. Thus far she has treated Mr. Ingersoll with cold indiffer- ence, silent scorn, and laughing mockery. And her conduct in this respect has not only been very mortifying to Mr. Ingersoll, but it has thoroughly aroused his ire and contempt. Mr. Ingersoll stews, and fumes, and threat- ens, and thunders. The Church laughs! and You have + 2. Wole all the religions attacks threats upon dag. in to responsible" lay yournals, be clergy 112 REASON AND then the hatred of Mr. Ingersoll soars to a climax. He then commences a new attack upon the Church, and the sight immediately becomes an amusing spectacle. Mr. Ingersoll with great calmness and resolution, girds his loins for the contest. And while he is pre- paring for the battle, let us "look into that soul, let us look into that obscurity. There, beneath the external silence, there are com- bats of giants as in Homer, melees of dragoons and hydras, and clouds of phantoms as in Milton, and ghastly labyrinths as in Dante." With dagger and sword, with pistol and blud- geon, he makes ready for the fray His anger has now become implacable and his mind frenetical. He can no longer refrain from falling with crushing weight upon this arch- enemy of mankind, this bitterest of all human foes. His intrepidity forces him upon his adversary. With the courage of a war- Paints future of Ingenioll as corople descend to hyperbole, animal жде * Excessive non-factual condter charge. INGERSOLLISM. 113 Noth- rior, and the gallantry of "a plumed knight," he meets his opponent "and throws his shining lance full and fair against " her, but without avail. The Church laughs again! His fury is then increased to madness. ing however, daunts his arrogance. With a thousand lances of libel, with a thousand arrows of slander, with a thousand missives of calumny and falsehood, he assails his enemy. With the vocabularies of all nations, he con- centrates his hatred and venom, and hurls it at his innocent opponent, with all the fierce- ness of a thousand fiends. With the baseness of a reptile, he pursues her with "a whip" of a thousand "scorpions," and the strength of a thousand hydra-headed dragons. With the ferocity of a thousand hyenas, with the sav- ageness of a thousand carnivorous animals, he mutilates and mars her beauty, and tears and claws her sacred form. Like a fiend 8 114 REASON AND Whole preventitink wwell incarnate, he vents his "venomed vengeance upon her holy head. Contact Prodigal "" And yet, after all this calumny and slander, and this veno- mous and fiendish attack, the Church simply looks down upon Mr. Ingersoll, with that serene and dignified calmness, that a merci- ful mother would bestow upon an erring prodigal son, with naught but pity in her soul, in a silence that is unspeakably grand. And when Mr. Ingersoll discovers the cool insensibility_displayed by the Church, he works himself into a frenzy. The scene now becomes truly ludicrous. Mr. Ingersoll favors us with one of his very best efforts, a regular แ tempest in a teapot." He again attacks his opponent. But the Church again treats his attack scoffingly, and the whole adventure degenerates into a roaring, rolicking, chirlish farce-leaving Mr. Ingersoll in the most. ridiculous and humiliating position. His INGERSOLLISM. 115 attack upon the Church being fully as laugh- able as the attack of a fly upon a bumble-bee, a cur dog upon an English mastiff, a weasel upon a lion, a canary-bird upon an eagle, a toad upon an elephant, or a minnow trying to drown a whale. ,, In his lecture on "Man, Woman and Child,' Mr. Ingersoll condemns and reproaches man, because he was not born an intellectual giant; because he was ignorant in the dim ages that have passed away. This great friend of humanity declares that "this world has not been fit for a man to live in fifty years." He reprobates man, because he used the "Collar of Torture," the "Scavenger's Daughter," and the "Rack," as instruments of punishment, for things done and thoughts uttered, which in by-gone days were considered crimes. Because he used the "Dug-out" for a boat, the "club, boomerang, cross-bow, blunderbuss 116 REASON AND and flint-lock,” as weapons. Because he used a "shell of a turtle," and "the shirts of mail " for an armor. Because he used the "tom- tom as a musical instrument. Because he was not born an artist. Because he wrote books upon the "skins of wild beasts, shoulder-blades of sheep," and "leaves" and pieces of "bark." Because he used a "crooked stick that was attached to the horn of an ox," as an agricultural implement, and finally, because his "skull" was not as large and as perfectly shaped as the skul's of men are to-day. He tells the women that they were the born slaves of men. But he forgets to tell them that the rule has since been reversed, and that men are now the born slaves of women. He then proceeds to abuse our progenitors in the following vigorous style: "Our fathers were intellectual serfs, and INGERSOLLISM. 117 their fathers were slaves. The makers of our creeds were ignorant and brutal. Every dogma that we have has upon it the mark of whip, the rust of chain, and the ashes of fagot." "Our fathers reasoned with instruments of torture. They believed in the logic o. fire and sword. They hated reason. They des- pised thought. They abhorred liberty.' After the thunder, the lightning and the storm, there comes a sudden calm that is noiseless and grand. After the tempest, the sun smiles upon nature, and illuminates the darkness. We have heard Mr. Ingersoll's thundering declamation, we have seen the glare and lightning flashes of his brilliant wit, and his merciless sarcasm. We have felt the shock of his scathing invective, and wit- nessed the storm and whirlwind of his splen- did rhetoric. And now, for a moment, calm reason, the idol of his heart, intervenes, and 118 REASON AND Forget. invites him to kneel and worship at her holy shrine. The dark tempest of vituperation, falsehood and slander, has at last subsided, the bright rays of the golden sun have pene- trated the soul of man, and majestic reason "crowned and jeweled" sits upon the high throne of justice. Mr. Ingersoll, why not talk about the pres- ent, and not "the dead calm and ignorance" of History the past? Let antiquity go. Let us throw the veil of charity over the errors of man during the_benighted ages. Let us talk about the issues of the day. To tell the people of the ignorance and cruelty of man in former times, and abuse all mankind without measure, will not eradicate the evils of the present. You have already told us all that the Church and her adherents have ever done that was erroneous and despicable. You have also told us all the good that the great infidels INGERSOLLISM. 