
cover |
THE
Principles of Secularism
Illustrated.
BY GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.
"Do the duty nearest hand,"--Goethe.
[THIRD EDITION, REVISED.]
LONDON:
AUSTIN & CO., 17, JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET.
BOOK STORE, 282, STRAND;
1870
PRICE SIXPENCE. |

inside cover |
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page 1 |
THE
Principles of Secularism
Illustrated.
BY GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.
"Do the duty nearest hand,"--Goethe.
[THIRD EDITION, REVISED.]
LONDON:
AUSTIN & CO., 17, JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET.
BOOK STORE, 282, STRAND;
1870
PRICE SIXPENCE.
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"If you think it right to
differ from the times, and to make a stand for any valuable point of
morals, do it, however rustic, however antiquated, however pedantic it may
appear; do it, not for insolene, but seriously--as a man who wore a soul
of his own in his bosom, and did not wait till it was breated into him by
the breath of fashion."--THE REV. SIDNEY SMITH, Canon of St. Paul's.
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CONTENTS.
Chapter I.--Introductory. 5
Chapter II.--The Term Secularism. 8
Chapter III.--Principles of Secularism Defined. 11
Chapter IV.--Laws of Secular Controversy. 14
Chapter V.--Maxims of Association. 16
Chapter VI.--The Secular Guild. 18
Chapter VII.--Organization Indicated. 21
Chapter VIII.--The Place of Secularism 25
Chapter IX.--Characteristics of Secularism 27
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INTRODUCTORY.
CHAPTER I.
In a passage of characteristic sagacity, Dr. J. H. Newman has depicted the
partisan aimlessness more descriptive of the period when this little book
first appeared, sixteen years ago, than it is now. But it will be long
before its relevance and instruction have passed away. I therefore take
the liberty of still quoting his words:--
"When persons for the first time look upon the world of politics or
religion, all that they find there meets their mind's eye, as a landscape
addresses itself for the first time to a person who has just gained his
bodily sight. One things is as far off as another; there is no
perspective. The connection of fact with fact, truth with truth, the
bearing of fact upon truth, and truth upon fact, what leads to what, what
are points primary and what secondary, all this they have yet to learn. It
is all a new science to them, and they do not even know their ignorance of
it. Moreover, the world of to-day has no connection in their minds with
the world of yesterday; time is not a stream, but stands before them round
and full, like the moon. They do not know what happened ten years ago,
much less the annals of a century: the past does not live to them in the
present; they do not understand the worth of contested points; names have
no associations for them, and persons kindle no recollections. They hear
of men, and things, and projects, and struggles, and principles; but
everything comes and goes like the wind; nothing makes an impression,
nothing penetrates, nothing has its place in their minds. They locate
nothing; they have no system. They hear and they forget; or they just
recollect what they have once heard, they cannot tell where. Thus they
have no consistency in their arguments: that is, they argue one way
to-day, and not exactly the other way to-morrow, but indirectly the other
way at random. Their
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lines of argument diverge;
nothing comes to a point; there is no one centre in which their mind sits,
on which their judgment of men and things proceeds. This is the state of
many men all through life; and miserable politicians or Churchmen they
make, unlessby good luck they are in safe hands, and ruled by others, or
are pledged to a course. Else they are at the mercy of the wind and waves;
and without being Radical, Whig, Tory, or Conservative, High Church or Low
Church, they do Whig acts, Tory acts, Catholic acts, and Heretical acts,
as the fit takes them, or as events or parties drive them. And sometimes
when their self importance is hurt, they take refuge in the idea that all
this is a proof that they are unfettered, moderate, dispassionate, that
they observe the mean, that they are no 'party of men;' when they are, in
fact, the most helpless of slaves; for our strength in this world is, to
be the subjects of the reason and our liberty, to be captives of the
truth."*
How the organization of ideas has fared with higher class societies others
can tell: the working class have been left so much in want of initiative
direction that almost everything has to be done among them, and an
imperfect and brief attempt to direct those interested in Freethought may
meet with some acceptance. To clamour for objects without being able to
connect them with principles; to smart under contumely without knowing how
to protect themselves; to bear some lofty name without understanding the
manner in which character should correspond to profession--this is the
amount of the popular attainment.
In this new Edition I find little to alter and less to add. In a passage
on page 27, the distinction between Secular instruction and Secularism is
explained, in these words:--"Secular education is by some confounded with
Secularism, whereas the distinction between them is very wide. Secular
education simply means imparting Secular knowledge separately--by itself,
without admixture of Theology with it. The advocate of Secular education
may be, and generally is, also an advocate of religion; but he would teach
religion at another time and treat it as a distinct subject, too sacred
for coercive admixture into the hard and vexatious routine of a school. He
*"Loss and Gain,"
ascribed to the Rev. Father Newman.
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would confine the inculcation
of religion fitting to seasons and chosen instruments. He holds also that
one subject at a time is mental economy in learning. Secular education is
the policy of a school--Secularism is the policy of life to those who do
not accept Theology."
Very few persons admitted that these distinctions existed when this
passage was written in 1854. This year, 1870, they have been substantially
admitted by the Legislature in concession made in the National Education
Bill. It only remains to add that the whole text has been revised and
re-arranged in an order which seems more consecutive. The portion on
Secular Organizations has been abridged, in part re-written, explaining
particulars as to the Secular Guild.
A distinctive summary of Secular principles may be read under the article
"Secularism," in Chambers's Cyclopaedia.
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THE TERM SECULARISM.
CHAPTER II.
"The adoption of the term Secularism is justified by its including a large
number of persons who are not Atheists, and uniting them for action which
has Secularism for its object, and not Atheism. On this ground, and
because, by adoption of a new term, a vast amount of impediment from
prejudice is got rid of, the use of the name Secularism is found
advantageous."--HARRIET MARTINEAU. Boston Liberator.--Letter to Lloyd
Garrison, November, 1853.
Every one observant of public controversy in England, is aware of its
improved tone of late years. This improved tone is part of a wider
progress. Increase of wealth has led to improvement of taste and the
diffusion of knowledge to refine the sentiment. The mass are better
dressed, better mannered, better spoken than formerly. A coffee-room
discussion, conducted by mechanics, is now a more decorous exhibition than
a debate in Parliament was in the days of Canning.*
Boisterousness at the tables of the rich, and insolence in the language of
the poor, are fast disappearing. "Good society" is now that society in
which people practise the art of being genial, without being familiar, and
in which an evincible courtesy of speech is no longer regarded as timidity
or effeminacy, but rather as proof of a disciplined spirit, which chooses
to avoid all offence, the better to maintain the right peremptorily
punishing wanton insult. Theologians, more inveterate in speech than
politicians, now observe a respectfulness to opponents before unknown.
That diversity of opinion once ascribed to "badness of heart" is now, with
more discrimination, referred to defect or diversity of understanding--a
change which, discarding invective, recognizes instruction as the agent of
uniformity.
Amid all this newness of conception it must be obvious that
*From whose lips the
House of Commons cheered a reference to a political adversary as "the
revered and ruptured Ogden."
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many old terms of theological
controversy are obsolete. The idea of an "Atheist" as one warring against
moral restraints--of an "Infidel" as one treacherous to the truth--of a
"Freethinker" as a "loose thinker,"* arose in
the darkness of past times, when men fought by the flickering light of
their hatreds--times which tradition has peopled with monsters of divinity
as well as of nature. But the glaring colours in which the party names
invented by past priests were dyed, no longer harmonize with the quieter
taste of the present day. The more sober spirit of modern controversy has,
therefore, need of new terms, and if the term "secularism" was merely a
neutral substitute for "Freethinking," there would be reason for its
adoption. Dissenters might as well continue the designation of "Schismatics,"
or Political Reformers that of "Anarchists," as that the students of
Positive Philosophy should continue the designation "Atheism," "Infidelism,"
or any similar term by which their opponents have contrived to brand their
opinions. It is as though a merchant vessel should consent to carry a
pirate flag. Freethinker is, however, getting an acceptable term. Upon the
platform, Christian disputants frequently claim it, and resent the
exclusive assumption of it by others. These new claimants say, "We are as
much Freethinkers as yourselves," so that it is necessary to define
Freethinking. It is fearless thinking, based upon impartial inquiry,
searching on both sides, not regarding doubt as a crime, or opposite
conclusions as species of moral poison. Those who inquire with sinister
pre-possessions will never inquire fairly. The Freethinker fears not to
follow a conclusion to the utmost limits of truth, whether it coincides
with the Bible or contradicts it. If therefore any pronounce the term
"Secularism" "a concealment or disguise," they can do so legitimately only
after detecting some false meaning it is intended to convey, and not on
the mere ground of its being a change of name, since nothing can more
completely "conceal and disguise" the purposes of Freethought than the old
names imposed upon it by its adversaries, which associate with guilt its
conscientious conclusions and impute to it as outrages, its acts of self-defence.
Besides the term Secularism, there was another term which seemed to
promise also distinctiveness of meaning--namely,
*As the Reverend Canon
Kingsley has perversely rendered it.
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Cosmism, under which adherents
would have taken the designation of Cosmists. But this name scientific men
would have understood in a purely physical sense, after the great example
of Humboldt, and the public would not all have understood it--besides, it
was open to easy perversion in one of its declinations. Next to this, as a
name, stands that of Realism--intrinsically good. A Society of Realists
would have been intelligible, but many would have supposed it to be some
revival of the old Realists. Moralism, a sound name in itself, is under
Evangelical condemnation as "mere morality." Naturalism would seem an
obvious name, were it not that we should be confounded with Naturalists,
to say no more. Some name must be taken, as was the case with the
Theophilanthropists of Paris. Many of them would rather not have assumed
any denomination, but they yielded to the reasonable argument, that if
they did not choose one for themselves, the public would bestow upon them
one which would be less to their liking. Those who took the name of
Philantropes found it exposed them to a pun, which greatly damaged them:
Philantropes was turned into filoux en troupe.
Historical characteristics, however, seemed to point to a term which
expressed the Secular element in life; a term deeply engrafted in
literature; of irreproachable associations; a term found and respected in
the dictionaries of opponents, and to which, therefore, they might dispute
our right, but which they could not damage. Instead, therefore, of finding
ourselves self-branded or caricatured by this designation, we have found
opponents claiming it, and disputing with us for its possession.
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PRINCIPLES OF SECULARISM
DEFINED.
CHAPTER III.
I.
