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<h2> NO FAITH WITH HERETICS. </h2>
<p>During the Crusades, when the Christians were wantonly fighting against
their superiors in civilisation and humanity, the doctrine, was
promulgated and obeyed that no faith should be kept with infidels, and
this was subsequently put in force against heretics. Thousands of
Mohammedan prisoners were butchered in cold blood, although their safety
had been confirmed by an oath; and this infamous practice was afterwards
pursued with respect to the "heretical" sects when the Papal troops
desolated some of the fairest parts of Europe. Not only was there no
salvation outside the Church, but even the ordinary laws of human society
were held to be abrogated. This wickedness, perhaps, reached its
culmination in the Spanish conquest of America. Few Christians were
civilised enough to condemn these purjured banditti, but Montaigne in
France, and Raleigh in England, were glorious exceptions, and both of them
were under a just suspicion of heterodoxy.</p>
<p>Protestants as well as Catholics were infected with this infamous bigotry.
Luther himself was not free from taint, and Calvin's treachery against
Servetus is an eternal blot on his character.</p>
<p>"No faith with heretics" took a new form when the downright violation of
an oath became too dissonant to the spirit of an improved civilisation. It
found expression in robbing the heretic of political and social rights,
and above all in treating him as outside the pale of honor. Slandering him
was no libel. Every bigot claimed the right to say anything against his
character, for the purpose of bringing his opinions into hatred and
contempt. All the dictates of charity were cast aside; his good actions
were misrepresented, and his failings maliciously exaggerated. If Voltaire
spent thousands in charity, he did it for notoriety; if he wrote odes to
beautiful or accomplished ladies, he was a wretched debauchee. If Thomas
Paine made sacrifices for liberty, he did it because he had a private
grudge against authority; if he befriended the wife and family of a
distressed Republican, he only sought to gratify his lust; if he spent a
convivial hour with a friend, he was an inveterate drunkard; and if he
contracted a malignant abscess by lying for months in a damp, unwholesome
dungeon, his sufferings were the nemesis of a wicked, profligate life.</p>
<p>An English precursor of Voltaire and Paine wrote <i>A Discourse on
Freethinking</i>. His name was Anthony Collins, and in a certain sense he
was the father of English Freethought. He was a man of exemplary life and
manners, yet the saintly Bishop Berkeley said he "deserved to be denied
the common benefit of air and water." One of Collins's antagonists was the
famous Dr. Bentley; and although Collins was a man of fortune, the
ridiculous calumny was started that he sought and obtained Bentley's
assistance in adversity. The author of this calumny was Richard
Cumberland, a grandson of Bentley, and in other respects an estimable man.
His mistake was pointed out by Isaac D'Israeli, who told him the person he
meant was <i>Arthur</i> Collins, the historical compiler. But Cumberland
perpetuated the calumny, remarking that "it should stand, because it could
do no harm to any but to Anthony Collins, whom he considered little short
of an Atheist."</p>
<p>Another story about Collins, which has frequently done duty in Christian
publications, is that a visitor found him reading the New Testament, and
that he remarked, "I have but one book, but that is the best." Fortunately
I am able to give the origin of this story. It is told of <i>William</i>
Collins, the poet, by Dr. Johnson, and may be found in the second volume
(p. 239) of that writer's "Miscellaneous and Fugitive Pieces," published
by Davies in Johnson's lifetime. It was not Anthony Collins, therefore;
but what does that matter? It was a gentleman named <i>Collins</i>; his
other name is indifferent. Besides, the story is so much more affecting
when told of <i>Anthony</i>.</p>
<p>Look at the lying stories of infidel death-beds; glance at the
scurrilities of an outcast minister which are gratuitously circulated by
the enemies of Colonel Ingersoll; observe on how many platforms Mr.
Brad-laugh has pulled out his watch and given the Almighty five minutes to
strike him dead; listen to the grotesque libels on every leading
Freethinker which are solemnly circulated by Christian malice; and you
will behold the last fruit of a very old tree, which is slowly but surely
perishing. It once bore scaffolds, stakes, prisons and torture rooms; it
now bears but libels and insinuations.</p>
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