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<h2> RELIGION AND MONEY. </h2>
<p>"Every religion is a getting religion; for though I myself get nothing, I
am subordinate to those that do. So you may find a lawyer in the Temple
that gets little for the present; but he is fitting himself to be in time
one of those great ones that do get."—Selden's Table Talk.</p>
<p>"The Divine stands wrapt up in his cloud of mysteries, and the amused
Laity must pay Tithes and Veneration to be kept in obscurity, grounding
their hope of future knowledge on a competent stock of present ignorance."—George
Farquhar.</p>
<p>Religion and priestcraft may not be the same thing in <i>essence</i>. That
is a point on which we do not intend to dogmatise, and this is not the
opportunity to argue it. But <i>practically</i> religion and priestcraft
<i>are</i> the same thing. They are inextricably bound up together,. and
they will suffer a common fate. In saying this, however, we must be
understood to use the word "religion" in its ordinary sense, as synonymous
with <i>theology</i>. Religion as non-supernatural, as the idealism of
morality, the sovereign bond of collective society, is a matter with which
we are not at present concerned.</p>
<p>Priestcraft did not <i>invent</i> religion. To believe that it did is the
error of an impulsive and uninformed scepticism. But priestcraft developed
it, systematised it, enforced it, and perpetuated it. This could not be
effected, however, except in alliance with the temporal power; and
accordingly, in every country—savage, barbaric, or civilised—the
priests and the privileged classes are found in harmony. They have
occasional differences, but these are ultimately adjusted. Sometimes the
priesthood overrules the temporal power, but more frequently the former
gives way to the latter; indeed, it is instructive to watch how the course
of religion has been so largely determined by political influences. The
development of Judaism was almost entirely controlled by the political
vicissitudes of the Hebrews. The political power really decided the great
controversy between Arianism and Athanasianism. Politics again, twelve
hundred years later, settled the bounds of the Reformation, not only for
the moment, but for subsequent centuries. Where the prince's sword was
thrown into the scale, it determined the balance. England, for instance,
was non-papal Catholic under Henry VIII., Protestant under Edward VI.,
papal-Catholic under Mary, and Protestant again under Elizabeth; although
every one of these changes, according to the clergy, was dictated by the
Holy Ghost.</p>
<p>Priests and the privileged classes <i>must</i> settle their differences in
some way, otherwise the people would become too knowing, and too
independent. The co-operation of impostor and robber is necessary to the
bamboozlement and exploitation of the masses. This co-operation, indeed,
is the great secret of the permanence of religion; and its policy is
twofold—education and the power of money.</p>
<p>The value of <i>education</i> may be inferred from the frantic efforts of
the clergy to build and maintain schools of their own, and to force their
doctrines into the schools built and maintained by the State. In this
respect there is nothing to choose between Church and Dissent. The reading
of the Bible in Board schools is a compromise between themselves, lest a
worse thing should befall them both. If one section were strong enough to
upset the compromise it would do so; in fact, the Church party is now
attempting this stroke of policy on the London School Board, with the
avowed object of giving a Church color to-the religious teaching of the
children. The very same principle was at work in former days, when none
but Churchmen were admitted to the universities or public positions. It
was a splendid means of maintaining the form of religion which was bound
up with the monarchy and the aristocracy. Learning and influence were, as
far as possible, kept on the side of the established faith, which thus
became the master of the masters of the people. This is perfectly obvious
to the student of history, and Freethinkers should lay its lesson to
heart. It is only by driving religion entirely out of education, from the
humblest school to the proudest college, that we shall ever succeed in
breaking the power of priestcraft and freeing the people from the bondage
of superstition.</p>
<p>We could write a volume on this theme—the power of education in
maintaining religion; but we must be satisfied with the foregoing at
present, and turn our attention to the power of <i>money</i>. It is a wise
adage that money is the sinews of war. Fighting is very largely, often
wholly, a question of resources. Troops may be ever so brave, generals
ever so skilful, but they will be beaten unless they have good rifles and
artillery, plenty of ammunition, and an ample commissariat. Now the same
thing obtains in <i>all</i> warfare. It would be foolish, no less than
base, to deny the inspiring efficacy of ideas, the electric force of
enthusiasm; but, however highly men may be energised, they cannot act
without instruments; and money buys them, whether the instruments be
rifles and artillery, or schools, or churches, or any kind of
organisation.</p>
<p>Given churches with great wealth, as well as control over public
education, and it is easy to see that they will be able to perpetuate
themselves. Endowments are specially valuable. They are rooted, so to
speak, in the past, and hold firm. They bear golden fruit to be plucked by
the skilful and adventurous. Besides, the very age of an endowed
institution gives it a venerable ora; and its freedom from the full
necessity of "cadging" lends it a certain "respectability"—like that
of a man who lives on his means, instead of earning his living.</p>
<p>It is not an extravagant calculation that, in England alone, twenty
millions a year are spent on religion. The figures fall glibly from the
tongue, but just try to realise them! Think first of a thousand, then of a
thousand thousand, then of twenty times that. Take a single million, and
think what its expenditure might do in the shaping of public opinion. A
practical friend of ours, a good Radical and Freethinker, said that he
would undertake to create a majority for Home Rule in England with a
million of money; and if he spent it judiciously, we think he might
succeed. Well then, just imagine, not one million, but twenty millions,
spent <i>every year</i> in maintaining and propagating a certain religion.
Is it not enough, and more than enough, to perpetuate a system which is
firmly founded, to begin with, on the education of little children?</p>
<p>Here lies the strength of Christianity. It is not true, it is not useful.
Its teachings and pretensions are both seen through by tens of thousands,
but the wealth supports it. "Without money and without price," is the
fraudulent language of the pious prospectus. It would never last on those
terms. The money keeps it up. Withdraw the money, and the Black Army would
disband, leaving the people free to work out their secular salvation,
without the fear and trembling of a foolish faith.</p>
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