Secularism is the study of promoting human welfare by material means;
measuring human welfare by the utilitarian rule, and making the service of
others a duty of life. Secularism relates to the present existence of man,
and to action, the issues of which can be tested by the experience of this
life--having for its objects the development of the physical, moral, and
intellectual nature of man to the highest perceivable point, as the
immediate duty of society: inculcating the practical sufficiency of
natural morality apart from Atheism, Theism, or Christianity: engaging its
adherents in the promotion of human improvement by material means, and
making these agreements the ground of common unity for all who would
regulate life by reason and ennoble it by service. The Secular is sacred
in its influence on life, for by purity of material conditions the
loftiest natures are best sustained, and the lower the most surely
elevated. Secularism is a series of principles intended for the guidance
of those who find Theology indefinite, or inadequate, or deem it
unreliable. It replaces theology, which mainly regards life as a sinful
necessity, as a scene of tribulation through which we pass to a better
world. Secularism rejoices in this life, and regards it as the sphere of
those duties which educate men to fitness for any future and better life,
should such transpire.
II.
A Secularist guides himself by maxims of Positivism, seeking to discern
what is in nature--what ought to be in morals--selecting the affirmative
in exposition, concerning himself with the real, the right, and the
constructive. Positive principles are principles which are provable. "A
positive
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precept," says Bishop Butler,
"is a precept the reason of which we see." Positivism is policy of
material progress.
III.
Science is the available Providence of life. The problem to be solved by a
science of Society, is to find that situation in which it shall be
impossible for a man to be depraved or poor. Mankind are saved by being
served. Spiritual sympathy is a lesser mercy than that forethought which
anticipates and extirpates the causes of suffering. Deliverence from
sorrow or injustice is before consolation--doing well is higher than
meaning well--work is worship to those who accept Theism, and duty to
those who do not.
IV.
Sincerity, though not errorless, involves the least chance of error, and
is without moral guilt. Sincerity is well-informed, conscientious
conviction, arrived at by intelligent examination, animating those who
posses that conviction to carry it into practice from a sense of duty.
Virtue in relation to opinion consists neither in conformity nor
non-conformity, but in sincere beliefs, and in living up to them.
V.
Conscience is higher than Consequence.*
VI.
All pursuit of good objects with pure intent is religiousness in the best
sense in which this term appears to be used. A "good object" is an object
consistent with truth, honour, justice, love. A pure "intent" is the
intent of serving humanity. Immediate service of humanity is not intended
to mean instant gratification, but "immediate" in contradistinction to the
interest of another life. The distinctive peculiarity of the Secularist
is, that he seeks that good which is dictated by nature, which is
attainable by material means, and which is of immediate service to
humanity--a religiousness to which the idea of God is not essential, nor
the denial of the idea necessary.
*Vide Mr. Holdreths'
papers
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VII.
Nearly all inferior natures are susceptible of moral and physical
improvability; this improvability can be indefinitely secured by supplying
proper material conditions; these conditions may one day be supplied by a
system of wise and fraternal co-operation, which primarily entrenches
itself in common prudence, which enacts service according to industrial
capacity, and distributes wealth according to rational needs. Secular
principles involve for mankind a future, where there shall exist unity of
condition with infinite diversity of intellect, where the subsistence of
ignorance and selfishness shall leave men equal, and universal purity
enable all things--noble society, the treasures of art, and the riches of
the world--to be had in common.
VIII.
Since it is not capable of demonstration whether the inequalities of human
condition will be compensated for in another life--it is the business of
intelligence to rectify them in this world. The speculative worship of
superior beings, who cannot need it, seems a lesser duty than the patient
service of known inferior natures, and the mitigation of harsh destiny, so
that the ignorant may be enlightened and the low elevated.
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LAWS OF SECULAR CONTROVERSY.
CHAPTER IV.
I.
Rights of Reason. As a means of developing and establishing secular
principles, and as security that the principles of Nature and the habit of
reason may prevail, Secularism uses itself, and maintains for others, as
rights of reason:--
The Free Search for Truth, without which its full attainment is
impossible.
The Free Utterance of the result, without which the increase of Truth is
limited.
The Free Criticism of alleged Truth, without which its identity must
remain uncertain.
The Fair Action of Conviction thus attained, without which conscience will
be impotent on practice.
II.
Standard of Appeal. "Secularism accepts no authority but that of Nature,
adopts no methods but those of science and philosophy, and respects in
practice no rule but that of the conscience, illustrated of the past, and
looks to tradition as presenting a storehouse of raw materials to thought,
and in many cases results of high wisdom for our reverence; but it utterly
disowns tradition as a ground of belief, whether miracles and
supernaturalism but claimed or not claimed on its side. No sacred
scripture or ancient church can be made a basis of belief, for the obvious
reason that their claims always need to be proved, and cannot without
absurdity be assumed. The association leaves to its individual members to
yield whatever respect their own good sense judges to be due to the
opinions of great men, living or dead, spoken or written,
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as also to the practice of
ancient communities, national or ecclesiastical. But it disowns all appeal
to such authorities as final tests of truth."*
III.
Sphere of Controversy. Since the principles of Secularism rest on grounds
apart from Theism, Atheism, or Christianism, it is not logically necessary
for Secularists to debate the truth of these subjects. In controversy,
Secularism concerns itself with the assertion and maintenance of its own
affirmative propositions, combating only views of Theology and
Christianity so far as they interfere with, discourage, or disparage
Secular action, which may be done without digressing into the discussion
of the truth of Theism or the divine origin of the Bible.
IV.
Personal Controversy. A Secularist will avoid indiscriminate disparagement
of bodies or antagonism of persons, and will place before himself simply
the instruction and service of an opponent, whose sincerity he will not
question, whose motives he will not impugn, always holding that a man whom
it is not worth while confuting courteously, is not worth while confuting
at all. Such disparagements as are included in the explicit condemnation
of erroneous principles are, we believe, all that the public defence of
opinion requires, and are the only kind of disparagement a Secularist
proposes to employ.
V.
Justification of Controversy. The universal fair and open discussion of
opinion is the highest guarantee of public truth--only that theory which
is submitted to that ordeal is to be regarded, since only that which
endures it can be trusted. Secularism encourages men to trust reason
throughout, and to trust nothing that reason does not establish--to
examine all things hopeful, respect all things probable, but rely upon
nothing without precaution which does not come within the range of science
and experience.
*"Programme of
Freethought Societies," by F. W. Newman. (REASONER, No. 388.)
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MAXIMS OF ASSOCIATION.
CHAPTER V.
I.
It is the duty of every man to regulate his personal and family interests
so as to admit of some exertions for the improvement of society. It is
only by serving those beyond ourselves that we can secure for ourselves
protection, sympathy, or honour. The neglect of home for public affairs
endangers philanthropy, by making it the enemy of the household. To
suffer, on the other hand, the interests of the family to degenerate into
mere selfism, is a dangerous example to rulers.
II.
"No man or woman is accountable to others for any conduct by which others
are not injured or damaged."*
III.
Social freedom consists in being subject to just rule and none other.
IV.
Service and endurance are the chief personal duties of man.
V.
Secularism holds it to be the duty of every man to reserve a portion of
his means and energies for the public service, and so to cultivate and
cherish his powers, mental and physical, as
*D. in the LEADER,
1850, who, as a correspondent, first expressed this aphorism thus.
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to have them ever ready to
perform service, as efficient as possible, to the well-being of humanity.
No weakness, no passion, no wavering, should be found among those who are
battling for the cause of human welfare, which such errors may fatally
injure. Self-control, self-culture, self-sacrifice, are all essential to
those whou would serve that cause, and would not bring discredit upon
their comrades in that service.*
VI.
To promote in good faith and good temper the immediate and material
welfare of humanity, in accordance with the laws of Nature, is the study
and duty of a Secularist, and this is the unity of principle which
prevails amid whatever diversity of opinion may subsist in a Secular
Society, the bond of union being the common convictions of the duty of
advancing the Secular good of this life, of the authority of natural
morality, and of the utility of material effort in the work of human
improvement. In other words, Secularist union implies the concerted action
of all who believe it is right to promote the secular good of this life,
to teach morality, found upon the laws of Nature, and to seek human
improvement by material methods, irrespective of any other opinions held,
and irrespective of any diversity of reasons for holding these.
*Mr. L. H. Holdreth,
Religion of Duty.
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THE SECULAR GUILD.
CHAPTER VI.
Several expositors of Secular principles, able to act together, have for
many years endeavored by counsel, by aid and by publication to promote
Secular organization. At one time they conducted a Secular Institute in
Fleet Street, London--in 1854. The object was to form Secular Societies
for teaching the positive results of Freethought. In the first edition of
this work it was held to be desirable that there should be a centre of
reference for all inquirers upon Secular principles at home and abroad.
Attention should be guaranteed to distant correspondents and visitors, so
that means of communication and publication of all advanced opinions in
society, theology, and politics might exist, and be able to command
publicity, when expressed dispassionately, impersonally, and with ordinary
good taste.
It has been generally admitted that the operations at that time conducted,
helped to impart a new character to Freethought advocacy, and many of its
recommendations have since been copied by associations subsequently
formed. The promoters of Secularism alluded to, have not ceased in the
Reasoner and other publications, by lectures, by lectures, by statements,
by articles, by pamphlets to urge a definite and consistent representation
of Secular and Freethought principles: as many mistake merely mechanical
association for the organization of ideas.
The promoters in question have since adopted the form of action of a
Secular Guild, and continue the Reasoner (of which there is now issued a
"Review Series") as their organ. The object of a Council of the Guild is
to promote, as far as means may permit, or counsel prevail, organization
of ideas:--
1.--To train Advocates of Secular principles.
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2.--To advise an impersonal
policy of advocacy, which seeking to carry its ends by force of
exposition, rather than of denunciation, shall command the attention and
respect of those who influence public affairs.
3.--To promote solution of political, social, and educational questions on
Secular and unsectarian grounds.*
4.--To point out new Books of Secular relevance, and where possible, to
accredit Advocates of Secularism that the public may have some guidance,
and the party be no longer liable to be judged by whomever may appear to
write or speak on the subject.
5.--To assist in the protection and defence of those injured, or attempted
to be injured on account of Freethought or Secularist opinion.
6.--To provide for the administration of property bequeathed for Secular
purposes, of which so much has been lost through the injustice of the law,
and machinations of persons opposed to Liberal views.