119 have performed in the world, either by word or deed. And it only took you a short time to tell us. And now, Mr. Ingersoll, if you really desire to immortalize yourself, suppose you devote the remainder of your life in writ- ing a few hundred volumes, to indicate to the the world all the good that the Church has achieved. The subject would be a grand one you know, and it would crown the last efforts of your life with immortal fame. Besides, people could not say then, as now, that you were one-sided, and had only written up the errors of man and the Church, leaving the story of their good deeds to be told by some one who has more humanity in his soul than you have. The Church no longer reasons "with instru- ments of torture." She no longer believes in "the logic of fire and sword." She no longer "hates reason. She no longer "des- shoe Because, row, matead of physical sever + torture, there is intellectual levery & torture 120 REASON AND pises thought." She no longer "abhors lib- erty." Years ago she abandoned the whip, the "manacle and chain," the "fagot," the 66 thumbscrew," the "rack," and the tortures of the "inquisition." Why then, taunt her with these dead issues of the past? The Church believed in those things simply be- cause the people of the rude and barbarous times in which they were used believed in them. The Church has advanced with the tidal-wave of civilization, and has adapted herself to the various ages in which she existed. If Now, Mr. Ingersoll, what constitutes the Church? The Church is the people. there were no people, there would be no Church. The Church therefore, cannot have any higher ideas of right and wrong than the people. This of course, is upon the theory that the Church is simply a human institution. INGERSOLLISM. 121 If the Church adheres to any doctrines to- day, that are detrimental to the develop- ment of the human intellect, the progress of civilization, or that may reasonably be consid- ered as vicious or infamous, point them out, make your attack upon them, and I will not utter a word in opposition to your views. On the contrary, if you are right I will applaud you. But, Mr. But, Mr. Ingersoll, I can see no reason or justice for reproaching the Church for the old ideas she once entertained; for the old practices which she once indulged in, but which she has long since abandoned. It is like kicking a man after he is dead because he died. It is like persecuting a culprit because he has reformed. It is like abusing a man for embracing civilization and discard- ing barbarism. There is no principle upon which you can justify your position, except the one adopted by the preacher, who pounded * 122 REASON AND the dog after it was dead, because while alive it had bitten his favorite son, and who when told by a passer-by who saw him thus engaged, that the dog was dead, simply remarked, "it makes no difference, sir; I believe in punish- ment after death." It can do no good to revive these old issues. You are wasting your strength upon the desert air. that you ceased to pour the vials wrath upon these whited sepulchers. It is time of your If you desire distinction, give us some new ideas if you have any. You might just as well talk to the wind about the phantoms of the air or the moon and stars, as to talk to the people about the dead issues of the past. evils have ceased to exist. These errors and They have long since been buried and are now mere matters of history with which everybody is familiar. Their substance has vanished, their skeletons. and shadows alone remain. The people have INGERSOLLISM. 123 heard enough of them. They want no more cheap twaddle. They no longer care "to sac- rifice the Present and the Living, upon the ignorant altars of the Past and the Dead." And no man who makes his living by preying like a great vulture upon society, or parading before the world the vices and corruptions of humanity and Church, in the dark epochs of by-gone centuries, can hope to live long in the memories of thoughtful men. But Mr. Ingersoll is unable to suppress this spirit of hatred towards the Church. Like Banquo's ghost, it will not down. This feeling of hatred has become the very "jewel of his soul," and leads him on "with Tarquin's ravishing strides towards" the object of his malice and madness. No man ever described Mr. Ingersoll's attack upon the Church, with greater truth or accuracy, than the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, when he said: the Accuses tages, coll of attacking Charch on what she has been (since reformed) instead of what she is now. [24 Bee fertes quas REASON AND "The trouble with Ingersoll is this: He has selected the excrescences of human life as it has grown in Churches and has repre- sented the excrescences as the essense of reli- gion. Suppose a physician wishing to get up a museum, representing the human body in all ages and conditions, should collect idiots and lunatics, with wens and warts all over them. Suppose that the physician should gather them into a museum and say, There's humanity for you; what do you think of that? That is what Mr. Ingersoll is doing in the religious world. He says scores of true things that have been said before, but he don't know it. He is not widely read in theology. I'm afraid he don't read his Bible very much. What does he read it for? I'll tell you. The doves flying over the landscape see all that is sweet and peaceful, but when the buzzard and the vulture lay abroad the first thing they INGERSOLLISM. 