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<h2> THE LORD OF LORDS. * </h2>
<p>* Written in August, 1884.<br/></p>
<p>We are in the midst of a political crisis. The House of Lords opposes a
reform unanimously voted by the House of Commons. Great demonstrations are
being held all over the country, to insist on the popular will being
carried into effect, and there is a growing cry of "Down with the Lords."
A spectator from another planet might wonder at all the fuss. He might
marvel how forty millions of people needed to stamp and gesticulate
against a handful of obstructives. He might imagine that they had only to
decree a thing and it would immediately be; that all opposition to their
sovereign will would melt away the moment they declared it. This
traveller, however, would soon be undeceived. A little study would show
him that the people are kept in check by faith and custom. He would learn
that the nation is tied down like Gulliver was, by ligatures springing
from its own head. Behind the King there is a King of Kings; behind the
Lords there is a Lord of Lords. Behind every earthly despotism there is a
heavenly one. The rulers of mankind overawe the people by religious
terrors. They keep a body of men in their pay, the black army of theology,
whose business it is to frighten people from their rights by means of a
ghost behind the curtain. Nobody has ever seen the bogie, but we are
taught to believe in it from our infancy, and faith supplies the
deficiencies of sight. Thus we are enslaved by our own consent. Our will
is suborned against our interests. We wear no chains to remind us of our
servitude, but our liberty is restrained by the subtle web of
superstition, which is so fine as to be imperceptible except to keen and
well-practised eyes, and elastic enough to cheat us with a false sense of
freedom.</p>
<p>Yes, we must seek in religion the secret of all political tyranny and
social injustice. Not only does history show us the bearing of religion on
politics—we see it to-day wherever we cast our gaze. Party feeling
is so embittered in France because the sharp line of division in politics
corresponds with the sharp line of division in religion. On the one side
there is Freethought and Republicanism, and on the other Catholicism and
Monarchy. Even in England, which at present knows less of the naked
despotism of the Catholic Church than any other European country, we are
gradually approximating to a similar state of things. Freethougnt is
appearing upon the public stage, and will play its peculiar part as
naturally as religion does. Those who fancy that theology and politics
have no necessary relations, that you may operate in the one without
affecting the other, and that they can and should be kept distinct, are
grossly mistaken. Cardinal Newman has well shown how it is the nature of
ideas to assimilate to themselves whatever agrees with them, and to
destroy whatever disagrees. When once an idea enters the human mind it
acts according to the necessary laws of thought. It changes to its own
complexion all its mental surroundings, and through every mental and moral
channel influences the world of practice outside. The real sovereigns of
mankind, who sway its destinies with irresistible power, are not the
czars, emperors, kings and lords, nor even the statesmen who enact laws
when public sentiment is ripe; they are the great thinkers who mould
opinion, the discoverers and enunciators of Truth, the men of genius who
pour the leaven of their ideas and enthusiasm into the sluggish brain of
humanity.</p>
<p>Even in this crisis it is easy to see how Religion and Freethought are at
variance. The Liberal party is not pledged to the abolition of the House
of Lords, but the Radical party is. Orthodox Liberalism is Christian, only
a little less so than orthodox Conservatism; but Radicalism is very
largely sceptical. It would surprise the dullards of both parties to learn
how great a portion of the working energy of Radicalism is supplied by
Freethinkers. True, many of them are unavowed Freethinkers, yet they are
of our party although they do not wear our colors. But setting all these
aside, I assert that Radicalism would be immensely weakened by the
withdrawal of declared Freethinkers from its ranks. No one in the least
acquainted with political organisation would think of disputing this.</p>
<p>Belief in God is the source and principle of all tyranny. This lies in the
very nature of things. For what is God? All definitions of religion from
Johnson's down to that of the latest dictionary agree on this one point,
that it is concerned with man's relations to <i>the unknown</i>. Yes, God
is the Unknown, and theology is the science of ignorance. Earl
Beaconsfield, in his impish way, once said that where our knowledge ends
our religion begins. A truer word was never spoken.</p>
<p>Now the unknown is the terrible. We become fearful the moment we confront
the incalculable. Go through the history of religions, consult the various
accounts of savage and barbarous faiths at present extant, and you will
find that the principle of terror, springing from the unknown, is the
essential feature in which they all agree. This terror inevitably begets
slavishness. We cannot be cowardly in this respect without its affecting
our courage in others. The mental serf is a bodily serf too, and spiritual
fetters are the agencies of political thraldom. The man who worships a
tyrant in heaven naturally submits his neck to the yoke of tyrants on
earth. He who bows his intellect to a priest will yield his manhood to a
king. Everywhere on earth we find the same ceremonies attending every form
of dependence. The worshipper who now kneels in prayer to God, like the
courtier who backs from the presence of the monarch, is performing an
apology for the act of prostration which took place alike before the altar
and the throne. In both cases it was the adoration of fear, the debasement
of the weak before the seat of irresponsible power.</p>
<p>Authority is still the principle of our most refined creeds. The majority
of Christians believe in salvation by faith; and what is the God of that
dogma but a capricious tyrant, who saves or damns according to his
personal whim? The ministers of Protestantism, like the priests of
Catholicism, recognise this practically in their efforts to regulate
public education. They dare not trust to the effect of persuasion on the
unprejudiced mind; they must bias the minds of children by means of
dogmatic teaching. They bend the twig in order to warp the tree.</p>
<p>Now God is the supreme principle of authority as he is the essence of the
unknown. He is thus the head, front and symbol of terror and slavery, and
as such must be assailed by every true soldier of Progress. We shall never
enfranchise the world without touching people's superstitions; and even if
we abolish the House of Lords we shall still dwell in the house of bondage
unless we abolish the Lord of Lords; for the evil principle will remain as
a germ to develop into new forms of oppression.</p>
<p>Freethought is the real Savior. When we make a man a Freethinker, we need
not trouble greatly about his politics. He is sure to go right in the
main. He may mistake here or falter there, but his tendency will always be
sound. Thus it is that Freethinkers always vote, work and fight for the
popular cause. They have discarded the principle of authority in the
heavens above and on the earth beneath, and left it to the Conservative
party, to which all religionists belong precisely in proportion to the
orthodoxy of their faith. Freethought goes to the root. It reaches the
intellect and the conscience, and does not merely work at haphazard on the
surface of our material interests and party struggles. It aims at the
destruction of all tyranny and injustice by the sure methods of
investigation and discussion, and the free play of mind on every subject.
It loves Truth and Freedom. It turns away from the false and sterile ideas
of the Kingdom of God and faces the true and fruitful idea of the Republic
of Man.</p>
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