7.--When a member has been honourably counted on the side of Secularism,
has been a Subscriber or a Worker for a term of years, the Guild, keeping
a record of such Service, proposes to give a Certificate of it which among
Friends of Freethought may be a passport to recognition and esteem. To
constitute some such Freemasonry in Freethought, may elevate association
in England. A certificate of Illuminism or of Carbonism in Italy was once
handed down from father to son as an heirloom of honor, while in England
you have to supplicate men to join a society of progression, instead of a
membership being a distinction which men shall covet. At present a man who
has given the best years of his life to the public service is liable (if
from any necessity he ceases to act) to be counted a renegade by men who
have never rendered twelve months consecutive or costly service
themselves. There ought to be a fixed term of Service, which, if
honourably and effectively rendered, should entitle a man to be considered
free, as a soldier after leaving the army, and his certificate of having
belonged to the Order of Secularism should entitle him to distinction and
to authority when his opinion was sought, and to exemption from all but
voluntary service. At present the soldiers of Progress, when no longer
able to serve, are dismissed from the public eye, like the race-horse to
the cab stand, to obscurity and neglect. This needs correction before men
can be counted upon in the battle of Truth. A man is to be estimated
according to the aims of the party to which he is allied. He is to be
esteemed in consequences of sacrifices of time, and discipline of conduct,
which he contributes to the service and reputation of his cause.
In foreign countries many person reside interested in Secularism; in Great
Britain indeed many friends reside where
*This has been done to
some extent in the discussion of the National Education question. The
Proposer of the Guild contributed what he could to this end by reading the
paper published in the proceedings of the Conference of the Birmingham
Education League, by letters like that to the Daily News, commented upon
by the Bishop of Peterborough, at Leicester [see official publications of
the Manchester National Education Union,] by discussions as thouse with
the Revs. Pringle and Baldwin, at Norwich, and with Mr. Chas. Bradlaugh,
at the Old Street Hall of Science, London; and by Lectures during the time
the question of National Education has been before Parliament.
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no Secular Society is formed;
and in these cases membership of the Guild would be advantageous to them,
affording means of introduction to publicists of similar views: and even
in instances of towns where Secular Societies do exist, persons in direct
relation to the Secular Guild would be able to furnish Secular direction
where the tradition and usage of a Secular Society are unknown, or
unfamiliar.
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ORGANIZATION INDICATED
CHAPTER VII.
As the aim of the Guild is not to fetter independent thought, but to
concert practical action, it is mainly required of each member that he
undertakes to perform, in good faith, the duties which he shall consent to
have assigned him; and generally so to comport himeslf that his principles
shall not be likely to suffer, if judged by his conduct He will be
expected to treat every colleague as equal with himself in veracity, in
honour, and in loyalty to his cause. And every form of speech which casts
a doubt upon the truth, or imputes, or assumes a want of honour on the
part of any member, will be deemed a breach of order. If any member
intends such an accusation of another, it must be made the matter of a
formal charge, after leave obtained to prefer it.
What is desirable to know about new members is this:--
Do they, in their conception of Secularism, see in it that which seeks not
the sensual but the good, and a good which the conscience can be engaged
in pursuing and promoting; a Moralism in accordance with the laws of
Nature and capable of intrinsic proof: a Matierialism which is definite
without dogmatism or grossness; and a unity on the ground of these common
agreements, for convictions which imply no apostolate are neither earnest
nor generous. No one ought to be encouraged to take sides with Secularism,
unless his conscience is satisfied of the moral rightfulness of its
principles and duties both for life and death.
It is not desirable to accept persons of that class who decry parties--who
boast of being of no party--who preach up isolation, and lament the want
of unity--who think party the madness of the many, for the gain of the
few. Seek rather the partisan who is wise enough to know that the
disparagement of party is the madness of the few, leading to the utter
impotence of the many. A party, in an associative and defensible sense, is
a class of persons taking sides upon some
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definite question, and acting
together for necessary ends, having principles, aims, policy, authority,
and discipline.*
With respect to proposed members, it may be well to ascertain whether
neglect, or rudeness, or insult, or unfairness from colleagues, or
overwork being imposed upon him, or incapacity of others, would divert him
from his duty. These accidents or necessities might occur: but if a
society is to be strong it must be able to count upon its members, and to
be able to count upon them it must be known what they will bear without
insubordination; and what they will bear will depend upon the frankness
and completeness of information they receive as to the social risks all
run who unite to carry out any course of duty or public service.
Always assuming that a candidate cares for the objects for which he
proposes to associate, and that it is worth while knowing whom it is with
whom you propose to work them out; answers to such inquiries as the
following would tend to impart a working knowledge and quality to the
society:--
Is he a person previously or recently acquainted with the principles he is
about to profess?
Does he understand what is meant by "taking sides" with a public party?
Would he be faithful to the special ideas of Secularism so long as he felt
them to be true? Would he make sacrifices to spread them and vindicate
them, or enable others to do so? Would he conceive of Secularism as a
cause to be served loyally, which we would support as well as he was able,
if unable to support it as well as he could wish?
Is he of decent, moral character, and tolerably reliable as to his future
conduct?
In presenting his views to others, would he be likely to render them in an
attractive spirit, or to make them disagreeable to others?
Is he of an impulsive nature, ardent for a time, and then apathetic or
reactionary--likely to antagonize to-morrow the persons he applauds
to-day?
Is he a person who would commit the fault of provoking persecution? Would
ridicule or persecution chill him if it occurred? Is he a man to stand by
an obscure and friendless cause--or are notoriety, success, applause, and
the company of others, indispensable to his fidelity?
Is he a man of any mark of esteem among his friends--a man whose promise
is sure, whose word has weight?
Is his idea of obedience, obedience simply to his own will? Would he
acquiesce in the authority of the laws of the Society, or the decision of
the Society where the laws were silent? Would he acknowledge in democracy
the despotism of principles self-consented to--or as an arena for the
*In a school there is
usually teaching, training, discipline, science, system, authorities,
tradition, and development.--TIMES, 1846.
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assertion of Individualism
before winning the consent of colleagues to the discussion of special
views?
The membership sought may be granted, provided the actual knowledge of
Secular principles be satisfactory, and evident earnestness to practise
them be apparent. The purport of the whole of the questions is to enable a
clear opinion to be formed as to what is to be expected of the new
member--how far he is likely to be reliable--how long he is likely to
remain with us--under what circumstances he likely to fail us--what work
may be assigned him--what confidences he may be entrusted with, and in
what terms he should be introduced to colleagues, and spoken of to others.
The Membership here described would and should be no restricted and
exclusive society, where only one pattern of efficiency prevails; but a
society where all diversities of capacity, energy, and worth, may be
found, so far as it is honest and trustworthy. A Society, like the State,
requires the existence of the people, as well as public officers--men who
can act, as well as men who can think and direct. Many men who lack
refinement, and even discretion, possess courage and energy, and will go
out on the inevitable "forlorn hopes" of progress; which the merely
prudent avoid, and from which the cultivated too often shrink. Our work
requires all orders of men, but efficiency requires that we know which is
which, that none may be employed in the dark.
In every public organization there are persons who promote and aid
unconnected with the Society.
Active members are those who engage to perform specific duties; such as
reporting lectures, sermons, and public meetings, so far as they refer to
Secularism.*
To give notice of meetings and sermons about to be held or delivered for
or against Secularism.
To note and report passages in books, newspapers, magazines, and reviews
referring to Secularism.
Each active member should possess some working efficiency, or be willing
to acquire it. To be able to explain his views by tongue or pen with
simple directness, to observe carefully,
*In reporting, each
member should be careful to understate rather than overstate facts,
distinguishing carefully what is matter of knowledge from rumour,
conjecture, or opinion.
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to report judiciously, to
reason dispassionately, to put the best construction on every act that
needs interpretation, are desirable accomplishments in a Propagandist.
In all public proceedings of the Society, written speeches should be
preferred from the young, because such speeches admit of preconsidered
brevity, consecutiveness, and purpose, and exist for reference. In the
deliberations and discussions of any Society, it might usefully be deemed
a qualification to make a contribution to the subject in speeches brief
and direct.
Non-reliableness in discharge of duties, or moral disqualification, shall
be a ground of annulling membership, which may be done after the member
objected to has had a fair opportunity of defending himself from the
specific disqualifications alleged against him and communicated to him,
and has failed therein.
The duties assigned to each member should be such as are within his means,
as respects power and opportunity; such, indeed, as interfere neither with
his social nor civil obligations; the intention being that the membership
of the Society shall not as a rule be incompatible with the preservation
of health, and the primary service due to family and the State.*
Any persons acquainted with the "Principles of Secularism" here given, who
shall generally agree therein, and associate under any name to promote
such objects, and to act in concert with all who seek similar objects, and
will receive and take into official consideration the instructions of the
Guild, and to make one subscription yearly among its members and friends
on behalf of its Propagandist Funds, shall be recognized as a Branch of
it.
*As a general rule, it
will be found that any one who sacrifices more than one-fifth of his time
and means will become before long reactionary, and not only do nothing
himself, but discourage others.
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THE PLACE OF SECULARISM
CHAPTER VIII.
"We do not, however, deny that, false as the whole theory [of Secularism]
appears to us, it is capable of attracting the belief of large numbers of
people, and of exercising considerable influence over their conduct; and
we should admit that the influence so exercised is considerably better
than no influence at all."--Saturday Review, July 2, 1859.