125 C see is a loathsome carcass, and if it is any- where in sight they don't fail to see it. _Inger- soll sees what he is looking after." If Is the Church to be condemned because. there are bad men who belong to it? Because she affords a shield to hypocrisy ? Upon this principle all societies, governments and pri- vate and public institutions would have to be condemned. If the Church has persecuted man in the past, have not governments done the same thing from time immemorial? the Church has ruled to a certain extent by coercion and fear, have not governments done the same thing? And has not the Church ceased to persecute, while govern- ments have not? Are not most all men ruled and governed by law, and the fear of punish- ment which its violation promises? "Why were laws made, but that we 're rogues by nature"? The Church has used force in the does this abspline of use of the Church 126 force REASON AND past, simply because her persecutors resorted to it. Why is it that children mind their parents, if it is not partially through fear of chastisement? The fact is, the world is gov- erned principally by force and fear. If we are to condemn the Church for her past deeds in this respect, must we not for the same rea- son, if we are logical and just, condemn all inst other institutions? And upon this principle, But thi Shunch is Repussar Civilizers instili the whole human race would have to be con- demned and extinguished. For where is the man, or institution that is perfect, who has never made a mistake or fallen into error? Is it reasonable to expect infallible conduct from a fallible being or institution? Mr. Ingersoll condemn the Church for reform- ing? Has she not kept pace with the advan- cing tide of civilization? Is not Mr. Inger- soll himself a reformer? condemn the reformed? Will How then can he In former times all INGERSOLLISM. 127 human institutions were more corrupt than they are now, and governments and all other societies were more cruel and oppressive than they are to-day. Everything has been changed, because man himself has been changed. We must condemn the Church for what she is to- day, if at all. Is there another institution on the earth, that in proportion to the number of its members, is doing as much good in the world as the Church? If there is, please name it. All monarchical governments were "conceived in iniquity and born in sin," and have been uniformly sustained by force, fear, oppression and plunder. They have always been opposed to the natural rights of man, and always will be. While the Church was instituted to civilize and aid man, and not to oppress him. The Church is no more to be condemned to-day, for teaching the doctrines she has in how many monas до Wochurch supported. Morar decal gouts has the Chi 128 REASON AND the past, than is astronomy, because the early astronomers adhered to the theory that the earth was a vast plain. Would you condemn the science of medicine because the doctors of old, when they cut off a limb or an arm stuck the stump into a bucket of boiling pitch? Or because they formerly forbid the man with a fever to drink cold water? The Church, like every other human institution, has reform ed, changed, and advanced, and has discarded in a measure the old ideas. The Church, like the science of law, has most always been bed progress behind the age and the demands of society badow and government. and government. Theology and law, are less apt to change, and are less progressive, than any other of the sciences which help to gov- ern the world. This is because both are said to be founded upon truth and justice, and that truth and justice never change. The common law however, is not always in har- Churchie can this ні INGERSOLLISM. 129 A mony with reason and justice. It abounds with inconsistencies, fictions, and a multiplic- Would you abolish it ity of absurdities. altogether on that account? But it may be said, that Mr. Ingersoll is not opposed to the Church, so much as he is to the Bible. Is not the Bible (the Catholic Church excepted) the foundation of the Church? Can the superstructure stand after the foundation is taken away? Must they not necessarily fall together? Does not the annihilation of the one, inevitably destroy the other? Mr. Ingersoll abuses the Church for her errors in the past. He gives her no praise for the good she has performed, nor does he credit her with the good she is doing at the present. Mr. Ingersoll is a good deal like the Irishman who whipped the Jew. When asked why he did so, he replied, “That man 9 130 REASON AND is a Jew." Well what of that? "The Jews," replied the Irishman, "killed Christ." Yes, but that was nearly two thousand years ago. "Well, never mind," said the Irishman, "I only heard of it to-day." The Church should have been chastised for her errors in the past, centuries ago, and not now when all the abuses she upheld have been abandoned. But then you know, Mr. Ingersoll was not born until recently, and is not aware of the fact that the Church has already been reproached for these things. He did not exist centuries. ago, and therefore, could not reprimand the Church at the time the evils complained of existed, but, like the Irishman, he intends to take his revenge on the Church to-day, for the reason that he has only just heard of her for- mer wrong-doings. But there is one of Mr. Ingersoll's produc- tions that I had almost forgotten, and that is. INGERSOLLISM. 131 his lecture on farming. Mr. Ingersoll's lec- ture on farming, is not only one of his best productions, but it is one of the most admir- able disquisitions on the theme, that I have ever read. I cordially commend it to the careful and conscientious perusal of every honest and intelligent farmer in the land. Mr. Ingersoll exhibits a greater fund of in- formation, and a greater familiarity with this subject, than he does on all the other subjects upon which he has written. And it really seems a pity, that a man whose rural tastes are so highly cultivated, and whose other qualities so well adapt him for the useful oc- cupation of farming, should ever have been churlish enough to have entered into the legal profession. Mr. Ingersoll may think I am joking, but if he knew me personally, he never would suspect me to be guilty of any such levity. Candidly speaking, I think this 132 REASON AND was the mistake of Mr. Ingersoll's life, to which all the fancied "Mistakes of Moses" can be traced. Before he entered into the profession of the law, and traveled over the country delivering lectures, he was a very energetic, promising young man, and un- doubtedly had an enviable future and a bril- liant career before him. But now, alas! all is lost in uncertainty and obscurity. And in concluding this chapter, it is only just that I should say that there is one re- deeming quality about Mr. Ingersoll's lec- tures. They are all more charming and just as true, as any of the tales in "The Arabian Nights." The story of "Aladdin, or the Won- derful Lamp" is fairly eclipsed by them. They are neither insipid nor heavy. They are always pleasant, fresh and vapory. So vapory, that you can read a whole volume of them without becoming wearied. They are INGERSOLLISM. 