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<h2> CHRIST AND BROTHERHOOD. </h2>
<p>Clergymen are supposed to be educated; that is, they go to college before
taking holy orders, and study what are called "the classics"—the
masterpieces of Greek and Roman literature. Theology is not enough to fit
them for the pulpit. They must also be steeped in "the humanities," It is
felt that they would never find all they require in the Bible. They find a
great deal of it in Pagan writings, and as these are unknown to the
people, it is safe for the clergy to work the best "heathen" ideas into
their interpretation of the Christian Scriptures. There was a time,
indeed, when Christian preachers were fond of references to Pagan poets
and philosophers. The people were so ignorant, and such implicit
believers, that it could be done with security. But now the case is
altered. The people are beginning to "smell a rat." It dawns upon them
that if so many fine things were said by those old Pagans—not to
mention the still more ancient teaching of India and Egypt—Christianity
can hardly merit such epithets as "unique" and "wonderful." Accordingly it
is becoming the fashion in clerical circles to avoid those old Pagans, or
else to damn them all in a sweeping condemnation. Some indeed go to the
length of declaring—or at least of insinuating—that all the
real truth and goodness there is in the world began with the Christian
era. This extreme is affected by the Evangelical school, and is carried to
its highest pitch of exaggeration by such shallow and reckless preachers
as the Rev. Hugh Price Hughes. Soon after the <i>Daily Chronicle</i>
correspondence on "Is Christianity Played Out?" this reverend gentleman,
and most accomplished "perverter of the truth," screamed from the platform
of St. James's Hall that women and children were regarded as slaves and
nuisances before the time of Christ; which is either a deliberate
falsehood, or a gross misreading both of history and of human nature. Mr.
Hughes has since been gathering his energies for a bolder effort in the
same direction. He now publishes in the <i>Methodist Times</i> his latest
piece of recklessness or fatuity. It is a sermon on "The Solidarity of
Mankind," and is really an exhibition of the solidity of Mr. Hughes's
impudence. It required nothing but "face," as Corbett used to call it, to
utter such monstrous nonsense in a sermon; it would need a great deal more
courage than Mr. Hughes possesses to utter it on any platform where he
could be answered and exposed.</p>
<p>Mr. Hughes believes in our "common humanity," and he traces it from "the
grand old gardener" (Tennyson). "We are all descended from Adam," he says,
"and related to one another." Now this is not true, even according to the
Bible; for when Cain fled into the land of Nod he took a wife there, which
clearly implies the existence of other people than the descendants of
Adam. But this is not the worst. Fancy a man at this time of day—a
burnin' an' a shinin' light to a' this place—gravely standing up and
solemnly telling three thousand people, most of whom we suppose have been
to school, that the legendary Adam of the book of Genesis was really the
father of the whole human race!</p>
<p>This common humanity is claimed by Mr. Hughes as "a purely Christian
conception." Yet he foolishly admits that "the Positivists in our own day
have strongly insisted on this great crowning truth which we Christians
have neglected." Nay, he states that when Kossuth appealed in England on
behalf of Hungary, he spoke in the name of the "solidarity" of the human
race. And why <i>solidarity</i>? Because the word had to be taken from the
French. And why from <i>the French</i>? "Because the French," Mr. Hughes
says, "have risen to a loftier level of human brotherhood than we."
Indeed! Then what becomes of your "purely <i>Christian</i> conception,"
when "infidel France" outshines "Christian England"? How is it, too, you
have to make the "shameful" confession that "we"—that is, the
Christians—took "nineteen centuries to find out the negro was a man
and therefore a brother"? You did not find it out, in fact, until the
eighteenth century—the century of Voltaire and Thomas Paine—the
century in which Freethought had spread so much, even in England, that
Bishop Butler in the Advertisement to his <i>Analogy</i>, dated May, 1736,
could say that "many persons" regarded Christianity as proved to be
"fictitious" to "all people of discernment," and thought that "nothing
remained but to set it up as a principal subject of mirth and ridicule."
