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<h2> DEAD THEOLOGY. </h2>
<p>This is an age of "series." Every publisher issues one, and the number of
them is legion. As far as possible they are written by "eminent hands," as
old Jacob Tonson used to call his wretched scribblers in Grub-street
garrets. But not every publisher can secure such an eminent hand as a live
Archbishop, This has been achieved, however, by Messrs. Sampson, Low,
Marston, and Company. Having projected a series of "Preachers of the Age,"
they were fortunate enough to enlist the Archbishop of Canterbury under
their banner. His Grace, as it is etiquette to call him, though his
natural name is Edward White Benson, leads off the publishers' attack on
the British public with a volume of sermons entitled <i>Living Theology</i>.
It is well printed on good paper, the binding is appropriate, and the
price of three-and-sixpence puts it within the reach of the great
middle-class public which cares for such things. We are far from sharing
the opinion of a carper who remarked that, as sermons go, this volume is
rather dear. Thirteen sermons by an Archbishop! Could any man in his
senses expect them for less money? The real wonder is that a man with
£15,000 a-year should condescend to publish at all. We ought to feel
thankful that he does not charge us a guinea a volume.</p>
<p>Prefixed to the thirteen sermons, at fourpence apiece, including the
binding, is an excellent photogravure portrait of the Archbishop. The face
is keen and scholarly, and not unpleasant. A noticeable nose, a large
fluent mouth, shrewd eyes, and a high well-shaped head, make on the whole
an agreeable picture. Something about the features shows the preacher, and
something more the ecclesiastic. It is the type, and the best type, of the
learned priest. Nobody could look at this portrait and call Edward White
Benson a fool. But is any one in danger of doing so? Would not every one
admit some ability in the unhereditary recipient of fifteen thousand a
year? Parsons are not a brilliant body, but to wriggle, or climb, or rise
to the top of the Black Army involves the possession of uncommon
faculties.</p>
<p>The Archbishop is seldom eloquent, in the popular sense of the word; but
his style has a certain force and color, always within the limits of
exquisite breeding. If he consigned you to Gehenna, he would do it with
bland graciousness; and if he swore at all, he would swear in Latin. His
language in these sermons, as in another volume we noticed a year ago, is
pure and nervous, with an etymological reason for every word. Sometimes he
is quite felicitous. Now and then he uses metaphor with skill and
illumination. The habitual concreteness of his style shows the clearness
of his perceptions. Occasionally he is epigrammatic "Strong enemies," he
says in one place, "are better to us than weak friends. They show us our
weak points." Finer and higher is another passage in the same sermon—"The
yearning of multitudes is not in vain. After yearning comes impulse,
volition, movement." It would be difficult, if not impossible, to better
this, unless a great poet cast it in the mould of a metaphor.</p>
<p>We confess that, on the whole, we have read the Archbishop's sermons with
some pleasure, as well as with much attention. It is to his credit that he
defies a superficial reading. We do not expect to find another volume in
the series at all comparable with his. Dr. Maclaren, who comes second, is
on a lower level, and the next descent to Mr. Price Hughes is a fall into
a slough of incapable and reckless sentimentalism.</p>
<p><i>Living Theology</i> is the title of the Archbishop's volume, but this
is a misnomer, for the title belongs only to the first sermon. It misled
us in this general application, as it will probably mislead others. We
took it to be a setting forth of so much theology as the Archbishop
thought <i>living</i>, in contradistinction to what he allowed to be <i>dead</i>.