133 just the thing to carry to the sea shore to read for pastime during the hot summer months. They ramble up and down, and slash around in about the same incoherent manner that the mind does when the thermom- eter stands at one hundred in the shade. The multiplicity of subjects upon which each lec- ture treats, is admirably calculated to amuse the illogical and delight the intellectual dilet- tante. They are as variant as the variegated leaves upon the forest trees in autumn. And the labyrinths through which they carry the reader, are as intricate and diverse, as the pathways of the wandering Jew. They are always vigorous, witty, and brilliant. They invariably leave the mind in the same placid condition that they found it, perfectly at rest, and as undisturbed as the calm face of the rural pond by moonlight. They can no more produce a single "fact," than the Church can 134 REASON AND produce a single "miracle." And after you have read them all, they vanish from your mind like a "Midsummer-Night's Dream," leaving nothing behind but a sea of empty words, to cherish and remember. ! INGERSOLLISM. 135 CHAPTER VI. ATHEISM, SKEPTICISM, SCIENCE AND RELIGION. “I would not always reason. The straight path Wearies us with its never-varying lines, And we grow melancholy. I would make Reason my guide, but she should sometimes sit Patiently by the wayside, while I trac'd The mazes of the pleasant wilderness. Around me. She should be my counsellor But not my tyrant. For the spirit needs Impulses from a deeper source than hers, And there are motions in the mind of man, That she must look upon with awe." That we are living in an age of doubt and unbelief, will not be disputed by any intelli- gent man, who is familiar with the times in which we live. That science and theology are at apparent war with each other, is equally true. That science is making extra- 136 REASON AND ordinary efforts to gain the ascendancy can- not be questioned. That recent scientific developments and the atheistic literature of the day, tend to increase atheism and skepti- cism, is a fact that is too palpable to be con- troverted. That atheism and skepticism pre- vail to such an extent as to excite alarm, will not be denied even by the most casual obser- ver. And the grand problem to be solved is, first, what will be the ultimate result of this increase of atheism and skepticism upon Christianity? And second, what effect will it have upon individual and public morals? In this struggle with atheism and skepti- cism, the Church will come out victorious. Neither atheism, nor skepticism, nor both combined, can ever expect to triumph over Christianity. So far as skepticism is con- cerned, its days are numbered. It is a remarkable fact, that even in this age of INGERSOLLISM 137 immorality, the Church is more powerful, more influential, and her adherents more numerous, than in any former period in her whole history. The Church to be sure is passing through an ordeal, but she will sur- vive the shock, and be all the better for it. The trial will develop her strength and genius, and when skepticism has spent its influence, she will grandly rise to the occasion and van- quish her enemy. The immediate result of this growth of skep- ticism will be to lessen morality. Crimes will multiply, quarrels and dishonesty will increase, virtue will decline, extravagance will reign on every hand, vice will temporarily triumph, social disorder and public immorality will spread, until at last the disastrous_effect of this condition of things will manifest itself. when the people will pause to consider the situation. The sacred voice of the Church The pticam, increases immorality 138 REASON AND will then be heard. Her holy admonitions will be honored and obeyed. A reaction will take place in individual and public morals and amidst all this confusion, immorality and social ruin, the Christian Church will emerge in all her grandeur to restore peace and order among men. Man as a general rule is so constituted, that he cannot live a life of vice and shame for any great length of time. A life of immoral- ity is of short duration. It leads either to ruin or reformation. Take for instance the man who discards all religion, and loses all sense of decency and morality, and falls into an habitual life of dissipation and depravity. For the time being he ignores all feeling of what is just and right, and conceives that everything is lovely, and that religion and all religious creeds are a farce and a snare. But after a few years of dissipation accompanied INGERSOLLISM. 139 by general dissolute habits, he suddenly awakes to a proper realization of his true condition physically and morally, and with this realization a moral reaction takes place. The old religious feeling in him revives, and he again assumes his former religious habits, and reinstates his former religious views. The Theism enobles man and promotes good morals. Atheism is degrading, and tends to destroy both man and his morals. scripture saith, "The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God." And Lord Bacon says, "They that deny a God destroy a man's nobility, for certainly man is of kin to the beasts by his body; and if he is not of kin to God by his spirit, he is a base and ignoble Atheism destroys likewise mag- nanimity, and the raising of human nature; for, take an example of a dog, and mark what a generosity and courage he will put on creature. 140 REASON AND when he finds himself maintained by a man, who, to him, is instead of a God, or 'melior natura,' which courage is manifestly such as that creature, without that confidence of a better nature than his own, could never attain. So man, when he resteth and assureth himself upon divine protection and favor, gathereth a force and faith, which human nature in itself could not obtain; therefore as atheism is in all respects hateful, so in this, that it depriveth human nature of the means to exalt itself above human frailty." And if we will only stop to consider the immorality of the age, the innumerable frauds, and the alarming increase of every kind of crime, we will discover that they furnish admirable arguments against atheism and skepticism, and their lamentable effect upon morals and society. Atheism has cast a dark shadow upon every country in which it exists. It I do Atheism Equated with Seier at INGERSOLLISM. 