This first step is to win, from public opinion, a standing place for
Secularism. So long as people believe Secularism not be wanted, indeed
impossible to be wanted--that it is error, wickedness, and unmitigated
evil, it will receive no attention, no respect, and make no way. But show
that it occupies a vacant place, supplies a want, is a direction where no
other party supplies any--and it at once appears indispensable. It is
proved to be a service to somebody, and from that moment it is tolerated
if not respected. It may be like war, or medicine, or work, or law,
disagreeable or unpalatable, but when seen to be necessary, it will have
recognition and support. We are sure this case can be made out for
Secularism. It is not only true, but it is known; it is not only known,
but it is notorious, that there are thousands and tens of thousands of
persons in every district of this and most European countries, who are
without the pale of Christianity. They reject it, they disprove it, they
dislike it, or they do not understand it. Some have vices and passions
which Christianity, as preached around them, condemns. As Devils are said
to do, they "believe and tremble," and so disown what they have not the
virtue to practise. Faith does not touch them, and reason is not
tried--indeed reason is decried by the evangelically religious, so that
not being converted in one way, no other way is open to them. Others are
absorbed or insensate; they are busy, or stupid, or defiant, and regard
Christianity as a waste of time, or as monotonous or offensive. It bores
them or threatens them. They are already dull, therefore it does not
attract them--they have some rude sense of independence and some feeling
of courage, and they object either to be snubbed into conformity or kicked
into heaven. Another and a yearly increasing portion of the people have,
after patiently and
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painfully thinking over
Christianity, come to believe it to be untrue; unfounded historically;
wrong morally, and a discreditable imputation upon God. It outrages their
affections, it baffles their understandings. It is double tongued. Its
expounders are always multiplying, and the more they increase the less
they agree, and hence sceptics the more abound. Disbelievers therefore
exist; the augment: they can neither be convinced, converted, nor
conciliated, because they will yield no allegiance to a system which has
no hold on their conscience. It is, we repeat, more than known, it is
notorious that these persons live and die in scepticism. These facts are
the cry of the pulpit, the theme of the platform, the burden of the
religious tract. Now, is nothing to be done with these people? You cannot
exterminate them, the Church cannot direct them. The Bible is no authority
to them--the "will of God," as the clergy call it, in their eyes is mere
arbitrary, capricious, dogmatical assumption; sometimes, indeed, wise
precept, but oftener a cloak for knavery or a pretext for despotism. To
open the eyes of such persons to the omnipresent teachings of Nature, to
make reason an authority with them, to inspire them with precepts which
experience can verify--to connect conscience with intelligence, right with
interest, duty with self-respect, and goodness with love, must surely be
useful. If Secularism accomplishes some such work, where Christianity
confessedly accomplishes nothing, it certainly has a place of its own. It
is no answer to it to claim that Christianity is higher, more complete,
better. The advocate of every old religion say the same. Christianity may
be higher, more complete, better--for somebody else. But nothing can be
high, complete, or good, for those who do not see it, accept it, want it,
or act upon it. That is first which is fit--that is supreme which is most
productive of practical virtue. No comparison (which would be as
irrelevant as offensive) between Secularism and Christianity is set up
here. The question is--is Secularism useful, or may it be useful to
anybody? The question is not--does it contain all truth? but does it
contain as much as may be serviceable to many minds, otherwise
uninfluenced for good? Arithmetic is useful though Algebra is more
compendious. Mensuration performs good offices in hands ignorant of
Euclid. There may be logic without Whately, and melody without Beethoven;
and there may be Secular ethics which shall be useful without the
pretension of Christianity.
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CHARACTERISTICS OF SECULARISM
CHAPTER IX
I.
Secularism means the moral duty of man in this life deduced from
considerations which pertain to this life alone. Secular education is by
some confounded with Secularism, whereas the distinction between them is
very wide. Secular education simply means imparting Secular knowledge
separately--by itself, without admixture of Theology in it. The advocate
of Secular education may be, and generally is, also an advocate of
religion; but he would teach religion at another time and treat it as a
distinct subject, too sacred for coercive admixture into the hard and
vexatious routine of a school. He would confine the inculcation of
religion to fitting seasons and chosen instruments. He holds also that one
subject at a time is mental economy in learning. Secular education is the
policy of a school--Secularism is a policy of life to those who do not
accept Theology. Secularity draws the line of separation between the
things of time and the things of eternity. That is Secular which pertains
to this world. The distinction may be seen in the fact that the cardinal
propositions of Theology are provable only in the next life, and not in
this. If I believe in a given creed it may turn out to be the true one;
but one must die to find that out. On this side of the grave all is doubt;
the truth of Biblical creeds is an affair of hope and anxiety, while the
truth of things Secular becomes apparent in time. The advantage arising
from the practice of veracity, justice, and temperance can be ascertained
from human experience. If we are told to "fear God and keep His
commandments," les His judgments overtake us, the indirect action of this
doctrine on human character make a vicious timid man better in this life,
supposing the interpretation of the will of God, and the commandments
selected to be enforced, are moral; but such teaching is not Secular,
because its main
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object is to fit men for
eternity. Pure Secular principles have for their object to fit men for
time, making the fulfilment of human duty here the standard of fitness for
an accruing future. Secularism purposes to regulate human affairs by
considerations purely human. Its principles are founded upon Nature, and
its object is to render man as perfect as possible in this life. Its
problem is this: Supposing no other life to be before us, what is the
wisest use of this? As the Rev. Thomas Binney puts it, "I believe * * that
even * * if there were really no God over him, no heaven above, or
eternity in prospect, things are so constituted that man may turn the
materials of his little life poem, if not always into a grand epic, mostly
into something of interest and beauty; and it is worth his while doing so,
even if there should be no sequel to the piece."*
Chalmers, Archbishop Whately, and earlier distinguished divines of the
Church of England, the most conspicuous of whom is Bishop Butler, have
admitted the independent existence of morality, but we here cite Mr.
Binney's words because among Dissenters this truth is less readily
admitted. A true Secular life does not exclude any from supplementary
speculations. Not until we have fulfilled our duty to man, as far as we
can ascertain that duty, can we consistently pretend to comprehend the
more difficult relations of man to God. Our duties to humanity, understood
and discharged to the best of our ability, will in now way unfit us to
"reverently meditate on things far beyond us, on Power unlimited, on space
unfathomed, on time uncounted, on 'whence' we came, and 'whither' we go."+
The leading ideas of Secularism are humanism, moralism, materialism,
utilitarian unity: Humanism, the physical perfection of this life--Moralism,
founded on the laws of Nature, as guidance of this life--Materialism, as
the means of Nature for the Secular improvement of this life--Unity of
thought and action upon these practical grounds. Secularism teaches that
the good of the present life is the immediate concern of man, and that it
should be his first endeavor to raise it. Secularism inculcates a Morality
founded independently upon the laws of Nature. It seeks human improvement
through purity and suitableness of material conditions as being a method
at once moral, practical, universal, and sure.
*"How to make the best
of both worlds," p. 11.
+F. W. Newman.
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II.
The province of Positivism is not speculation upon the origin, but study
of the laws of Nature--its policy is to destroy error by superseding it.
Auguste Comte quotes, as a cardinal maxim of scientific progress, the
words "nothing is destroyed until it is replaced," a proverbial form of a
wise saying of M. Necker that in political progress "nothing is destroyed
for which we do not find a substitute." Negations, useful in their place,
are iconoclastic--not constructive. Unless substitution succeeds
destruction--there can be no sustained progress. The Secularist is known
by setting up and maintaining affirmative propositions. He replaces
negations by affirmations, and substitutes demonstration for denunciation.
He asserts truths of Nature and humanity, and reverses the position of the
priest who appears as the sceptic, the denier, the disbeliever in Nature
and humanity. Statesmen, not otherwise eager for improvement, will regard
affirmative proposals. Lord Palmerston could say--"Show me a good and I
will realize it--not an abuse to correct."
III.
"All science," says M. Comte, "has prevision for its end, an axiom which
separates science from erudition, which relates to events of the past
without any regard to the future. No accumulation of facts can effect
prevision until the facts are made the basis of reasonings. A knowledge of
phenomena leads to prevision, and prevision to action;" or, in other
words, when we can foresee what will happen under given circumstances, we
can provide against it. It by no means follows that every Secularist will
be scientific, but to discern the value of science, to appreciate and
promote it, may be possible to most. Science requires high qualities of
accurate observation, close attention, careful experiment, caution,
patience, labour. Its value to mankind is inestimable. One physician will
do more to alleviate human suffering than ten priests. One physical
discovery will do more to advance civilization than a generation of
prayer-makers. "To get acquaintance with the usual course of Nature (which
Science alone can teach us), is a kind of knowledge which pays very good
interest."* The value of this knowledge becomes more apparent the longer
we live. There
*Athenaeum, No. 1,637,
March 12, 1859.
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may be a general
superintending Providence--there may be a Special Providence, but the
first does not interfere in human affairs, and the interpositions of the
second are no longer to be counted upon. The age of Prayer for temporal
deliverance has confessedly passed away. But without disputing these
points, it is clear that the only help available to man, the sole
dependence upon which he can calculate, is that of Science. Nothing can be
more impotent than the fate of that man who seeks social elevation by mere
Faith. All human affairs are a process, and he alone who acts upon this
knowledge can hope to control results. Loyola foresaw the necessity of men
acting for human purposes, as though there were no God. "Let us pray,"
said he, "as if we had no help in ourselves; let us labour as if there was
no help for us in heaven." Society is a blunder, not a science, until it
ensures good sense and competence for the many. Why this process is tardy,
is that creedists get credit for hoping and meaning well. Creedists of
good intent, who make no improvement and attempt none, are very much in
the way of human betterance. The spiritualist regards the world
theoretically as a gross element, which he is rather to struggle against
than to work with. This makes human service a mortification instead of
pure passion. We would not deify the world, that is, set up the sensualism
of the body, as spiritualism is set up as the sensualism of the soul.
Secularism seeks the material purity of the present life, which is at once
the mean and end of Secular endeavor. The most reliable means of progress
is the improvement of material condition, and "purity" implies
"improvement," for there can be no improvement without it. The aim of all
improvement is higher purity. All power, art, civilization and progress
are summed up in the result--purer life. Strength, intellect, love are
measured by it. Duty, study, temperance, patience are but ministers to
this. "There is that," says Ruskin, "to be seen in every street and lane
of every city, that to be found and felt in every human heart and
countenance, that to be loved in every road-side weed and moss-grown wall,
which, in the hands of faithful men, may convey emotions of glory and
sublimity continual and exalted."
IV.
It is necessary to point out that Sincerity does not imply infallibility.
"There is a truth, which could it be stamped
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on every human mind, would
exterminate all bigotry and persecution. I mean the truth, that worth of
character and true integrity, and, consequently, God's acceptance, are not
necessarily connected with any particular set of opinions."*
If you admit that Mark and Paul were honest, most Christians take that to
be an admission of the truth of all related under their names. Yet if a
man in defending his opinions, affirm his own sincerity, Christians
quickly see that is no proof of their truth, and proceed to disprove them.
Sincerity may account for a man holding his opinions, but it does not
account for the opinions themselves. Nothing is more common than
uninformed, misinformed, mistaken, or self-deluded honesty. But sincere
error, though dangerous enough, has not the attribute of crime about
it--personal intention of mischief. "Because human nature is frail and
falliable, the ground of our acceptance with God, under the Gospel, is
sincerity. A sincere desire to know and do the will of God, is the only
condition of obtaining the Christian salvation. Every honest man will be
saved."+ But sincerity, if the reader recurs
to our definition of it, includes a short intellectual and moral education
with respect to it. Those worth of the high descriptive "sincere," are
those who have thought, inquired, examined, are in earnest, have a sense
of duty with regard to their conviction, which is only satisfied by acting
upon it. These processes may not bring a man to the truth, but they bring
him near to it. The chances of error are reduced hereby as far as human
care can reduce them. Secularism holds that the Protestant right of
private judgment includes the moral innocency of that judgment, when
conscientiously formed, whether for or against received opinion; that
though all sincere opinion is not equally true, nor equally useful, it is
equally without sin; that it is not sameness of belief but sincerity of
belief which justifies conduct, whether regard be had to the esteem of men
or the approval of God. Sincerity, we repeat, is not infallibility. The
conscientious are often as mischievous as the false, but he who acts
according to the best of his belief is free from criminal intention. The
sincerity commended by the Secularist is an active sentiment seeking the
truth and acting upon it--not the
*Dr. Price.