But we find a very miscellaneous lot of sermons, sometimes rather on
Church work than on Church teaching. The title, therefore, is what Walt
Whitman would call "a suck and a sell." Yet it is hardly worth while to
labor the complaint, for titles are often better than the pages that
follow them. Sometimes, indeed, a writer puts all his head into the title,
and the rest of the book displays his imbecility. But this cannot be said
of the Archbishop.</p>
<p>Another difficulty is this. The Archbishop's sermons are hard for a
Freethinker to criticise. He seldom expounds and rarely argues. He
addresses an audience who take the fundamentals of Christianity for
granted. Yet he lays himself open here and there, and where he does so we
propose to meet him.</p>
<p>In the first sermon Dr. Benson is surely going beyond his actual belief in
referring to "the earliest race of man, with whom the whole race so nearly
passed away." He can scarcely take the early chapters of Genesis literally
at this time of day. In the very next sermon he speaks cheerfully of the
age of Evolution. That sermon was preached at St. Mary's, Southampton, to
the British Association in 1882. It is on "The Spirit of Inquiry." "The
Spirit of Inquiry," he says, "is God's spirit working in capable men, to
enlarge the measure and the fulness of man's capacity." But if <i>capable</i>
men are necessary, to say nothing of favorable conditions, the working of
God's spirit seems lost in the natural explanation. Still, it is pleasant
to find the Archbishop welcoming the Spirit of Inquiry, under any
interpretation of its essence; and it may be hoped that he will vote
accordingly when the Liberty of Bequest Bill reaches the Upper Chamber. It
is also pleasant to read his admission that the Spirit of Inquiry (we keep
his capitals) "has made short work not only of the baser religions, but of
the baser forms of ours"—to wit, the Christian. Some of those "baser
forms" are indicated in the following passage:</p>
<p>"I know not whether any stern or any sensuous religion of heathendom has
held up before men's astonished eyes features more appalling or more
repulsive than those of the vindictive father, or of the arbitrary
distributor of two eternities, or again of the easy compromiser of
offences in return for houses and lands. Dreadful shadows under which,
thousands have been reared."</p>
<p>Dreadful shadows indeed! And not thousands, but countless millions, have
been reared under them. Those dreadful shadows were for centuries the
universal objects of Christian worship. They still hover over Spurgeon's
tabernacle and a host of other houses of God. But they are hateful to Dr.
Benson. To him the God of orthodoxy, the God of the Thirty-nine Articles,
is dead. He dismisses Predestination, a vindictive God, and Everlasting
Torment. He speaks of the very "prison" where Christ is said to have
preached after his death, as a place "where spirits surely unlearn many a
bias, many a self-wrought blindness, many a heedless error." Hell is
therefore a place of purgation, which is certainly an infinite improvement
on the orthodox idea of eternal and irremediable woe, however it fall(s)
below the conception that the Creator has no right to punish his own
failures.</p>
<p>Let the reader note who makes these admissions of the intellectual and
moral death of the "baser forms" of Christianity. It is not an
irresponsible <i>franc-tireur</i> of the Black Army, nor an expelled
soldier like Mr. Voysey, nor a resigned soldier like Dr. Momerie. It is
the Archbishop of Canterbury, the highest dignitary of the Church of
England.</p>
<p>His Grace does not reflect—he cannot afford to reflect—that as
the dead theology of to-day was the living theology of the past, so the
living theology of to-day may be the dead theology of to-morrow.</p>
<p>The Archbishop still dogmatises, even in this sermon on the Spirit of
Inquiry. In opposition to the man of science who knows of no limits to
nature, he declares that "There is a <i>sum</i> of created things, and
therefore a real end (however far off) to what can be known of them." In a
certain sense, truly, there <i>is</i> an end to what can be known of
nature, for human knowledge must ever be relative and not absolute. But
the Archbishop's limit is not qualitative in man; it is quantitative in
the universe. Herein he goes beyond the bounds of knowledge, and indulges
in the very dogmatism for which he reprehends the materialist.</p>
<p>It is dogmatism also to assert that "the soul has every reason to believe
itself absolutely eternal." Absolutely is a word of vast significance. How
can it apply to "the soul"? Were "the soul" to subsist eternally in the
future, it could not be <i>absolutely</i> eternal if it once began to be.
"Every reason" is also too comprehensive. Dr. Benson may think he has good
reasons for "the soul's" immortality, but he must be aware that divines of
his own church have held the contrary doctrine.</p>
<p>Before the Spirit of Inquiry, says Dr. Benson, every other religion than
Christianity fades away; though he has admitted that some parts of
Christianity, the "baser forms," have shared the same fate. Every fresh
conquest of the Spirit of Inquiry has "brought out some trait in the
character, or some divine conception in the mind of Jesus of Nazareth."
This sweeping statement is supported by "three very clearly marked"
instances.</p>
<p>The first is that science shows us the unity of life. "The latest
discovered laws involve at least this, that the Life of man is one Life."