141 augments sensuality, ruins virtue, and extir pates conscience. It has kissed from the fair cheeks of innocent youth, the hue of health, and the charms of beauty, and turned her choicest flowers into withering plants. The tendency of Christianity is to build up, while the tendency of atheism and skepticism is to pull down. The former endeavors to elevate and ennoble man, the latter to degrade him. And as skepticism spreads, crime increases. In Germany, where skepticism has been spreading rapidly for the last decade, we find a terrible state of affairs. While in 1875 Ber- lin only held 31,882 prisoners for trial, in 1878 it held 60,642, an increase of nearly one hundred per cent. in three years. And we are told by Mr. Stursburg, of Dusseldorf, the agent of the Rhenish Westphalia Prison Association, that in the seven years from 1871 to 1877, the number of criminals in the Prus- 142 REASON AND sian state increased one hundred per cent. while the population only increased sixty-six per cent. And says Mr. Sarasin, of Basel, “Be- side the empty churches you can see the overflowing prisons." And thus it is that "skepticism, pessimism, mental wretchedness, and crime go hand in hand." While Chris- tianity promotes and protects the best in- terests of society, atheism and skepticism produce crime and disorder. Christianity sup- presses crime, prevents the increase of social evils, encourages virtue, secures obedience to the laws, secures good government, estab- lishes a bulwark of safety to life, liberty, and property, and constitutes the most powerful moral prohibition against the commission of crime, that man ever devised or the world ever saw. The Church is now, and ever has been, the deadly enemy of every sort of wickedness, INGERSOLLISM 143 the champion and advocate of every sort of good. She opposes intemperance. She en- courages sobriety. She opposes idleness. She encourages industry. the vices known to man. She opposes all She upholds every virtue. She is opposed to and does all in her power to put down every evil that tends to undermine or corrupt society. She is opposed to atheism, skepticism, socialism, nihilism and This must communism. And when her immense influ- are vecer be quoted ence over the minds of men is duly weighedMr. Dowha and considered, it seems to me, that it is no sumes that these exaggeration to say, that the Church is not only man's greatest benefactor, but she is do- ing more to suppress crime and misery, and alleviate the condition of man and increase his happiness, than all the other human insti- tutions in the world united. And any man who deliberately attacks such an institution, and claims to be the friend of humanity, does 144 REASON AND it with hatred and malice in his heart, and is nothing but a despicable hypocrite. He is not a lamb, he is a wolf. He is not a saint, he is a gorilla. His object is not that of the philanthrophist, it is that of the destroyer. It is said that science has fully demon strated that there is no God; that the Bible is not an inspired work; that the Church is not a divine institution; that there is no heaven, no hell, no future life, and that the end of man is the silent grave. Now, granting for the sake of argument, that science has proved all this, what effect is this to have upon Christianity? Science to-day, it must be con- ceded, is making great progress and wields a mighty influence. And its growth and ad- vancement, as well as its discoveries, have undoubtedly had a marked effect upon the religious beliefs of men. It has unquestion- ably developed skepticism to such an extent "Dowling behaves science & religian are ure conciliable that suence well dissipate teef INGERSOLLISM. 145 But how as to lead thinking people to say, that we are indeed living in an age of unbelief. long is this to last? When the scientific in- tellect has exhausted its power and learning, in discussing the truth or untruth of the pre- sent religious beliefs-and I think it must be admitted that this power has already been exhausted a reaction must inevitably follow. And this reaction is now taking place, and must in my opinion necessarily be favorable to religion, and unfavorable to personal scien- tific conclusions. One of the most logical reasons for this is, that the majority of reli- gious people, either never read anything con- cerning scientific developments-and there- fore are wholly ignorant of the developments that science has made-or they are prejudiced to such an extent by their religious bigotry, against all scientific theories on religious sub- jects, that when they do read what science 10 146 REASON AND has to say, they find the views of the scien- tists so completely antagonistic to their own, that they usually reject them without either respect or consideration. Hence it will be seen, that the scientists live in one atmosphere of belief, while those who are of a religious turn of mind generally live in another. And while scientists usually know everything that is going on in the religious world, the great masses of religionists know but little, if any- thing, about what is going on in the world of science. So that it makes no difference, whether the conclusions reached by the scientists are correct or incorrect, just so long as the great masses of the religionists are unconscious of the nature of those conclusions, they can have neither force nor effect, and therefore, the ultimate result of this war between science and theology, especially in view of the re- action which has already been adverted to, Religious people (Church) ignore Пе or know ishere of nothing of synce quence well jail- Earth, the opposite has happened. INGERSOLLISM. 147 and which in my judgment must inevitably take place when science has reached the zenith of her progress and glory, must naturally be in favor of Christianity, and against the con-- clusions to which science may now seem to› lead The truth and logic of this conclusion,. will be all the more apparent, when it is con-- sidered that the scientists and those who sym- wouldn't pathize with them in their views, only numbere surprised a bo today a few thousands, while the religionists can numbered by the hundred millions. The common sense of mankind to-day, seems to revolt against all scientific views on religious questions, no matter whether they are true or false. And notwithstanding all that science and atheism have said and promulgated rela- tive to religious beliefs, the majority of people who believe in any religious faith, are so wholly ignorant of what has been said, that they are entirely unconscious of what science this Hogan: Agresance is Weis - 148 REASON AND and atheism have uttered. The secret of this perhaps, lies in the fact that scientific and atheistic literature is not only too dry, and too heavy, to interest the masses of the people, but its learning is so far beyond their compre- hension, that as a rule they never read it. And those who have read what the scientists and atheists have had to say about the Chris- tian religion find no consolation in their views. It has been said by an able English writer of the positive school, who evidently does not welcome the growth of atheism and skepticism, based upon scientific principles and arguments, that "Never in the history of man has so terrific a calamity befallen the race as that which all who look may now behold, advancing as a deluge, black with destruc- tion, resistless in might, uprooting our most cherished hopes, engulfing our most precious creed, and burying our highest life in mind- INGERSOLLISM. 