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<h2> ATHEIST MURDERERS. * </h2>
<p>* January, 1894.<br/></p>
<p>An Open Letter to the Bishop of Winchester.</p>
<p>Bishop,—You are a high and well-paid dignitary of the Church of
England. You are therefore a State official, as much as a soldier or a
policeman; and, as such, you are amenable to public criticism. It is
possible that you never heard of me before, but I am a member of the
English public, and as a citizen I help (very unwillingly) to support the
Church, and therefore to support <i>you</i>. My right to address you is
thus indisputable. I make no apology or excuse for doing so; and, as for
my reason, it will appear in the course of this letter.</p>
<p>I notice in the daily and weekly newspapers a paragraph which concerns you—<i>and
me</i>. The paragraph is exactly the same in all the papers I have seen;
it must therefore have emanated from, and been circulated by, one hand;
and that hand I suspect is yours, particularly as it insinuates the
necessity of supporting Christian Missions in England—that is, of
subscribing to Church agencies over and above the nine or ten millions a
year which your Establishment spends (or devours) in ministering to what
you call "the spiritual needs" of the English people.</p>
<p>The paragraph I refer to states that you have converted and confirmed an
Atheist, and that this Atheist has been hung for the crime of murder; and
it plainly hints that his crime was the natural result of his irreligious
opinions.</p>
<p>As you make so much of this case, I presume that this murderer—who
was not good enough to live on earth, and whom you have sent to live for
ever in heaven—is the only Atheist you have ever converted; so that
in every way the case is one of exceptional interest.</p>
<p>And now, before I go any farther, let me tell you why the case concerns me
as well as you. I am an Atheist, and a teacher of Atheism. I am the
President of the National Secular Society, which is the only open
organisation of Freethinkers in England. My immediate predecessor in this
office was Charles Bradlaugh, of whom you <i>must</i> have heard. Not to
know him would argue yourself unknown. My personality is not so famous as
his, but my office is the same, and you will now understand why I address
you on the subject of your converted murderer.</p>
<p>The newspaper paragraph to which I have referred is brief and inadequate,
but fuller particulars are given in your <i>Diocesan Chronicle</i>, for a
copy of which I am indebted to the kindness of a gentleman who is
technically a member of your flock. He is a Freethinker, but I do not
believe you will convert him, and still less that you will ever "assist"
at his execution.</p>
<p>The murderer for whom you made the gallows the gateway to heaven was
called George Mason. He was nineteen years of age. Serving in the militia,
he was liable to severe discipline. His sergeant had him imprisoned for
three days, and in revenge he shot the officer dead while at rifle
practice. It is an obvious moral, which I wonder your lordship does not
perceive, that it is dangerous to put deadly weapons in the hands of
passionate boys. Your lordship's interest in the case seems to be entirely
<i>professional</i>.</p>
<p>While this lad was simply a militiaman your lordship would not have
regarded him as an object of solicitude. As a convicted murderer, he
became profoundly interesting. No less than three clergymen took him in
hand: the Rev. J. L. Ladbrooke, the Rev. James Baker, and yourself. Three
to one are long odds, and it is no marvel that you conquered the boy.
Still, it is unfortunate that we have only <i>your</i> account of the
conflict, for your profession is not famous for what I will politely call
<i>accuracy</i>. Herder remarked that "Christian veracity" deserved to
rank with "Punic faith." How many falsehoods has your Church circulated
about <i>great</i> Freethinkers! Why should it hesitate, then, to tell
untruths about <i>little</i> ones? A Wesleyan minister, the Rev. Hugh
Price Hughes, has published a long circumstantial story of a converted
Atheist shoemaker, which is proved to be false in all its main features.
It is far from certain, therefore, that your lordship's account of the
conversion of George Mason is true. You and your two clerical colleagues
can say what you please; your evidence cannot be tested; and <i>such</i>
evidence, especially when given by persons who are confederates in a
common cause, is always open to suspicion.</p>
<p>Nevertheless I need not doubt that George Mason made an edifying end. It
is the way of murderers. What I venture to doubt is your statement as to
his life. You write as follows:—</p>
<p>"His early life was lived in the east of London, his trade being that of a
costermonger, and he was brought up by his father, a professed atheist,
who was in the habit of reading the Bible with this boy and a company of
other freethinkers, verse by verse, and deliberately turning it into
ridicule, by way of commentary. It is hard to imagine a more deliberate
training for the gallows than what his father gave him."</p>
<p>Later on, you say the boy was "insignificant, almost stunted to look at,"
and you add that "his only opportunity was to learn how to be a child of
the Devil."</p>
<p>Now I wish to observe, in the first place, that you have not said <i>enough</i>.