+John Foster's Tracts on Heresy.
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fortuitous, insipid,
apathetic, inherited consent, which so often passes for honesty, because
too indolent or too cowardly to inquire, and too stupid to doubt. The man
who holds merely ready made opinions is not to be placed on the same level
with him whose convictions are derived from experience. True sincerity is
an educated and earnest sentiment.
V.
In the formation and judgment of opinions we must take into account the
consequences to mankind involved in their adoption. But when an opinion
seems true in itself and beneficial to society, the consequences in the
way of inconvenience to ourselves is not sufficient reason for refusing to
act upon it. If a particular time of enforcing it seem to be one when it
will be disregarded, or misunderstood, or put back, and the sacrifice of
ourselves on its behalf produce no adequate advantage to society, it may
be lawful to seek a better opportunity. We must, however, take care that
this view of the matter is not made a pretext of cowardice or evasion of
duty. And in no case is it justifiable to belie conscience or profess a
belief contrary of that which we believe to be true. There may in extreme
cases be neutrality with regard to truth, but in no case should there be
complicity in falsehood. So much with respect to this life. With respect
to Deity or another life, we may in all cases rely upon this, that in
truth alone is safety. With God, conscience can have no penal
consequences. Conscience is the voice of honesty, and honesty, with all
its errors, a God of Truth will regard. "We have," says Blanco White, "no
revealed rule which will ascertain, with moral certainty, which doctrines
are right and which are wrong--that is, as they are known to God." * *
"Salvation, therefore, cannot depend on orthodoxy; it cannot consist in
abstract doctrines, about which men of equal abilities, virtue, and
sincerity are, and always have been, divided." * * "No error on abstract
doctrines can be heresy, in the sense of a wrong belief which endangers
the soul." "The Father of the Universe accommodates not His judgments to
the wretched wranglings of pedantic theologians, but every one who seeks
truth, whether he findeth it or not, and worketh righteousness, will be
accepted of Him."* Thomas
*Bishop Watson's
Theological Tracts. Introductory.
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Carlyle was the first English
writer, having the ear of the public, who declared in England that
"sincere doubt is as much entitled to respect as sincere belief."
VI.
Going to a distant town to mitigate some calamity there will illustrate
the principle of action prescribed by Secularism. One man will go on this
errand from pure sympathy with the unfortunate; this is goodness. Another
goes because his priest bids him; this is obedience. Another goes because
the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew tells him that all such persons will
pass to the right hand of the Father; this is calculation. Another goes
because he believes God commands him; this is piety. Another goes because
he believes that the neglect of suffering will not answer; this is
utilitarianism. But another goes on the errand of mercy, because it is an
errand of mercy, because it is an immediate service to humanity; and he
goes to attempt material amelioration rather than spiritual consolation;
this is Secularism, which teaches that goodness is sanctity, that Nature
is guidance, that reason is authority, that service is duty, and that
Materialism is help.
VII.
The policy of Secular controversy is to distinguish and assert its own
affirmative propositions. It is the policy of Secularism not so much to
say to error "It is false," as to say of truth "This is true." Thus,
instead of leaving to the popular theology the prestige of exclusive
affirmation accorded to it by the world, although it is solely employed in
the incessant re-assertion of error, Secularism causes it to own and
publish its denial of positive principle; when the popular theology proves
itself to be but an organized negation of the moral guidance of nature and
its tendancies to progress. A Secularist sees clearly upon what he relies
as a Secularist. To him the teaching of Nature is as clear as the teaching
of the Bible: and since, if God exists, Nature is certainly His work,
while it is not so clear that the Bible is--the teaching of Nature will be
preferred and followed where the teaching of the Bible appears to conflict
with it. A Secular Society, contemplating intellectual and moral progress,
must provide for the freest expression of opinion on all subjects which
its members may deem conducive to their common objects. Christianism,
Theism,
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Materialism, and Atheism will
be regarded as open questions, subject to unreserved discussion. But these
occasions will be the opportunity of the members, not the business of the
society. All public proceedings accredited by the society should relate to
topics consistent with the common principles of Secularism. "In necessary
things, unity: in doubtful things, liberty: in all things, charity."*
The destruction of religious servitude may be attempted in two ways. It
may be denounced, which will irritate it, or it may be superseded by the
servitude of humanity. Attacking it by denunciation, generally inflames
and precipitates the persecution of the many upon the few; when the weak
are liable to be scattered, the cowardly to recant, and the brave to
perish.
VIII.
The essential rule upon which personal association can be permanent, or
controversy be maintained in the spirit in which truth can be evolved, is
that of never imputing evil motives nor putting the worst construction on
any act. Free Inquiry has no limits but truth, Free speech no limits but
exactness, Policy (here the law of speech) no limits but usefulness.
Unfettered and uncompromising are they who pursue free inquiry
throughout--measured and impassable may those become, who hold to a
generous veracity. Far both from outrage or servility--too proud to court
and too strong to hate--are those who learn to discard all arts but that
of the austere service of others, exacting no thanks and pausing at no
curse. Wise words of counsel to Theological controversialists have been
addressed in a powerful quarter of public opinion: "Religious controversy
has already lost much of its bitterness. Open abuse and exchange of foul
names are exploded, and even the indirect imputation of unworthy motives
is falling into disuse. Another step will be made when theologians have
learnt to extend their intellectual as well as their moral sympathies, to
feel that most truths are double edged, and not to wage an unnecessary war
against opinion which, strange, incongruous, and unlovely as they may at
first appear, are built, perhaps, on as firm a foundation, and are held
with equal sincerity and good faith, as their own."+
This is advice which both sides should remember.
*Maxim (much unused) of
the Roman Catholic Church.
+TIMES Leader of November 8, 1855.
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IX.
"No society can be in a healthy state in which eccentricity is a matter of
reproach." Conventionality is the tyranny of the average man, and a
despicable tyranny it is. The tyranny of genius is hard to be borne--that
of mediocrity is humiliating. That idea of freedom which consists in the
absence of all government is either mere lawlessness, or prefers to the
distant period when each many having attained perfection will be a law
unto himself. Just rule is indispensable rule, and none other. The few
laws consistent with the public preservation the better--there is then, as
Mr. Mill has shown in his "Liberty," the more room for that ever-recurring
originality which keeps intellect alive in the world. Towards law kept
within the limits of reason, obedience is the first of virtues. "Order and
Progress," says Comte, which we should express thus:--Order, without which
Progress is impossible; Progress, without which Order, is Tyranny. The
world is clogged with men of dead principles. Principles that cannot be
acted upon are probably either obsolete or false. One certain way to
improvement is to exact consistency between profession and practice; and
the way to bring this about is to teach that the highest merit consists in
having earnest views and in endeavoring to realize them--and this whether
the convictions be contained within or without accredited creeds. There
will be no progress except within the stereotyped limits of creeds, unless
means are found to justify independent convictions to the conscience. To
the philosopher you have merely to show that a thing is true, to the
statesman, that it is useful, but to a Christian, that it is safe. The
grace of service lies in its patience. To promote the welfare of others,
irrespective of their gratitude or claims, is to reach the nature of the
Gods. It is a higher sentiment than is ascribed to the Deity of the Bible.
The abiding disposition to serve others is the end of all philosophy. The
vow of principle is always one of poverty and obedience, and few are they
who take it--and fewer who keep it. If hate obscure for a period the path
of duty, let us remember nothing should shake our attachment to that
supreme thought, which at once stills human anger and educates human
endeavor--the perception that "the sufferings and errors of mankind arise
out of want of knowledge rather than defect of goodness."
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X.
A leading object of Secularism is the promotion of the material purity of
the present life--"material purity," which includes personal as well as
external condition. The question of Spiritualism (without employing it and
without disparaging it) it regards as a distinct question, and hence the
methods by which Secularists attempt "improvement" will be "material" as
being the most reliable. The tacit or expressed aim of all Freethinking,
has ever been true thinking and pure thinking. It has been a continued
protest against the errors Theology has introduced, and the vicious
relations it has conserved and sanctified. It is necessary to mark this,
and it can be done by insisting and keeping distinctly evident that the
aim of Secularism is the purity of material influences. This precludes the
possibility of Secularism being charged either with conscious grossness or
intentional sin. Secularism concerns itself with the work of to-day. "It
is always yesterday or to-morrow, and never to-day,"*
is a fair description of life according to theologies. Secularism, on the
contrary, concerns itself with the things of "to-day."
To know
That which before us lies in daily life
Is the prime wisdom.
The cardinal idea of the "popular Theology" is the necessity of
Revelation. It believes that the light of Nature is darkness, that Reason
affords no guidance, that the Scriptures are the true chart, the sole
chart, and the sufficient chart of man, and it regards all attempts to
delineate a chart of Nature as impious, as impracticable, and as a covert
attack upon the Biblical chart in possession of the churches. Knowing no
other guidance than that of the Bible, and disbelieving the possibility of
any other, theology denounces Doubt, which inspires it with a sense of
insecurity--it fears Inquiry, which may invalidate its trust--and
deprecates Criticism, which may expose it, if deficient. Having nothing to
gain, it is reluctant to incur risk--having all to lose, it dreads to be
disturbed--having no strength but in Faith, it fears those who Reason--and
less from ill-will than from the tenderness of its position, it persecutes
in self-defence. Such are the restrictions and the logic of Theology.
*Story of Boots, by
Dickens.
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XI.
On the other hand, Rationalism (which is the logic of Nature) is in
attitude and spirit quite the reverse. It observes that numbers are
unconvinced of the fact of Revelation, and feel the insufficiency, for
their guidance, of that offered to them. To them the pages of Nature seem
clearer than those of the Apostles. Reason, which existed before all
Religions and decides upon all--else the false can never be distinguished
from the true--seems self-dependent and capable of furnishing personal
direction. Hence Rationalism instructed by facts, winning secrets by
experiments, establishing principles by reflection, is assured of a
morality found upon the laws of nature. Without the advantage of inductive
science to assist discoveries, or the printing press to record
corroborations of them, the Pre-Christian world created ethics, and
Socrates and Epictetus, and Zoroaster and Confucious, delivered precepts,
to which this age accords a high place. Modern Rationalists therefore
sought, with their new advantages, to augment and systematize these
conquests. They tested the claims of the Church by the truth of Nature.