149 less desolation," filling the soul of man with fear, gloom, and unspeakable horror, while, "Religion, blushing, veils her sacred fires, And, unawares, morality expires." "All serious reflections," says Mr. Mallock, "are like reflections in water-a pebble will disturb them, and make a dull pond sparkle. But the sparkle dies, and the reflection comes again. And there are many about us, though they never confess their pain, and perhaps themselves hardly like to acknowledge it, whose hearts are aching for the they can no longer believe in. religion that Their lonely hours, between the intervals of gaiety, are passed with barren and sombre thoughts; and a cry rises to their lips but never passes them." If all the people were as intelligent and law-abiding as Mr. Ingersoll, no doubt this world would be perfectly happy without any 150 REASON AND religion at all. But when you consider the ignorance and immorality of the masses of the people, notwithstanding the high state of civilization which we enjoy, it must be mani- fest to every thoughtful man, that some moral restraint, for the government of the passions of the great masses of the people is absolutely essential. The Church alone of all other in- stitutions, can supply this necessary moral restraint. She is the only institution in exist- ence, in which the people have implicit con- fidence, that possesses the power and capacity to exercise that moral influence over the masses of the people, which is indispensible to good morals, and the maintenance of the best interests of society. The Church is susceptible of reform, but she can never be obliterated. You might just as well try to prevent grass from grow- ing upon the earth, as to attempt to suppress ~ Church is only institution in which gnorance masses place infiding to appeals to their invenit, talk afreight. INGERSOLLISM. 151 her. Her teachings have become too firmly implanted in the human heart. You may root her up, and apparently annihilate her, but she will re-appear to flourish and grow more influential than ever. As civilization advances, as the human intellect develops, she will undoubtedly change her dogmas and teachings. But to destroy her is impossible. The great masses of the people will always believe in the existence of a God, and the divine authority of the holy church. The Christian Church is absolutely indestructible, because to destroy the Church means to re- vive barbarism. To revive barbarism is an utter impossibility. Whole nations to be sure have deserted Catholicism, to believe in Protestantism. Whole nations have left Pro- testantism and lapsed into infidelity, and have gone back to Catholicism again, but none have gone back to barbarism. Under "the law of 152 REASON AND the survival of the fittest," the Christian Church must continue to exist until the con- summation of time. Her foundation is as firm and immutable from decay, as the base of the Alleghany Mountains. Her glory as endur- ing as the eternal granite upon the hills. No human power can ever hope to extirpate her. Her life is imperishable, her fame immortal. She of course, will every now and then be agitated by internal and external foes, her ministry will occasionally become corrupt, and she herself will become arrogant when overwhelmed and flushed by success, but these turbulent causes will only disturb her momentarily she will survive them all. She possesses the power to resist every attack upon her, whether made by pen or sword. In diplomacy, in statemanship, her achieve- ments have dazzled the nations of the earth. And, "It is impossible to deny the fact, that INGERSOLLISM. 153 the polity of the" Christian Church, "is the very masterpiece of all human wisdom. In truth, nothing but such a polity could, against such assaults," have survived for so many cen- 66 turies. 'The experience of" two thousand "eventful years, the ingenuity and patient care of forty generations of statesmen, have improved her to such perfection, that she now occupies the highest place" in the world. So I say, "Let the storms of infidelity rage, though they be never so loud! Let thought- less youth and decaying old age sport as oft as they may with the perilous winds! The storm shall roll on and be lost in the night, but the temple shall stand as before! Skeptics and others may say what they please, but there can be no doubt, that when you undermine a man's religion, you not only take away his hope of a future life, but you inevitably destroy his sense of right and ४ 154 REASON AND wrong. The man who can conscientiously reject the atheistic deductions which the lips of science seem to whisper but faintly, and believe with his whole heart and soul in the existence of a supreme Being, a living God, and a future life of eternal rewards and pun- ishments, is certainly happier, than the man who neither believes in a God, nor a future life, but who believes that the grave is the end of man. To deny this, would be equiv- alent to denying the truth. The man who believes in a God, and an interminable life of joy in the future, certainly may have some hope in this world-something to live for. But he who believes in neither, and sees naught but a yawning grave before him, enters into that realm of darkness and de- spair, in entering which, he might well exclaim in the language of the poet: "All hope abandon, ye who enter here." INGERSOLLISM. 