How is it your "Christian conceptions" took such a surprising time to be
understood? How is it they had to wait for realisation until the advent of
an age permeated with the spirit of scepticism and secular humanity?</p>
<p>Mr. Hughes is brave enough—in the absence of a critic—to start
with Jesus Christ as the first cosmopolitan. "He came of the Jewish
stock," we are told, "and yet he had no trace of the Jew in him." Of
course not—in Christian sermons and Christian pictures, preached and
painted for non-Jewish, and indeed Jew-hating nations. But there is a very
decided "trace of the Jew in him" in the New Testament. To the Canaanite
woman he said, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel." To the twelve he said, "Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and
into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not: But go rather to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel." It was Paul who, finding he could not make
headway against the apostles who had known Jesus personally, exclaimed,
"Lo, we turn to the Gentiles." That exclamation was a turning point. It
was the first real step to such universalism as Christianity has attained.
No wonder, therefore, that Comte puts Paul instead of Jesus into the
Positivist calendar, as the real founder of Christianity.</p>
<p>Even in the case of St. Paul, it is perfectly idle to suppose that his
cosmopolitanism extended beyond the Roman empire. A little study and
reflection would show Mr. Hughes that the very fact of the Roman empire
was the secret of the cosmopolitanism. Moral conceptions follow in the
wake of political expansion. The morality of a tribe is tribal; that of a
nation is national; and national morality only developes into
international morality with the growth of international interests and
international communication. Now the Roman empire had broken up the old
nationalities, and with them their local religions. The human mind
broadened with its political and social horizon. And the result was that a
cosmopolitan sentiment in morals, and a universal conception in religion,
naturally spread throughout the territory which was dominated by the Roman
eagles. Christianity itself was at first a Jewish sect, which developed
into a cosmopolitan system precisely because the national independence of
the Jews had been broken up, and all the roads of a great empire were open
to the missionaries of a new faith.</p>
<p>But let us return to Mr. Hughes's statements. He tells us that the
solidarity of mankind was "revealed to the human race through St. Paul"—which
is a great slur upon Jesus Christ, and quite inconsistent with what Mr.
Hughes affirms of the Nazarene. It is also inconsistent with the very
language of St. Paul in that sermon of his to the Athenians; for the great
apostle, in enforcing his argument that all men are God's children,
actually reminds the Athenians that "certain also of your own poets have
said, For we are also his offspring."</p>
<p>Mr. Hughes goes on to say that "our common humanity" is "a perfectly new
idea." "Max Muller," he tells us, "says that there was no trace of it
until Christ came. It is a purely Christian conception." Professor Max
Muller, however, is not infallible. He sometimes panders to Christian
prejudices, and this is a case in point. What he says about "humanity" is
an etymological quibble. Certainly the Greeks knew nothing about it,
simply because they did not speak Latin. But they had an equivalent word
in <i>philanthropia</i>, which was in use in the time of Plato, four
hundred years before the birth of Christ.*</p>
<p>* Mr. Hughes talks so much that he must have little time for<br/>
reading. Every educated man, however, is supposed to be<br/>
acquainted with Bacon's <i>Essays</i>, the thirteenth of which<br/>
opens as follows:—"I take goodness in this sense, the<br/>
affecting of the weal of men, which is that the Grecians<br/>
called Philanthropia; and the word humanity (as it is used)<br/>
is a little too light to express it." Bacon not only knew<br/>
the antiquity of <i>Philanthropia</i>, but preferred it to the<br/>
later and less weighty term so ignorantly celebrated by Mr.<br/>
Hughes.<br/></p>
<p>Max Muller or no Max Muller, we tell Mr. Hughes that he is either reckless
or ignorant in declaring that the idea of human brotherhood owes its
origin to Christ, Paul, or Christianity. To say nothing of Buddha, whose
ethics are wider than the ethics of Christ, and confining ourselves to
Greece and Rome, with the teaching of whose thinkers Christianity comes
into more direct comparison—it is easy enough to prove that Mr.