That Freethought which had won these truths applied them to creeds, and
criticism became its weapon of Propagandism. Its consciousness of new
truth stimulated its aggression on old error. The pretensions of reason
denied as false, and rationalists themselves persecuted as dangerous, they
had no alternative but to criticise in order to vindicate their own
principles, and weaken the credit and power of their opponents. To attack
the misleading dogmas of Theology was to the early Freethinkers well
understood self-defence. In some hands and under the provocations of
vindictive bigotry, this work, no doubt, became wholly antagonistic, but
the main aspiration of the majority was the determination of teaching the
people "to be a law unto themselves." They found prevailing a religion of
unreasoning faith. They sought to create a religion of intelligent
conviction, whose uniformity consisted in sincerity. Its believers did not
all hold the same tenets, but they all sought the truth and pursued it
with the same earnestness. It was this inspiration which sustained Vanini,
Hamont, Lewes, Kett, Legate, and Wightman at the stake, and which armed
Servetus to prefer the fires of Calvin to the creed of Calvin, which
supported Annet in the pillory, and Woolston and Carlile in their
imprisonments. It was no
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capricious taste for negations
which dictated these deliberate sacrifices, but a sentiment purer than
interest and stronger than self-love--it was the generous passion for
unfriended truth.
XII.
The intellectual, no less than the heroic characteristics of Freethought
have presented features of obvious unity. Tindal, Shaftesbury, Voltaire,
Paine, and Bentham, all vindicated principles of Natural Morality. Shelley
struggled that a pure and lofty ideal of life should prevail, and Byron
had passionate words of reverence for the human character of Christ.*
The distrust of prayer for temporal help was accompanied by trust in
Science, and all saw in material effort an available deliverance from
countless ills which the church can merely deplore. Those who held that a
future life was "unproven," taught that attention to this life was of
primary importance, at least highly serviceable to humanity, even if a
future sphere be certain. All strove for Free Inquiry--Rationalism owed
its existence to it; all required Free Speech--Rationalism was diffused by
it; all vindicated Free Criticism--Rationalism established itself with it;
all demanded to act out their opinions--Rationalism was denuded of
conscience without this right. In all its mutations, and aberrations, and
conquests, Freethought has uniformly sought the truth, and shown the
courage to trust the truth. Freethought uses no persecution, for it fears
no opposition, for opposition is its opportunity. It is the cause of
Enterprise and Progress, of Reason and Duty--and now seeking the definite
and the practical, it selects for its guidance the principle that "human
affairs should be regulated
*Thus we read, Canto
xv. stanza xviii., of Don Juan:--
Was it not so, great Locke? and greater Bacon?
Great Socrates? And thou Diviner still
Whose lot is by man to be mistaken,
And thy pure creed made sanctions of all ill?
Redeeming world to be by bigots shaken,
How was thy toil rewarded?
To this stanza Lord Byron adds this note:--
"As it is necessary in these times to avoid ambiguity, I say that I mean
by "Diviner still" CHRIST. If ever God was man--or man God--he was BOTH. I
never arraigned this creed, but the use--or abuse--made of it."
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by the considerations purely
human."+ These--the characteristics which
Secularism was designed to express--are therefore not inventions, not
assumptions, but the general agreements of the Freethought party,
inherent, traditional, and historic. That which is new, and of the nature
of a development, is the perception that the positivism of Freethought
principles should be extended, should be clearly distinguished and made
the subject of energetic assertion--that the Freethought party which has
so loudly demanded toleration for itself, should be able to exercise it
towards all earnest thinkers, and especially towards all co-workers--that
those who have protested against the isolation of human effort by
sectarian exclusiveness, should themselves set the example of offering, in
good faith, practical conditions of unity, not for the glory of sects, or
coteries, or schools, but for the immediate service of humanity.
XIII.
The Relation of Secularism to the future demands a few words. To seek
after the purity and perfection of the Present Life neither disproves
another Life beyond this, nor disqualifies man for it. "Nor is Secularism
opposed to the Future so far as that Future belongs to the present
world--to determine which we have definite science susceptible of trial
and verification. The conditions of a future life being unknown, and there
being no imaginable means of benefiting ourselves and others in it except
by aiming after present goodness, we shall confessedly gain less towards
the happiness of a future life by speculation than by simply devoting
ourselves to the energetic iimprovement of this life."*
Men have a right to look beyond this world, but not to overlook it. Men,
if they can, may connect themselves with eternity, but they cannot
disconnect themselves from humanit without sacrificing duty. Secular
knowledge relates to this life. Secular instruction teaches the duties to
man. Religious instruction the duties to God apart from man. Religious
knowledge relates to celestial creeds. Secular knowledge relates to human
duties to be performed. The religious teacher instructs us how to please
God by creeds. The Secular teacher how to serve man by sympathy and
science.
+L. H. Holdreth
*F. W. Newman |

page 40 |
Archbishop Whatley tells a
story of a lady at Bath, who, being afraid to cross a tottering bridge
lest it should give way under her, fortunately bethought herself of the
expedient of calling for a sedan chair, and was carried over in that
conveyance. Some of our critics think that we shall resemble this
ingenious lady. But those who fear to trust themselves to the ancient and
tottering Biblical bridge, will hardly get into the sedan chair of
obsolete orthodoxy, and add the weight of that to the danger. They prefer
going round by the way of reason and fearless private judgment.
XIV.
Secularism, we have said, concerns itself with four rights:--
1. The right to Think for one's self, which most Christians now admit, at
least in theory.
2. The right to Differ, without which the right to think is nothing worth.
3. The right to Assert difference of opinion, without which the right to
differ is of no practical use.
4. The right to Debate all vital opinion, without which there is no
intellectual equality--no defence against the errors of the state or the
pulpit.
It is of no use that the Protestant concedes the right to think unless he
concedes the right to differ. We may as well be Catholic unless we are
free to dissent. Rome will concede our right to think for ourselves,
provided we agree with the Church when we have done; and when
Prostestantism affects to award us the right of private judgment, and
requires us to agree with the thirty-nine Articles in the end--or when
Evangelical Ministers tell us we are free to think for ourselves, but must
believe in the Bible nevertheless, both parties reason on the Papist
principle; both mock us with a show of freedom, and impose the reality of
mental slavery upon us. It is mere irony to say "Search the Scriptures,"
when the meaning is--you must accept the Scriptures whether they seem true
or not. Of the temper in which theological opinions ought to be formed, we
have the instruction of one as eminent as he was capable. Jefferson
remarks, "In considering this subject, divest yourself of all bias, shake
off all fears and servile prejudices, under which weak minds crouch; fix
reason in her
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seat firmly; question with
boldness, even the existence of God; because, if there be one, he must
approve the homage of reason more than that of blindfolded fear. Read the
Bible as you would Tacitus or Livy. Those facts in the Bible which
contradict the laws of Nature must be examined with care. The New
Testament is the history of a person called Jesus. Keep in your eye what
is related. They say he was begotten by God, but born of a virgin (how
reconcile this?); that he was crucified to death, and buried; that he rose
and ascended bodily into heaven; thus reversing the laws of nature. Do not
be frightened from this inquiry by any fear, and if it ends in a belief
that the story is not true, or that there is not a God, you will find
other incitements to virtue and goodness. In fine, lay aside all
prejudices on both sides, neither believe nor reject anything because
others have rejected or disbelieved it. Your reason is the only oracle
given you by heaven, and you are answerable, not for the rightness, but
for the uprightness of your opinion; and never mind evangelists, or
pseudo-evangelists, who pretend to inspiration."*
It is in van the Christian quotes the Pauline injunction, "Prove all
things; hold fast that which is good," if we are to hold fast to his good,
which may be evil to us. For a man to prove all things needful, and hold
fast to that which he considers good, is the true maxim of freedom and
progress. Secularism, therefore, proclaims and justifies the right to
Differ, and the right to assert conscientious difference on the platform,
through the press, in civil institutions, in Parliament, in courts of law,
where it demands that the affirmation of those who reject Christianity
shall be as valid as the oath of those who accept it.
XV.
Yet some opponents have professed that Secular cannot be distinguished
from Christian rights. Is this so? The right to think for ourselves has
been emphatically and reiteratedly declared to be a Christian right:+
it "belongs essentially to Christianity." Now Christianity has no such
right. It has the right to think the Bible true, and nothing else. The
Christian
*"Jefferson: Memoirs."
Vol. II. Quoated by Sir G. Cockburn, in his "Confessions of Faith, by a
Philosopher," pages 4 and 5.
+"Six Chapters on Secularism," by Dr. Parker, Cavendish Pulpit,
Manchester.
|

page 42 |
has no right to think
Christianity untrue, however untrue it may appear. He dare not think it
false. He dare no more think it false than the Catholic dare differ from
the dictum of the Church, or the Mahomedan differ from the text of the
Koran, or the Hindoo differ from the precepts of the Brahmin. Therefore,
the Christian's right to think for himself is simply a compulsion to
believe. A right implies relative freedom of action; but the Christian has
no freedom. He has no choice but to believe, or perish everlastingly. The
Christian right to think for himself is, therefore, not the same as the
Secular right. We mean by the right to think, what the term right always
implies--freedom and independence, and absence of all crime, or danger of
penalty through the honest exercise of thought and maintenance of honest
conclusions, whether in favour of or against Christianity. Our assertion
is that "Private judgment is free and guiltless." The Christian is good
enough to say, we have "a right to think, provided with think rightly."
But what does he mean by "rightly"? He means that we should think as he
thinks. This is his interpretation of "rightly." Whoever does not fall in
with his views, is generally, in his vocabulary, a dishonest perverter of
scripture. Now, if we really have the right to differ, we have the right
to differ from the Minister or from the Bible, if we see good reason to do
so, without being exposed to the censure of our neighbors, or
disapprobation of God. The question is not--does man give us the right to
think for ourselves? but, does God give it to us? If we must come to a
given opinion, our private judgment is unnecessary. Let us know at once
what we are to believe, that we may believe it at once, and secure safety.
If possible disbelief in Christianity will lead to eternal perdition, the
right of private judgment is a snare. We had better be without that
perilous privilege, and we come to regard the Roman Catholic as
penetrative when he paints private judgment as the suggestion of Satan,
and the Roman Catholic no less merciful than consistent when he proscribes
it altogether. We must feel astonishment at him who declares the Secular
right to be essentially a Christian right, when it is quite a different
thing, is understood in an entirely different sense, and has an
application unknown and unadmitted by Christianity. This is not merely
loose thinking, it is reckless thinking.