155 Mr. Ingersoll would destroy man's belief in a future life, he would destroy man's hope of heaven, he would destroy the holy Bible, he would destroy the Church, he would destroy Christianity, he would destroy God! What does all this mean? It means the subversion of good morals, the demoralization of society, the destruction of civilization, and the sub- stitution of tyranny for liberty. And what does Mr. Ingersoll propose to give us in re- turn? That sable monster called infidelity, the worship of reason, nihilism, communism, and a French Revolution with all its attendant horrors and sublime atrocities. And while Mr. Ingersoll says, "Happiness is the only possible good, and all that tends to the happiness of man is right, and is of value," still he unblushingly and unceasingly endeavors to deprive man of the only ray of hope which makes this life endurable and quato 156 REASON AND happy, by attempting to rob him of the con- solation which he finds in his belief in the immortality of the soul. And yet Mr. Inger- soll has said while standing in the awful silence of death, at his brother's grave, that "From the voiceless lips of the unreplying dead there comes no word; but in the night of death hope sees a star and listening love can hear the rustle of a wing." And again: "The idea of immortality, that like a sea has ebbed and flowed in the human heart, with its countless waves of hope and fear, beating against the shores and rocks of time and fate, was not born of any book, nor of any creed, nor of any religion. It was born of human affection and it will continue to ebb and flow beneath the mists and clouds of doubt and darkness as long as love kisses the lips of death." There can be no doubt, that however much INGERSOLLISM. 157% the infidel writers may have done to advance literature and science, they have done but precious little to ameliorate the condition of mankind or make men happier. For this reason the world owes but little to such men as Voltaire, Reauseau, Paine, Ingersoll, and the rest of the infidels named by the lat- ter. The men who have done most to civil- ize the world, and to whom mankind are most indebted, are the inventors of steam, rail- roads, steamboats, telegraphy, printing, elect- ricity and a thousand other inventions. These men were not a lot of scheming hypocrites or infidels. They were men who said but little and performed much. They were not like Mr. Ingersoll and the rest of those infidels, who have talked a great deal, written a great deal, but have invented nothing and per- formed nothing, whose principal business has been that of the adventurous mercenary, * quito 158 REASON AND who wrote and talked for money, who believed nothing they said and who were a lot of blatant hypocrites whose whole lives were passed in stirring up strife, and making the world unhappy. So far as I am personally concerned, no matter whether the doctrines of Christianity are true or false, no matter what other men or the world may think or say about them, so convinced am I, that the maintenance of the Christian Church is of far more vital import- ance to man, than the continued existence of any other human institution, that if such a thing were possible as the immediate extinc- tion of the Christian Church, and the sacrifice of my life would save her from destruction, I should not only consider it a high privilege, but a distinguished honor, to be able to bid farewell to the "vain pomp, and glory of this Chuck is wron имала world," and sacrifice, my life to, maintain, the It doesn't matter whitdes the Church is os rigdo de romed He roaintained INGERSOLLISM. 159 holy Church, that I might be borne by her to my long home, while "the music of requiem filled her cathedral arches, and the domes of her proudest temples." This I would be willing to do, even though the Church were nothing but a human institution. I would be willing to do it, for the love which I bear for my fellow men, and the inevitable advantage which such a sacrifice under such circum- stances, would confer upon mankind, through the instrumentality of the Church and her glorious good works. Dowling is 1. Anti-reasin 2. LL 3. Science sceptician * 160 REASON AND CHAPTER VII. THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. "What peremptory, eagle-sighted eye Dares look upon the heaven of her brow, That is not blinded by her majesty." If the Christian Church is to be considered as a human institution, she must be judged by the same criterion, that we would judge any other institution of human origin. And in this character, what can be said of her? Where is the institution that is performing so many works of charity? What other institu- tion is doing so much as a social organization, to promote good morals? If we consider her in the light of an educational institution, where is her peer? As a preventive of crime, MAN'S WHEN CONDITION CHRISTIANITY WAS BORN. *** VIACE. ԼՈՈ MAN'S PROGRESS UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY. This is an answer to Mr. Ingersoll's illustrated "Preface" in his work, entitled: "The Gods and Other Lectures." INGERSOLLISM. 161 where is her equal? Is not her chief aim to make men better and happier, to uphold all that is right, and to oppose that which is wrong? And what grander mission could any human institution have in this world? Whatever tends to make man better, tends to make him happier. And if this is true, why is it that Mr. Ingersoll opposes the Church? Is it because she is doing more to make man happy, than any other human institution on this earth? To write the history of the Church, would be equivalent to writing the history of the world. "Let man only see her as she is, as she has ever been, divinely beautiful, divinely beneficent, divinely wise; let him see her as she is, living with an immortal life, radiant with an imperishable beauty, surrounded by the wrecks of a thousand kingdoms and empires" that have been swept away; while she ex- 11 162 REASON AND again pores солон Curlin hibits no signs of mortal decay, but presents an appearance resplendent with the renown of ages, and as dazzling as the sun with the world's immortal fame. Intellectually, the Church is the beacon light of the world. In this respect, she is no more to be compared with any other human institution, than genius is with mediocrity, or the capacious ocean with a rippling stream. Intellectually, she towers above them all, even as the mountain towers above the plain. This millionaire of souls, is the very embodiment of all human greatness, and of all human wis- dom. For millions of years this earth was nothing but a barren waste, and utterly unfit for the habitation of man. The birth of Christianity gave a new impulse to the human intellect, and lifted mankind up to a higher plain of thought and action. It found man in a con- INGERSOLLISM. 