Hughes is in error, or worse. Four centuries before Christ, when Socrates
was asked on one occasion as to his country, he replied, "I am a citizen
of the world." Cicero, the great Roman writer, in the century before
Christ, uses the very word <i>caritas</i>, which St. Paul borrowed in his
fine and famous chapter in the first of Corinthians. Cicero, and not St.
Paul, was the first to pronounce "charity" as the tie which unites the
human race. And after picturing a soul full of virtue, living in charity
with its friends, and taking as such all who are allied by nature, Cicero
rose to a still loftier level. "Moreover," he said, "let it not consider
itself hedged in by the walls of a single town, but acknowledge itself a
citizen of the whole world, as though one city." In another treatise he
speaks of "fellowship with the human race, charity, friendship, justice."</p>
<p>We defy Mr. Hughes to indicate a single cosmopolitan text in the New
Testament as strong, clear, and pointed as these sayings of Socrates and
Cicero—the one Greek, the other Roman, and both before Christ. Let
him ransack gospels, epistles, acts, and revelations, and produce the text
we call for.</p>
<p>From the time of Cicero—that is, from the time of Julius Caesar, and
the establishment of the Empire—the sentiment of brotherhood, the
idea of a common humanity, spread with certainty and rapidity, and is
reflected in the writings of the philosophers. The exclamation of the
Roman poet, "As a man, I regard nothing human as alien to me," which was
so heartily applauded by the auditory in the theatre, expressed a growing
and almost popular sentiment. The works of Seneca abound in fine
humanitarian passages, and it must be remembered that if the Christians
were tortured by Nero at Rome, it was by the same hand that Seneca's life
was cut short. "Wherever there is a man," said this thinker, "there is an
opportunity for a deed of kindness." He believed in the natural equality
of all men. Slaves were such through political and social causes, and
their masters were bidden to refrain from ill-using them, not only because
of the cruelty of such conduct, but because of "the natural law common to
all men," and because "he is of the same nature as thyself." Seneca
denounced the gladiatorial shows as human butcheries. So mild, tolerant,
humane, and equitable was his teaching that the Christians of a later age
were anxious to appropriate him. Tertullian calls him "Our Seneca," and
the facile scribes of the new faith forged a correspondence between him
and their own St. Paul. One of Seneca's passages is a clear and beautiful
statement of rational altruism. "Nor can anyone live happily," he says,
"who has regard to himself alone, and uses everything for his own
interests; thou must live for thy neighbor, if thou wouldest live for
thyself." Eighteen hundred years afterwards Auguste Comte sublimated this
principle into a motto of his Religion of Humanity—<i>Vivre pour
Autrui</i>, Live for Others. It is also expressed more didactically by
Ingersoll—"The way to be happy is to make others so"—making
duty and enjoyment go hand in hand.</p>
<p>Pliny, who corresponded with the emperor Trajan, and whose name is
familiar to the student of Christian Evidences, exhorted parents to take a
deep interest in the education of their children. He largely endowed an
institution in his native town of Como, for the assistance of the children
of the poor. His humanity was extended to slaves. He treated his own with
great kindness, allowing them to dispose of their own earnings, and even
to make wills. Of masters who had no regard for their slaves, he said, "I
do not know if they are great and wise; but one thing I do know, they are
not men." Dion Chrysostom, another Stoic, plainly declared that slavery
was an infringement of the natural rights of men, who were all born for
liberty; a dictum which cannot be paralleled in any part of the New
Testament. It must be admitted, indeed, that Paul, in sending the slave
Onesimus back to his master Philemon, did bespeak humane and even
brotherly treatment for the runaway; but he bespoke it for him as a
Christian, not simply as a man, and uttered no single word in rebuke of
the institution of slavery.</p>
<p>Plutarch's humanity was noble and tender. "The proper end of man," he
said, "is to love and to be loved." He regarded his slaves as inferior
members of his own family. How strong, yet how dignified, is his
condemnation of masters who sold their slaves when disabled by old age. He
protests that the fountain of goodness and humanity should never dry up in
a man. "For myself," he said, "I should never have the heart to sell the
ox which had long labored on my ground, and could no longer work on
account of old age, still less could I chase a slave from his country,