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XVI.
It has been asserted that the second right, the right to differ," is also
a Christian right. "Christianity recognizes the claim to difference of
opinion. Christians are not careful to maintain uniformity at the expense
of private judgment." This is omitting a part of the truth. Christians
often permit the difference of opinion upon details, but not upon
essentials, and this is the suppression made. The Christians may differ on
the points of church discipline, but if he differ upon the essential
articles of his creed, the minister at once warns him that he is in
"danger of the judgment." Let any minister try it himself, and his
congregation will soon warn him to depart, and also warn him of that
higher Power, who will bid him depart "into outer darkness, where there
will be wailing and gnashing of teeth." With respect to the third right,
"the right of asserting difference of opinion," this is declared to be not
peculiar to Secularism; that "Christian churches, chapels, literature and
services, are so many confirmations of the statement that Christians claim
the right of speaking what they think, whether it be affirmative or
negative." Yes, so long as what they speak agrees with the Bible. This is
the Christian limit; yet this is the limit which Secularism expressly
passes and discards. It is the unfettered right which makes Secularism to
differ from Christianity, and to excel it.
XVII.
The right of private judgment, always in set terms conceded to us, means
nothing, unless it leads to a new understanding as to the terms in which
we are to be addressed. In the "Bible and the People," it is described as
"an insolence to ignore Christianity."* We do
not understand this language. It would be insolence to Deity to ignore a
message which we can recognize as coming from Him, but it may rather imply
reverence for God to reject the reports of many who speak in His name.
Were we to require Christians to read our books or think as we think, they
would resent the requirement as an impertinence; and we have yet to learn
that it is less an impertinence when Christians make these demands of us.
If Christians are under no obligation to hold our opinions, neither are we
under obligation to hold theirs. By our own
*No. I. Vol. I., p. 8.
Edited by the Rev. Brewin Grant.
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act, or at their solicitation,
we may study "sacred" writings, but at dictation, never! So long as
Secularists obey the laws enacted for the common security, so long as they
perform the duties of good citizens, it is nothing to Christians what
opinions they hold. We neither seek their counsel nor desire their
sentiments--except they concede them on the terms of equality. The light
by which we walk is insufficient for us; as as at the last day, of which
Christians speak, we shall there have, according to their own showing, to
answer for ourselves, we prefer to think for ourselves; and since they do
not propose to take our responsibility, we decline to take their
doctrines. Where we are to be responsible, we will be free; and no man
shall dictate to us the opinions we shall hold. We shall probably know as
well as any Christian how to live with freedom and to die without fear. It
is in vain for Christians to tell us that Newton and Locke differed from
us. What is that to us unless Newton and Locke will answer for us? The
world may differ from a man, but what is the world to him, unless it will
take his place at the judgment-day? Who is Paul or Apollos, or Matthew or
Mark, that we should venture our eternal salvation on his word, any more
than on that of a Mahomedan prophet, or a Buddhist priest? Where the
danger is our own, the faith shall be our own. Secularism is not an act
conceived in the spirit of pride, or vanity, or self-will, or
eccentricity, or singularity, or stiff-neckedness. It is simply
well-understood self-defence. If men have the right of private judgment,
that right has set them free; and we own no law but reason, no limits but
the truth, and have no fear but that of guilt. We may say we believe in
honour, which is respecting the truth--in morality, which is acting the
truth--in love, which is serving the truth--and in independence, which is
defending the truth.
XVIII.
Confucius declared that the foundation of all religion was reverence and
obedience.* The Religious sentiment is the
intentional reverence of God. The Christian is ever persuaded that there
is only one way of doing this, and he arrogantly assumes that he has that
way. Whereas the ways are as
*Sir John Bowring.
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diverse as human genius. Let
those who deny that Secular Truth meets the emotional part of their
nature, settle what is the nature of the emotions they desiderate. The
miser wants money--the sensualist wants the cook--the scholar wants
knowledge--and the mother desires the life, growth, and happiness of her
child. But what can man want in a rational sense which nature and humanity
may not supply. Do we not meet the demand of the many when we show that
Secularism is sufficient for progress; that it is moral, and therefore
sufficient for trust; that it builds only upon the known, and is therefore
reliable? It is the highest and most unpresumptuous form of unconscious
worship. It is practical reverence without the arrogance of theoretical
homage. We at least feel confident of this, that the future, if it come,
will not be miserable. There may be a future--this remains to awaken
interest and perennial curiousity. If Nature be conscious, it will still
design the happiness of man, which it now permits--this assurance remains,
stilling fear and teaching trust.
XIX.
In surveying the position of Christianism in Great Britain, there is found
to exist a large outlying class, daily increasing, who for conscientious
reasons reject its cardinal tenets. Hence arises the question:--Are good
citizenship and virtuous life on Secular principles, possible to these
persons? Secularism answers, Yes. To these, excluded by the letter of
scripture, by the narrowness of churches, by the intrinsic error and moral
repulsiveness of doctrine, Secularism addresses itself; to these it is the
word of Recognition, of Concert and Morality. It points them to an
educated conscience as a security of morals, to the study of Nature as a
source of help, and seeks to win the indifferent by appeals to the
inherent goodness of human Nature and the authority of reason, which
Christianism cannot use and dare not trust. If, however, the Secularist
elects to walk by the light of Nature, will he be able to see? Is the
light of Nature a fitful lamp, or a brief torch, which accident may upset,
or a gust extinguish? On the contrary, the light of Nature may burn
steady, clear, and full, over the entire field of human life. On this
point we have the testimony of an adversary, who was understood to address
us, a testimony as remarkable for its quality as for its felicity of
expression:--"There is the ethical mind, calm, level, and clear;
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chiefly intent on the good
ordering of this life; judging all things by their tendency to this end,
and impatient of every oscillation of our nature that swings beyond it.
There is nothing low or unworthy in the attachment which keeps this spirit
close to the present world, and watchful for its affairs. It is not a
selfish feeling, but often one intensely social and humane, not any mean
fascination with mere material interests, but a devotion to justice and
right, and an assertion of the sacred authority of human duties and
affections. A man thus tempered deals chiefly with this visible life and
his comrades in it, because, as nearest to him, they are better known. He
plants his standard on the present, as on a vantage ground, where he can
survey his field, and manoeuvre all his force, and computer the battle he
is to fight. Whatever his bearing fervours towards beyond his range, he
has no insensibility to the claims that fall within his acknowledged
province, and that appeal to him in the native speech of his humanity. He
so reverences veracity, honour, and good faith, as to expect them like the
daylight, and hears of their violation with a flush of scorn. His word is
a rock, and he expects that yours will not be a quicksand. If you are lax,
you cannot hope for his trust; but if you are in trouble, you easily move
his pity. And the sight of a real oppression, though the sufferer be no
ornamental hero, but black, unsightly, and disreputable, suffices perhaps
to set him to work for life, that he may expunge the disgrace from the
records of mankind. Such men as he constitute for our world its moral
centre of gravity; and whoever would compute the path of improvement that
has brought it thus far on its way, or trace its sweep into a brighter
future, must take account of their steady mass. The effect of this style
of thought and taste on the religion of its professor, is not difficult to
trace. It may, no doubt, stop short of avowed and conscious religion
altogether; its basis being simply moral, and its scene temporal, its
conditions may be imagined as complete, without any acknowledgment of
higher relations."*
XX.
Nature is. That which is, is the primary subject of study. The study of
Nature reveals the laws of Nature. The laws of
*Professor Martineau,
in Octagon Chapel, Norwich, 1856.
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Nature furnish safe guidance
to humanity. Safe guidance is to help available in daily life--to
happiness, self-contained--to service, which knows how "to labour and to
wait." For authority, Nature refers us to Experience and to Reason. For
help, to Science, the nearest available help of man. Science implies
disciplined powers on the part of the people, and concert in their use, to
realize the security and sufficiency necessary to happiness. Happiness
depends on moral, no less than on physical conditions. The moral condition
is the full and fearless discharge of Duty. Duty is devotion to the Right.
Right is that which is morally expedient. That is morally expedient which
is conducive to happiness of the greatest numbers. The service of others
is the practical form of duty; and endurance in the service of others, the
highest form of happiness. It is pleasure, peace, security, and desert.
XXI.
We believe there is sufficient soundness in Secular principles to make way
in the world. All that is wanted is that advocates of them shall have
clear notions of the value of method in their work. To the novice in
advocacy policy seems a crime--at least, many so describe it. Unable
himself to see his way, they tyro fights at everything and everybody
equally; and too vain to own his failure, he declares that the right way.
Not knowing that progress is an art, and an art requiring the union of
many qualities, he denies all art, cries down policy, and erects
blundering into a virtue. Compare the way which Havelock reached Lucknow,
and the way in which Sir Colin Campbell performed the same feat, and you
see the difference between courage without, and courage with strategy. It
was because magnitudes existed, which were inaccessible and incapable of
direct measurement, that mathematics arose. Finding direct measurement so
often impossible, men were compelled to find means of ascertaining
magnitude and distance indirectly. hence mathematics became a scientific
policy. Mathematics is but policy of measurement--grammar but the policy
of speech--logic but the policy of reason--arithmetic but the policy of
calculation--temperance but the policy of healthy--trigonometry but the
policy of navigation--roads but the policy of transit--music but the
policy of controlling sound--art but the policy of beauty--law but the
policy of protection--discipline but the policy of strength--love but the
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policy of affection. An enemy
may object to our having a policy, because it suits his purpose that we
should be without one; but that a friend should object to our having a
policy is one of those incredible infatuations which converts partisans
into unconscious traitors. The policy adopted may be a bad policy, and no
policy at all is idiotcy. If a policy be bad, criticise and amend it; but
to denounce all policy is to commit your cause to the providence of
Bedlam. If, therefore, throughout all intelligent control of Nature and
humanity, policy is the one supreme mark of wisdom, why should it be
dishonourable to study the policy of opinion? He who consistently objects
to policy, would build railway engines without safety valves, and dismiss
them from stations without drivers; he would abolish turnpike roads and
streets, and leave us to find our way at random; he would recommend that
vessels be made without helms, and sail without captains, that armies
fight without discipline, and artillery-men should fire before loading,
and when pointing their guns, should aim at nothing. In fine, a man
without policy, honestly and intelligently opposed to policy, would build
his house with the roof downwards, and plant his trees with their roots in
the air; he would kick his friend and hug his enemy; he would pay wages to
servants who would not work, govern without rule, speak without a thought,
think without reason, act without purpose, be a knave by accident, and a
fool by design.