163 dition of semi-barbarism, it has advanced him to a state of civliization such as the world never saw before, a civilization, that like a new born star, has shed a glorious lustre over the prospects of humanity. "It found anarchy and barbarism; it has bestowed order and enlightenment. It found groveling ignorance and super- stition; it has bestowed knowledge and philosophy. It found man a vassal and slave; it has lifted him to a peerage with Gods. It found woman a menial and concubine; it has lifted her up to the sphere of angels. Do you point me to the achievements of the nations before Christ; their wondrous pro- ficiency in the arts and sciences? I will point you to the wreck and ruin of it all. Do you ask why? Time has written the answer. 164 REASON AND Christianity found the human race unable to rise from the miry clay, staggering and blinded and bewildered, through the horror- strewn gorges of Polytheism; through the caverns of Doubt and Denial; through the unillumined defiles of a terrible Dread, grop- ing in the deep dark valley, surrounded by the ghastly spectres of the skeletoned past, while Death, brooding like a monster vampire over the world, cast everywhere its terrible shadow! But when the chorus rang out on the world, 'Peace! peace on earth, good will to men!' our poor humanity took heart. Slowly and steadily we have marched through all the centuries; slowly but surely, step by step, mounting the stair of Christ's enlightenment. And now, where once the trackless ocean rolled, and unknown seas kissed back the INGERSOLLISM. 165 sun, sails! commerce sits smiling in a million And now, where once was howling wilder- ness and waste, a million fields glow with the golden grain! a million homes crown life with happiness! And now, where once were unknown haunts of savage beasts, railroads, the swift arteries of trade, like a broad net-work spread, and the chained lightnings, girt about the globe, serve everywhere men's purposes! The land is decked with cities, and the land is jeweled over with churches and with schools? Nay, we have mounted far beyond these scenes! Behold! where gleam the countless stars, there stretch the highways of all-con- quering science! And now, where once were unknown heights, and depths profound, are paths 166 REASON AND wherein we stroll as through our gardens! Where once were grotesque shapes and heathen deities, now, through the illimitable space roll worlds innumerable! And these we measure, weigh and analyze, delve in their mines, explore their mountains and plains, bask in the light of their resplendent suns, and dally with their gorgeous tinted beams!" Christianity has recreated the world, "and from the ashes of the old feudal and decrepit carcase, civilization on her luminous wings soars, phoenix-like, to Jove." What a wonderful age of progress is this in which we live! Intellectually, man never stood higher. The conveniences of life were never so great. Every art, and every science, has almost reached perfection. Steamboats have taken the place of the "Dug-out," rail- roads have taken the place of the stage-coach, steam presses have taken the place of hand INGERSOLLISM. 167 presses, and in every department of manu- facture, and in all agricultural employments, machinery has taken the place of hand labor. Governments have improved, the laws have improved, our system of police has improved, and so has our system of education. We have a literature such as no former age or civiliza- tion ever anticipated or enjoyed. Personal liberty was never greater nor more secure- life and property never better protected. Free speech and a free press exist in every Footdivilized land. The absurd doctrine of the divine right and authority of kings no longer Chinch prevails. The advantages afforded by the press, the telephone, telegraphy and electric- ity, are simply immeasurable. The brilliancy of the times in which we live, the towering intellectual genius of man, and his dazzling achievements; in war, in peace, in statesman- ship, in literature, in diplomacy, and in all 168 REASON AND • the arts and sciences; are sufficiently stupen- dous to dwarf and eclipse by their splendor, the grandest accomplishments of all former ages. And all these things have been accomplished, and have come to pass, under the royal and salutary influence of the Christian Church. She has been an-eye witness to every change in the material and intellectual progress of man for two thousand years. "The history of the Church joins together the two great ages of human civilization. No other institution is left standing which carries the mind back to the times when the smoke of sacrifice rose. from the Pantheon, and when camelopards and tigers bounded in the Flavian amphi- theatre. The proudest royal houses are but of yesterday, when compared with the line of her Supreme Pontiffs. That line we trace back in an unbroken series, from the Pope who INGERSOLLISM. 169 crowned Napoleon in the nineteenth century, to the Pope who crowned Pepin in the eighth; and far beyond the time of Pepin the august dynasty extends, till it is lost in the twilight of fable. She saw the commencement of all the governments that now exist in the world; and we feel no assurance that she is not des- tined to see the end of them all. She was great and respected before the Saxon had set foot on Britain-before the Frank had passed the Rhine-when Grecian eloquence still' flourished at Antioch-when idols were still worshiped in the temple of Mecca. And she may still exist in undiminished vigor," until all mankind shall have bowed before her holy shrine, and embraced her holy teachings. Governments have been overthrown, repub- lics have been extinguished, empires have crumbled and decayed, dynasties have fallen, anarchy has reigned and passed into oblivion, 170 REASON AND INGERSOLLISM. kings have been dethroned, the old aristoc- racy is gone, we have new laws, new titles. all that was old has vanished; the world is full of new creations, the Church alone, of all the institutions of antiquity, appears "amidst the ruins of a world that has passed away. The idol of reason, the goddess of genius, the queen of nations. "Fresh in eternal youth, exempt from mutability and decay, immortal as the " divine power which gave her birth, crowned and sceptred, she sits upon her mighty throne, and reigns with majestic splendor, over the destinies of the world. : : Form 9584 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GRADUATE LIBRARY DATE DUE ! ** UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 3 9015 06225 4035 1 یا གས་ཅངས་ જો કે · માં