登陆注册
15479900000050

第50章 VIII THE ROMANCE OF ORTHODOXY(2)

For some inconceivable cause a "broad" or "liberal" clergyman always means a man who wishes at least to diminish the number of miracles; it never means a man who wishes to increase that number. It always means a man who is free to disbelieve that Christ came out of His grave; it never means a man who is free to believe that his own aunt came out of her grave. It is common to find trouble in a parish because the parish priest cannot admit that St. Peter walked on water; yet how rarely do we find trouble in a parish because the clergyman says that his father walked on the Serpentine? And this is not because (as the swift secularist debater would immediately retort) miracles cannot be believed in our experience. It is not because "miracles do not happen," as in the dogma which Matthew Arnold recited with simple faith. More supernatural things are ALLEGED to have happened in our time than would have been possible eighty years ago.

Men of science believe in such marvels much more than they did: the most perplexing, and even horrible, prodigies of mind and spirit are always being unveiled in modern psychology. Things that the old science at least would frankly have rejected as miracles are hourly being asserted by the new science. The only thing which is still old-fashioned enough to reject miracles is the New Theology.

But in truth this notion that it is "free" to deny miracles has nothing to do with the evidence for or against them. It is a lifeless verbal prejudice of which the original life and beginning was not in the freedom of thought, but simply in the dogma of materialism.

The man of the nineteenth century did not disbelieve in the Resurrection because his liberal Christianity allowed him to doubt it.

He disbelieved in it because his very strict materialism did not allow him to believe it. Tennyson, a very typical nineteenth century man, uttered one of the instinctive truisms of his contemporaries when he said that there was faith in their honest doubt. There was indeed.

Those words have a profound and even a horrible truth. In their doubt of miracles there was a faith in a fixed and godless fate; a deep and sincere faith in the incurable routine of the cosmos.

The doubts of the agnostic were only the dogmas of the monist.

Of the fact and evidence of the supernatural I will speak afterwards. Here we are only concerned with this clear point; that in so far as the liberal idea of freedom can be said to be on either side in the discussion about miracles, it is obviously on the side of miracles. Reform or (in the only tolerable sense) progress means simply the gradual control of matter by mind.

A miracle simply means the swift control of matter by mind. If you wish to feed the people, you may think that feeding them miraculously in the wilderness is impossible--but you cannot think it illiberal.

If you really want poor children to go to the seaside, you cannot think it illiberal that they should go there on flying dragons; you can only think it unlikely. A holiday, like Liberalism, only means the liberty of man. A miracle only means the liberty of God.

You may conscientiously deny either of them, but you cannot call your denial a triumph of the liberal idea. The Catholic Church believed that man and God both had a sort of spiritual freedom.

Calvinism took away the freedom from man, but left it to God.

Scientific materialism binds the Creator Himself; it chains up God as the Apocalypse chained the devil. It leaves nothing free in the universe. And those who assist this process are called the "liberal theologians."

This, as I say, is the lightest and most evident case.

The assumption that there is something in the doubt of miracles akin to liberality or reform is literally the opposite of the truth.

If a man cannot believe in miracles there is an end of the matter; he is not particularly liberal, but he is perfectly honourable and logical, which are much better things. But if he can believe in miracles, he is certainly the more liberal for doing so; because they mean first, the freedom of the soul, and secondly, its control over the tyranny of circumstance. Sometimes this truth is ignored in a singularly naive way, even by the ablest men.

For instance, Mr. Bernard Shaw speaks with hearty old-fashioned contempt for the idea of miracles, as if they were a sort of breach of faith on the part of nature: he seems strangely unconscious that miracles are only the final flowers of his own favourite tree, the doctrine of the omnipotence of will. Just in the same way he calls the desire for immortality a paltry selfishness, forgetting that he has just called the desire for life a healthy and heroic selfishness.

How can it be noble to wish to make one's life infinite and yet mean to wish to make it immortal? No, if it is desirable that man should triumph over the cruelty of nature or custom, then miracles are certainly desirable; we will discuss afterwards whether they are possible.

But I must pass on to the larger cases of this curious error; the notion that the "liberalising" of religion in some way helps the liberation of the world. The second example of it can be found in the question of pantheism--or rather of a certain modern attitude which is often called immanentism, and which often is Buddhism.

But this is so much more difficult a matter that I must approach it with rather more preparation.

The things said most confidently by advanced persons to crowded audiences are generally those quite opposite to the fact; it is actually our truisms that are untrue. Here is a case.