And this is "no more than the scientific verification of what was long ago
stated, and by Christians (at least for a while) acted on."</p>
<p>In support of the Christian idea of the Unity of Life the Archbishop cites
St. Paul, who once asked in a callous way if God cared for oxen. Had the
Archbishop appealed to Jesus he would have found the oracle dumb, or
something worse; for the Nazarene distinctly told his apostles to preach
only to the Jews, and leave the Samaritans and Gentiles in darkness. St.
Paul took a flight beyond this narrow patriotism. It was he, and not the
personal disciples of Jesus, who broke down the barriers between Jew and
Gentile. It was he who scorned the idea that Jesus, to use his own
language, was only sent to the lost sheep of the house ot Israel. It was
he, and not Peter, or James, or John, who said that God had made all
nations of one blood; he who declared "ye are all one in Christ." Yet it
is easy to make too much of this; for St. Paul did not include the heathen
and unbelievers within the fold of brotherhood; and when he asserted the
fatherhood of God, he appealed to the previous utterance of a Greek poet,
thus conceding his own want of originality.</p>
<p>One might imagine, too, that the old Jewish story of Creation—which
in turn was not original—involved the common descent of the human
race; and as this idea was almost, if not quite, universal, being based on
the obvious generic resemblance of the various races of mankind, it seems
a stretch of fancy to put it forward as "a Christian statement" in some
way connected with "Jesus of Nazareth."</p>
<p>The Archbishop's second instance of the concurrence of modern progress
with the teaching of Jesus, is, to say the least of it, peculiar. "From
the liberty to inquire," he says, "comes the liberty to express the
results of inquiry. And this is the preamble of the Charter of Jesus
Christ."</p>
<p>We defy Dr. Benson to find a single plain passage about freedom of thought
in the teachings of Jesus. The Nazarene was fond of saying, "He that hath
ears to hear let him hear." But it was reserved for Ingersoll to say, "He
that hath a brain to think let him think."</p>
<p>The Archbishop goes on to claim Darwin as "our aged Master"—Darwin,
who rejected Christianity for forty years of his life! He quotes from
Beale the sentence, "Intellectual work of every kind must be free." "And
the New Testament," he adds, "is still the one volume of books on religion
which accepts thia whole statement."</p>
<p>This is a bold—some would say a brazen—assertion. If the New
Testament teaches anything clearly, it teaches that belief is necessary to
salvation. That doctrine stifles free speech and extinguishes inquiry. Why
investigate if you may be damned for your conclusions? And why allow
investigation if another man's errors may involve your perdition? These
questions have been answered logically enough by the Christian Church, and
the "Charter of Jesus Christ" has been the worst of spiritual oppressions.
No religion has been so intolerant as the Christian. Mohammedanism has
been far less bigoted. Buddhism has the proud distinction of never having
persecuted one human being in twenty-four centuries. The Archbishop's
third instance is fantastic to the point of grotesqueness. Both
Christianity and the spirit of Inquiry, he says, are at one in "the demand
for fruit." Does he mean to imply that other religions set their faces
against "fruit"? Buddhism is quite imperative about moral duties.
