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<h2> ARE ATHEISTS WICKED? </h2>
<p>One of the most effective arts of priestcraft has been the
misrepresentation and slander of heretics. To give the unbeliever a bad
name is to prejudice believers against all communication with him. By this
means a twofold object is achieved; first, the faithful are protected from
the contagion of scepticism; secondly, the notion is propagated that there
is something essentially immoral involved in, or attendant upon,
unorthodox opinions; and thus the prevalent religious ideas of the age
become associated with the very preservation and stability of the moral
order of human society.</p>
<p>This piece of trickery cannot, of course, be played upon the students of
civilisation, who, as Mill remarked, are aware that many of the most
valuable contributions to human improvement have been the work of men who
knew, and rejected, the Christian faith. But it easily imposes on the
multitude, and it will never be abandoned until it ceases to be
profitable.</p>
<p>Sometimes it takes the form of idle stories about the death-beds of
Freethinkers, who are represented as deploring their ill-spent life, and
bewailing the impossibility of recalling the wicked opinions they have put
into circulation. At other times it takes the form of exhibiting their
failings, without the slightest reference to their virtues, as the sum and
substance of their character. When these methods are not sufficient,
recourse is had to insinuation. Particular sceptics are spared perhaps,
but Freethinkers are depicted—like the poor in Tennyson's "Northern
Farmer"—as bad in the lump. It is broadly hinted that it is a moral
defect which prevents them from embracing the popular creed; that they
reject what they do not wish to believe; that they hate the restraints of
religion, and therefore reject its principles; that their unbelief, in
short, is only a cloak for sensual indulgence or an excuse for evading
irksome obligations.</p>
<p>We are so accustomed to this monstrous theory of scepticism in religious
circles, that it did not astonish us, or give us the least surprise, to
read the following paragraph in the <i>Christian Commonwealth</i>—</p>
<p>"Free Life, and No Compulsory Virtue, was the title of a placard borne by
a pamphlet seller of the public highway a few days ago. What the contents
of the pamphlets were we do not know, but the title is a suggestive sign
of the times, and a rather more than usually plain statement of what a
good deal of modern doubt amounts to. Lord Tennyson was severely taken to
task a few years ago for making the Atheist a villain in his 'Promise of
May,' but he was about right. Much of the doubt of the day is only an
outcome of the desire to discredit and throw off the restraints of
religion and moral law in the name of freedom, wrongly used. Free love,
free life, free divorce, free Sundays, in the majority of cases, are but
synonyms for license. Those who hold the Darwinian doctrine of descent
from a kind of ape may yet see it proved by a reversion to the beast, if
men succeed in getting all the false and pernicious freedom they want."</p>
<p>Now, in reply to this paragraph, we have first to observe that our
contemporary takes Lord Tennyson's name in vain. The villain of the
"Promise of May" is certainly an Agnostic, but are not the villains of
many other plays Christians? Lord Tennyson does not make the rascal's
wickedness the logical result of his principles; indeed, although our
contemporary seems ignorant of the fact, he disclaimed any such intention,
A press announcement was circulated by his eldest son, on his behalf, that
the rascal was meant to be a sentimentalist and ne'er-do-well, who,
whatever his opinions, would have come to a bad end. When the <i>Commonwealth</i>,
therefore, talks of Lord Tennyson as "about right," it shows, in a rather
vulgar way, the danger of incomplete information. Were we to copy its
manners we might use a swifter phrase.</p>
<p>That Atheists, in the name of freedom, throw off the restraints of moral
law, is a statement which we defy the <i>Commonwealth</i> to prove, or in
the slightest degree to support, and we will even go to the length of
suggesting how it might undertake the task.</p>
<p>Turpitude of character must betray itself. Moral corruption can no more be
hidden than physical corruption. Wickedness "will out," like murder or
smallpox. A man's wife discovers it; his children shun him instead of
clinging about his knees; his neighbors and acquaintances eye him with
suspicion or dislike; his evil nature pulsates through an ever-widening
circle of detection, and in time nis bad passions are written upon his
features in the infallible lines of mouth and eyes and face. How easy,
then, it should be to pick out these Atheists. The most evil-looking men
should belong to that persuasion. But do they? We invite our contemporary
to a trial. Let it inquire the religious opinions of a dozen or two, and