There is a phrase of facile liberality uttered again and again at ethical societies and parliaments of religion: "the religions of the earth differ in rites and forms, but they are the same in what they teach." It is false; it is the opposite of the fact.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 图转苍天

    图转苍天

    上天有长生路,却无轮回法,我不甘!若生这世间,自然我命由我不由天!
  • 快枪手

    快枪手

    著名的快枪手马林,在腊月二十一那一天回到了靠山屯。马林回来了,他要在腊月二十三那天,大张旗鼓地做两件事。第一件事他要先休了秋菊,接下来要名正言顺地再娶一回杨梅。秋菊走进马家的门坎已有些年头了,那一年秋菊才十二岁,马林十岁。马林和秋菊圆房那一年,马林十六岁,秋菊十八岁。也就是在那一年,十六岁的马林离家,投奔了张作霖的队伍,当上了一名快枪手。
  • 三国贼寇

    三国贼寇

    看三国,品三国,众多英雄埋没,不若重回三国那个战火纷飞的年代,看一看让我们热血沸腾的事情!张燕,这个在《三国志》和《三国演义》暂露头角的人物,但因其山贼起家,又后事黄巾,便多遭史家贬抑,因此也很快埋没在历史长河中。张燕其人究竟是何等人物?张燕,一人之力,力保十万黑山众;封官拜爵,冠绝笑傲天地间!不如重回三国,看一看这个被历史淹没的英雄人物!现代某高校历史系学生张燕,屌丝一枚,平日里无所事事,但却痴迷于三国历史,沉醉三国游戏。机缘巧合之下,他穿越至那个让他痴迷的年代,还稀里糊涂成了黄巾余孽张燕。众看客,且看他,官府追缉,江湖封杀,险境厄运,带领十万随众求生存;揭竿而起,浪迹漂泊,远遁太行,力战三国群雄成霸业。
  • 超级医王

    超级医王

    出身卑微,却不代表不可君临天下!淳朴的乡村少年步入繁华的都市,迫于无奈改变自己。一只神秘的左眼,世间之阴暗面无所遁形。现实的残酷让他化身杀神,无尽的敌人,万千的阴谋,破之!为了兄弟,为了红颜,剑指天下!
  • 三国之黄灾

    三国之黄灾

    “文姬!你看我真诚的眼神!吾真的没有跟奉孝、兴霸、恶来还有文远去教坊啊!真的!我对灯发誓!”“犯我大汉者死,杀我大汉子民者死,杀尽天下诸胡,匡复我汉家基业,天下汉人皆有义务屠戮胡狗,明不才受命于天道特以此兆告天下”后有成吉思汗的黄祸,今看我刘明的黄灾!人不怯,仇必血,万丈豪情赴烟沙。卫我泱泱华夏,复我浩荡中华!如果您感觉还行,请收藏本书。多前来看看,就是对本作品最大的支持!谢谢
  • 绝世傲女笑天下

    绝世傲女笑天下

    第一次,有人狠毒地说:“我只是在利用你罢了!”她伤心欲绝与他同归于尽,却不想还有重生的转机。第二次,有人心疼地说:“别看了,等小姐要走了奴婢一定跟随!”却不想自己比她活得更长久更长久。。。第三次,有人悲愤地说:“你就是个祸害!天煞孤星!”她离开了,从此一去不复返。第四次。。。。。。第五次。。。。。。第。。。。。。她重生到异世,想把曾经错过的失去的补回来。她死过一次不想再这么遗憾,她竭尽所能去守护住最开始的真心,却终究敌不过这大千世界的人心难测。她身边的人从旧面孔变成新面孔,再从两两相伴到无依无靠为止,直到她登上强者的巅峰也终究没有明白自己最开始的初衷是什么她将心出卖给了魔鬼,最后的代价是?
  • 旭阳置地

    旭阳置地

    一个被命运选中的孤儿来到另一个弱肉强食的世界生性散漫的他如何生存
  • 凤逆九玄:狂魔宠妻无度

    凤逆九玄:狂魔宠妻无度

    无极涅槃印,是那个所谓无恶不作的天魔,用一身心血替她封印的,她不知那个人一直在用生命宠爱她。原来最大的恶人是她,到底是有多蠢才舍得这样伤害一个深爱自己的人?他穷凶恶极,十恶不赦又怎样?她只看得到他的温柔和深情,谁也比不了!这一次,就让她来寻回曾经的他吧!
  • 天眼系统

    天眼系统

    ‘小的们,干活了,去本岛国找天父钓鱼!’叶子辰尽显屌丝风范!路人甲A‘如此猖狂,怎么没人治理他!’路人甲B‘人家打不赢!’路人甲A‘那就用科技!’路人甲B‘你能造宇宙飞船?’路人甲A‘……!有钱能使鬼推磨……’路人甲B‘人家的公司差点人噢盟破产,一支军队让大米国军队投降’路人甲A‘…………!!!!’叶子辰为何如此逆天,让我们一起观看!
  • 千灵万唤

    千灵万唤

    灵若动,天亦灭,你若成灵,我亦化为灵,随灵而动一个天赋一般的人,却依然灵动天下故事剧情纯属虚构如有雷同纯属巧合