You do not say whether George Mason's father is still living. I have not
been able to hear of him myself. If he be still living, have you taken the
trouble to obtain <i>his</i> version of the matter? And if not, do you
think it kind or just to speak of him in this manner? Nor do you say what
religion George Mason professed in the Militia, whether he attended
"divine service," and what was its influence upon him. You were in too
great a hurry to capture your Atheist, and insult all who do not believe
the dogmas of your Church.</p>
<p>You regard it as "deliberate training for the gallows" to let a boy laugh
at the Bible. Has it ever occurred to you to inquire how it is that the
Bible is so easy to ridicule? Have you ever reflected that what is laughed
at is generally ridiculous? Are you not aware that the most risible imp
could hardly laugh at <i>all</i> the contents of the Bible? Who laughs at
the saying, "Blessed are the peacemakers"? Who laughs at the horrid
massacres of the Old Testament? But who does <i>not</i> laugh at
cock-and-bull stories like that of Jonah and the whale? Your lordship does
not discriminate. Very little thought would show you that some parts of
the Bible <i>cannot</i> be laughed at, that where it <i>can</i> be laughed
at it is probably absurd, and that to laugh at an absurdity is certainly
no "training for the gallows."</p>
<p>Your lordship evidently wishes to convey the idea that Atheists are very
likely to become murderers, or <i>more</i> likely than their Christian
fellow citizens. This I deny, and I ask for your evidence. All you adduce
is the case of this "insignificant" and "stunted" boy. Let us suppose for
a moment that your statement about him is entirely accurate. What does it
prove? Simply this, that it is not impossible for an Atheist to commit a
murder. But who ever said it was? Who asserts that Atheists are absolutely
free from the passions and frailties of human nature? Has your lordship
never heard of a Christian murderer? Is it not a fact that Jesus Christ
himself could not select his apostles without including a villain? "Twelve
of you have I chosen," he said, "and one of you is a murderer." Is not one
in twelve a large percentage? Why, then, is the world to be alarmed, and
invited to subscribe to Christian Missions, because one Atheist out of all
the thousands in England commits a murder —and that one an
"insignificant" and "stunted" boy, apparently bred in poverty and
hardship?</p>
<p>Mind you, I am not admitting that George Mason <i>was</i> an Atheist, or
the <i>son</i> of an Atheist. I say that has to be proved. I am taking
your lordship's account of the matter as true merely for the sake of
argument.</p>
<p>Let me draw your attention to some <i>facts</i>. So many of the clergy in
your own Church "went wrong" that you were compelled to obtain a special
Act of Parliament to enable you to get rid of them. Is it not true, also,
that the greatest swindlers of this age have been extremely pious? What do
you make of Messrs Hobbs and Wright? What do you think of Jabez Balfour?
Are not such scoundrels a thousand times worse than a passionate boy like
George Mason? Were not the "Liberator" victims fleeced and ruined by
professed Christians? What have you to say about Mr. Hastings, Captain
Verney, and Mr. De Cobain, who were all convicted of bad crimes and
expelled from Parliament? Have you ever heard of the text, "Physician heal
thyself"?</p>
<p>Here is another fact. A few months ago an Irish clergyman, the Rev. George
Griffiths, deliberately shot his own mother for the sake of what cash he
could find in her desk. He was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to be
hung. Would you think me justified in saying that the Rev. George
Griffiths committed a murder because he was a Christian? Why, then, do you
pretend that George Mason committed a murder because he or his father was
an Atheist?</p>
<p>Lay your hand upon your heart, and answer this question honestly. Do you
really believe that an Atheist has a special proclivity to murder? What is
there in Atheism to make men hate each other? When a man holds the hand of
the woman he loves, or feels about his neck the little arms of his child,
do you suppose he is likely to injure either of them because he is unable
to accept your dogma about the mystery of this illimitable universe? Shall
I hate my own boy because I disbelieve that Jesus Christ was born without
a father? Shall I keep him without food and clothes because I see no proof
of a special providence? Will Shakespeare's <i>Hamlet</i> poison my mind
because I think it finer than the gospels? If I treat the Creation Story
and the Deluge as legend and mythology, and smile at the feats of Samson,
shall I therefore commit a burglary? If I think that my neighbor's life in
this world is <i>his all</i>, that death ends his possibilities, do you
really think I shall be the more likely to rob him of what I can never
restore?</p>
<p>I am at a loss to understand your lordship, and I invite you to explain
yourself. At present I can only see in your account of George Mason, a
very common exhibition of Christian logic, and Christian temper. Your
lordship's is not the charity that "thinketh no evil." You ascribe
wickedness to those who differ from you in opinion. I conceive it possible
for men to differ from you in religion, and yet to equal you in morality.
I conceive it even possible that some of them might surpass you without a
miracle.</p>
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