from the place where he has been nourished for so long, and from the way
of life to which he has been so long accustomed." Sentiments like these
were the natural precursors of the abolition of slavery, as far as it
could be abolished by moral considerations.</p>
<p>Epictetus, the great Stoic philosopher, who had himself been a slave,
taught the loftiest morality. Pascal admits that he was "one of the
philosophers of the world who have best understood the duty of man." He
disdained slavery from the point of view of the masters, as he abhorred it
from the point of view of the slaves. "As a healthy man," he said, "does
not wish to be waited upon by the infirm, or desire that those who live
with him should be invalids, the freeman should not allow himself to be
waited upon by slaves, or leave those who live with him in servitude." It
is idle to pretend, as Professor Schmidt of Strasburg does, that the ideas
of Epictetus are "colored with a reflection of Christianity." The
philosopher's one reference to the Galileans, by whom he is thought to
have meant the Christians, is somewhat contemptuous. Professor Schmidt
says he "misunderstood" the Galileans; but George Long, the translator of
Epictetus, is probably truer in saying that he "knew little about the
Christians, and only knew some examples of their obstinate adherence to
the new faith and the fanatical behavior of some of the converts." It
should be remembered that Epictetus was almost a contemporary of St. Paul,
and the accurate students of early Christianity will be able to estimate
how far it was likely, at that time, to have influenced the philosophers
of Rome.</p>
<p>Marcus Aurelius was one of the wisest and best of men. Emperor of the
civilised world, he lived a life of great simplicity, bearing all the
burdens of his high office, and drawing philosophy from the depths of his
own contemplation. His <i>Meditations</i> were only written for his own
eyes; they were a kind of philosophical diary; and they have the charm of
perfect sincerity. He was born a.d. 121, he became Emperor a.d. 161, and
died a.d. 180, after nineteen years of a government which illustrated
Plato's words about the good that would ensue when kings were philosophers
and philosophers were kings. Cardinal Barberini, who translated the
Emperor's <i>Meditations</i> into Italian, in 1675, dedicated the
translation to his own soul, to make it "redder than his purple at the
sight of the virtues of this Gentile."</p>
<p>Marcus Aurelius combines reason with beautiful sentiment. His emotion is
always accompanied by thought. Here, for instance, is a noble passage on
the social commonwealth—"For we are made for co-operation, like
feet, like hands, like eyelids, like the rows of the upper and lower
teeth. To act against one another then is contrary to nature; and it is
acting against one another to be vexed and to turn away." In a still
loftier passage he says—and let us remember he says it to himself,
not to an applauding audience, but quietly, and with absolute truth, and
no taint of theatricality—"My nature is rational and social; and my
city and country, so far as I am Antoninus, is Rome; but so far as I am a
man, it is the world." In his brief, pregnant way, he states the law of
human solidarity—"That which is not good for the swarm, neither is
it good for the bee." And who could fail to appreciate this sentiment,
coming as it did from the ruler of a great empire?—"One thing here
is worth a great deal, to pass thy life in truth and justice, with a
benevolent disposition even to liars and unjust men."</p>
<p>Here again, it is the fashion in some circles, to pretend that Marcus
Aurelius was influenced by the spread of Christian ideas. George Long,
however, speaks the language of truth and sobriety in saying, "It is quite
certain that Antoninus did not derive any of his Ethical principles from a
religion of which he knew nothing." To say as Dr. Schmidt does that
"Christian ideas filled the air" is easy enough, but where is the proof?
No doubt the Christian writers made great pretensions as to the spread of
their religion, but they were notoriously sanguine and inaccurate, and we
know what value to attach to such pretensions in the second century when
we reflect that even in the fourth century, up to the point of
Constantine's conversion, Christianity had only succeeded in drawing into
its fold about a twentieth of the inhabitants of the empire. Enough has
been said in this article to show that the idea of our common humanity is
not "a purely Christian conception," that it arose in the natural course
of human development, and that in this, as in other cases, the apologists
of Christianity have simply appropriated to their own creed the fruits of
the political, social, and moral growth of Western civilisation.</p>
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