Mohammedanism gets itself obeyed in matters of conduct, while Christianity
is quite ineffectual. Drink, gambling, and prostitution abound in
Christian countries; in the Mohammedan world they have been sternly
repressed. This is admitted by Dr. Benson in his volume on <i>Christ and
his Times</i>; admitted, and even emphasised; so that he may, as it were,
be confuted out of his own mouth.</p>
<p>If we take a leap to the penultimate sermon in the present volume, we find
Archbishop Benson indulging in the same kind of loose statement and
inconsequential reasoning. Its title is "Christ's Crucifixion, an All in
All." The preacher scorns the Greek notion of the Crucifixion as "the
shocking martyrdom of a grand young moralist." Such a notion, he says, is
"quite inconsistent with the facts." Either we know not what Christ
taught, or else he was more than man. And the Archbishop sets about
proving this by means of a series of leaps over logical chasms.</p>
<p>After dilating on the innocence of Christ, who was certainly guilty
according to the Mosaic law, and deserving of death according to the
express command of Jehovah, the Archbishop writes as follows:</p>
<p>"Then we look back through our eighteen centuries, and we see that before
the age of three-and-thirty he had fashioned sayings, had compacted
thoughts, had expressed principles about duty, about the relative worth of
things, about life, about love, about intercourse with God, about the
formation of character, the relation of classes, the spirit of law, the
essence of government, the unity of man, which had not existed, or which
were not formulated when he opened his lips, but which have been and are
the basis of society from the time they were known till now."</p>
<p>This is a tissue of false assumptions. The sayings, thoughts, and
principles of Jesus <i>did</i> exist before, and they <i>were</i>
formulated when he opened his lips. Not one original utterance is ascribed
to him in the whole of the Gospels. It is idle to bandy generalisations;
let the Archbishop select specimens of Christ's teaching, and we will find
parallels to them, sometimes better and more wisely expressed, in the
utterances of his predecessors. Nor is it true that Christ's teachings
have been, or are, the basis of society. Society exists in defiance of
them. It is never based, and it never will be based, on any abstract
teaching. Its basis is <i>self-interest</i>, ever increasing in
complexity, and ever more and more illuminated by the growth of knowledge.</p>
<p>Take the case of oaths. Jesus said plainly, "Swear not at all." But when
earthly potentates wanted their subjects to swear fidelity, the Christian
priests discovered that Jesus meant, "Swear only on special occasions."
And it was reserved for an Atheist, in the nineteenth century, to pass an
Act allowing Christians to obey Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>Take the injunction, "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth."
Society could never exist upon such a basis, so the clergy find that
Jesus, like Polonius, spoke tropically. Every Christian is busy laying up
treasures on earth, and Archbishop Benson is well to the front in the
competition.</p>
<p>Having made ridiculous claims for Jesus Christ, the Archbishop proceeds in
this wise: "Next ask yourself whether a stainless, loving, sincere,
penetrating person like that makes or enlarges on unfounded declarations
as to matters of fact. Is it consistent with such a character?" Now Jesus
speaks of "the immense importance of his own person," he speaks of "My
flesh, My blood" as of vital power, he says "I and my Father are one."
Could he have been deceived? Well, why not? Honesty does not guarantee us
against error. The best of men have been mistaken, And sincere natures are
most liable to be deceived by taking subjective impressions for external
realities.</p>
<p>There is another explanation which the Archbishop is too shrewd to pass
over in silence. Perhaps others said those things for Jesus, perhaps they
"attributed to him sayings which he did not utter." But this, the
Archbishop says, only multiplies the difficulty and the astonishment; for,
to put it briefly, his biographers in that case were as good at predicting
and inventing as himself. And why not? Do we not know that the story of
the woman taken in adultery, which is finely told, and has all along been
thought to contain some of Christ's most characteristic teaching, does not
exist in the earlier manuscripts? It was invented by an unknown writer.
And if one unknown writer could (and did) invent this story, other unknown
writers may have invented every part of the Gospel narratives.</p>
<p>The attempt to make Jesus sponsor for himself is the last refuge of
hard-driven Christians. The frame of mind it evinces is seen in Dr.
Benson's interpretation of the exclamation "I thirst," ascribed to Jesus
on the cross. Crucifixion produced an intolerable thirst, and the
exclamation is very natural; but Dr. Benson says that Jesus meant "I
thirst for souls," and and adds that "no man can doubt" it. Such are the
shifts to which Christians are reduced when they cling to faith in
defiance of reason.</p>
<p>Dr. Benson's "living theology" is dead theology. It is sentimentalism and
make-believe. Perfectly scriptural doctrines are cast aside while others
are arbitrary retained. Vague talk about "Christ and him crucified" takes
the place of time-honored dogmas, logically deduced from the "Word of
God," and stamped with the deliberate approval of councils and synods.
Christianity, in short, is becoming a matter of personal taste and
preference. The time is approaching when every Christian will have a
Christianity of his own.</p>
<p>This is the moral of the Archbishop's volume. Had space permitted we
should have liked to notice other features of his sermons. In one place he
says that "the so-called Secularist is the man who deprives things secular
of all power and meaning and beauty." We think that he deprives
Christianity of all meaning, and that being gone its "power" and "beauty"
are idle themes of wasted eloquence.</p>
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