see if there is an Atheist among them.</p>
<p>Again, a certain amount of evil disposition <i>must</i> produce a certain
percentage of criminal conduct. Accordingly the gaols should contain a
large proportion of Atheists. But <i>do</i> they? Statistics prove they do
<i>not</i>. When the present writer was imprisoned for "blasphemy," and
was asked his religion, he answered "None," to the wide-eyed astonishment
of the official who put the question. Atheists were scarce in the
establishment. Catholics were there, and red tickets were on their
cell-doors; Protestants were there, and white tickets marked their
apartments; Jews were there, and provision was made for their special
observances; but the Atheist was the <i>rara avis</i>, the very phoenix of
Holloway Gaol.</p>
<p>Let us turn to another method of investigation. During the last ten years
four members have been expelled from the House of Commons. One of them was
not expelled in the full sense of the word; he was, however, thrust by
brute force from the precincts of the House. His name was Charles
Bradlaugh, and he was an Atheist. But what was his crime? Simply this: he
differed from his fellow members as to his competence to take the
parliamentary oath, and the ultimate event proved that he was right and
they were wrong. Now what were the crimes of the three other members, who
were completely and absolutely expelled? Captain Verney was found guilty
of procuration for seduction, Mr. Hastings was found guilty of
embezzlement, and Mr. De Cobain was pronounced guilty of evading justice,
while charged with unnatural offences. Mr. Jabez Spencer Balfour might
also have been expelled, if he had not accepted the Chiltern Hundreds. Now
all these <i>real</i> delinquents were Christians, and even ostentatious
Christians. Compare them with Charles Bradlaugh, the Atheist, and say
which side has the greatest cause for shame and humiliation.</p>
<p>Are Atheists conspicuous in the Divorce Court? Is it not Christian
reputations that are smirched in that Inquisition? Do Atheists, or any
species of unbelievers, appear frequently before the public as promoters
of bubble companies, and systematic robbers of orphans and widows? Is it
not generally found, in the case of great business collapses, that the
responsible persons are Christians? Is it not a fact that their profession
of Christianity is usually in proportion to the depth of their rascality?</p>
<p>Not long since the Bishop of Chester, backed up by Mr. Waugh, of the
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, publicly declared that
the worst ill-users of little ones were artisan Secularists. He was
challenged to give evidence of the assertion, but he preferred to maintain
what is called "a dignified silence." Mr. Waugh was challenged to produce
proofs from the Society's archives, and he also declined. It is enough to
affirm infamy against Freethinkers; proof is unnecessary; or, rather, it
is unobtainable. Singularly, there have been several striking cases of
brutal treatment of children since Mr. Waugh and Bishop Jayne committed
themselves to this indefensible assertion, and in no instance was the
culprit a Secularist, though some of them, including Mrs. Montagu, were
devout Christians.</p>
<p>There are other methods of inquiry into the wickedness of Atheists, but we
have indicated enough to set the <i>Commonwealth</i> at work, and we
invite it to begin forthwith. And while it is getting ready we beg to
observe that theologians have always described "free-dem" as "license,"
whereas it is nothing of the kind. Freedom is the golden mean between
license and slavery. The breaking of arbitrary fetters, forged by
ignorance and intolerance, does not mean a fall into loose living. The
heretic in religion, while resenting outside control, by his very
perception of the vast and far-reaching consequences of human action, is
often chained to "the most timid sanctities of life."</p>
<p>With respect to "the Darwinian theory of descent from a kind of ape," we
have a word for our contemporary. The annual meeting of the British
Association was held at Oxford in 1860. Darwin's <i>Descent of Man</i> had
recently been published, and the air was full of controversy. Bishop
Wilberforce, in the course of a derisive speech, turned to Professor
Huxley and asked whether it was on the mother's or father's side that his
grandfather had been an ape. Huxley replied that man had no reason to be
ashamed of having an ape for a grandfather. "If there is an ancestor," he
continued, "whom I should feel shame in recalling it would be a <i>man</i>"—one
who meddled with scientific questions he did not understand, only to
obscure them by aimless rhetoric, and indulgence in "eloquent digressions
and appeals to religious prejudice." This rebuke was administered
thirty-three years ago, but it is still worth remembering, and perhaps the
<i>Commonwealth</i> may find in it something applicable to itself.</p>
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