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INDEX
Action, Secular and Theological -- 33
Affirmative Policy -- 33
Association, its Maxims -- 16
Atheists, angry origin of the term -- 9
Atheistic maxim of Loyola -- 30
Bond of Union -- 17
Branch of the Secular Guild, defined -- 24
Byron Lord, his passionate Christianism -- 38
Characteristics of Secularism -- 27
Christian rights -- 42
" distinguished from Secular rights -- 43
Comte on prevision -- 29
Controversy, new tone of -- 8
Conscience higher than consequence -- 12
Controversy, sphere of -- 15
" personal -- 15
Construction of conduct -- 34
Conventionality -- 35
Degrees of progress -- 12
Distinction between Secular Instruction and Secularism -- 5
Emotional nature, its variety -- 45
Ethical life, Professor Martineau's view -- 46
Features of the Future -- 45
Fleet Street Secular Institute -- 18
Freethinking, true-thinking -- 36
Future, the, separated but not prejudged -- 39
Guides of the Secularist -- 11
Guild, Secular -- 18
" its uses in Foreign countries -- 20
Heresy no sin, Blanco White, upon -- 32
Imputation of motives -- 34
Inferior natures, religious duty towards them -- 13
Infidel, an imputative term -- 9
Jefferson, on boldness of inquiry -- 41
Justification of Controversy -- 15
Knowledge, a remunerative investment -- 29
Law of Secular Controversy -- 14
Legitimate topics of Secular Societies -- 34
Limits of Imputation -- 21
Loose-thinking -- 9
Maixms of association -- 16
Martineau Harriet, on the term Secularism -- 8
Membership, diversities of -- 23
Method, material and spiritual -- 36
Mill, J.S. on originality -- 35
Morality, its independence of theology -- 28
Neckar's maxim -- 29 |

page 50 |
Newman, Dr. J. H. on
organization -- 5
Objects of Secular Guild -- 19
Open quesitons -- 33
Organization of ideas -- 18
" indicated -- 21
Outlying classes -- 45
Persistence in Opinion -- 2
Personal duty -- 16
Place of Secularism -- 25
Positivism, its subjects of study -- 29
Policy, its Secular necessity -- 47-48
Private judgment absolute -- 43-44
Principles of Secularism defined -- 11
Public duty -- 16
Qualities of new members -- 21
" of active members -- 23
Rationalism, its securities -- 37
Reason, its self-dependence -- 37
Religiousness, its moral meaning -- 12
Revelation, its absolute chart -- 36
Rights of Reason -- 14
Ruskin, on the morality of realism -- 30
Science, its social problem -- 12
Secularism, its relative influence -- 25
" persons whom it addresses -- 25
" compared with Christianity -- 26
" the sum of Freethought arguments -- 38
Secularity, its line of demarcation -- 27
Sincerity defined -- 12
" distinguished from infallibility -- 30
Sincerity distinguished from sin -- 31
Spiritualism, the sensualism of the soul -- 30
Standard of appeal -- 14
Summary of Secularism -- 47
Term Secularism, not a disguise -- 9
Trustworthiness of Candidates -- 22
Utilitarian action -- 33
Various terms of Freethought -- 10
Vow of principle, its nature -- 35
Written speeches -- 24 |

page 51 |
THE REASONER
(ESTABLISHED 1846.)
Advocates the Free Search, Free Utterance, Free Criticism, the Free Action
of Secular Principles.
REVIEW SERIES.
[The following extracts are given as the only independent means of
indicating to strangers and Christian readers (who commonly have
prepossessions that the advocacy of Freethought must be outrage and sin)
the spirit in which it has been the endeavour of the Editor to conduct the
Reasoner--the title of which does not assume perfection in reasoning, but
is merely a sign that principles and criticisms will, by preference, be
urged upon grounds of reason. For as Professor Martineau observes, "In
every endeavor to elevate ourselves above reason, we are seeking to rise
beyond the atmosphere, with wings which cannot soar but by beating the
air." Of the remarks which follow, the chief, it will be seen, must apply
to contributors.]
"THE REASONER . . . edited by G.J. Holyoake, is written with considerable
ability, and conducted with no small amount of tact. It addresses itself
to that large and constantly increasing class in English society--the
class of artizans; men who demand to be dealt with logically. THE REASONER
is calm, affectedly dispassionate, impersonal; piques itself upon being
scrupulously exact in its statement of facts, rigorous in its inductions,
and charitable and tolerant in its judgment. This air, which seems partly
real, is eminently calculated to prepossess its readers with the idea of
its strength and firmness. Its conductors are by no means common-place
men. There is evidently a great deal of ability in them. Such men may not
be dispised, nor their doings overlooked. The writers of the other works
which we have classed with this have no object beyond the miserable
pittance which their labour brings them. These men have a creed. They
apparently have principles, too, at stake."--DAILY NEWS, Nov. 2, 1848.
"The adoption of the term Secularism is justified by its including a large
number of persons who are not Atheists, and uniting them for action which
has Secularism for its object, and not Atheism. On this ground, and
because, by the adoption of a new term, a vast amount of impediment from
prejudice is got ride of, the use of the name Secularism is found
advantageous; but it in no way interferes with Mr. Holyoake's profession
of his own unaltered views on the subject of a First Cause. As I am
writing this letter, I may just say, for myself, that I constantly and
eagerly read Mr. Holyoake's writings, though many of them are on
subjects--or occupied with stages of subjects--that would not otherwise
detain me, because I find myself morally the better for the influence of
the noble spirit of the man; for the calm courage, the composed temper,
the genuine liberality, and unremitting justice with which he treats all
manner of persons, incidents, and topics. I certainly consider the
conspicuous example of Mr. Holyoake's kind of heroism to be one of our
popular education advantages at this time."--HARRIET MARTINEAU. Letter to
Lloyd Garrison, editor of the LIBERATOR, Boston, U.S., Nov. 1. 1853.
"You inform me that the REASONER is to be enlarged into a political
magazine, and you ask my permission to insert in it, as Political
Fragments, various articles which have already appeared from my pen in
provincial newspapers or elsewhere. In giving you full permission to make
your own selection, and authorising you to tell the public that you have
that permission, I think it due to you to put on record WHY I most
cordialy accede to your request. It is because I think you so remarkably
unite the two qualities--uncompromising hostility to false or unjust
systems, and a tender and just allowance for the men who carry on those
systems--that I rejoice in your becoming a political spokesman for English
operatives, who are too often carried away by violent invective against
persons--invective which always fails to effect reform. I know you to be a
reasonable man as well as a "reasoner," and though I do not entirely go
along with your politics any more than with your anti-theology, yet I have
a deep belief if your moral soundness; and the want of this is, after all,
our greatest national weakness.--PROFESSOR NEWMAN, March 8, 1855. REASONER,
No. 459.
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"1. I do not know any other
man who so consistently vindicates the right of every opinion to its own
free utterance. 2. I do not know any other man who is so unswervingly firm
in paying a candid, courteous, and painstaking attention to the statement
of opinions opposed to his own."--THORNTON LEIGH HUNT, Aug. 23, 1858.
"You are welcome to any writing or fragment of mine, which you may wish to
reprint for the REASONER. Thought, according to me, is, as soon as
publicly uttered, the property of all, not an individual one. In this
special case, it is with true pleasure that I give the consentment you ask
for. The deep esteem I entertain for your personal character, for your
sincere love of truth, perseverence, and nobly tolerant habits, makes me
wish to do more; and time and events allowing, I shall. But, whilst gladly
granting your kind request, I feel bound in my turn to address one to you,
and it is to grant me the selection of the first two fragments. They will
shield my own individuality against all possible misinterpretations, and
state at once the limits within which we commune; these limits are
POLITICAL and MORAL, not philosophical. We pursue the same; progressive
improvement, association, transformation of the corrupted medium in which
we are now living, overthrow of all idolatries, shames, lies, and
conventionalities. We both want man to be, not the poor, passive,
cowardly, phantasmagoric unreality of the actual time, thinking in one way
and acting in another; bending to power which he hates and despises;
carrying empty popish, or thirty-nine article formulas on his brow and
none within; but a fragment of the living truth, a real individual being
linked to collective humanity, the bold seeker of things to come; the
gentle, mild, loving, yet firm, uncompromising, inexorable apostle of all
that is just and heroic, the Priest, the Poet, and the Prophet. We widely
differ as to the HOW and WHY."--JOSEPH MAZZINI, June 8, 1855. REASONER,
No. 472.
"Here we have before us a weekly publication, written with an ability
superior to that displayed by the majority of English provincial journals,
which has been regularly issued for the last nine years, and yet the name
of which is now for the first time mentioned to the Indian reader. It is
an unstamped journal, containing nothing that can legally be taken as
news, but enforcing with all the regularity and power of a well-conducted
newspaper, a certain defined set of opinions. These opinions are, in
regard to politics, democratic to the extent of being socialistic; and in
regard to religion (for religion is discussed in the columns of this
journal) rationalistic to the extent of being atheistic. The conductors of
this journal openly avow their objects to be---1. To test religion by
reason, to which in these days the most advanced churches appeal. 2. To
found public action on secular principles---which, being based on
experience, all men are enabled to judge them; and being unsectarian, all
liberal men can unite about them. 3. To train the working class to take
part in public affairs, English and foreign; developing the ability of
self-government, personal, local, and national; cultivating sentiments of
inflexible truth, justice, and good-will; because a people in such
respects self-consistent may, by vigilantly contrasting the conduct of
their rulers with the precepts they deliver to the people, force them into
integrity, or shame them into privacy."--HINDOO PATRIOT, June 28, 1855.
"I am not fond of substituting authorities for arguments, and there is
only one other witness I will call. There are many members of this house,
and many more of the working classes, who are familiar with the name of
Mr. Holyoake. He is chiefly known in connection with philosophical
speculations of an unpopular character, and also as warmly and earnestly
sympathising with the cause of democratic institutions in Europe. No one
is a more fitting representative in that respect of the feelings of that
section of the working class which interests itself most strongly in
politics. Mr. Holyoake may fairly be taken to represent the feelings of
persons of extreme political opinions, and it is with his political
opinions alone with which I have to do."--SPEECH OF LORD STANLEY, House of
Commons, March 21, 1859. Vide THE TIMES, March 22.
"Who can tell us anything about the working man? Are they the mere dupes
of interested leaders, as men of Mr. Bright's order invariably assure us
when they have to contend with strikes and labour leagues? Are they
anxious for nothing but relief from taxation? Are they brimful of
undeveloped energies, as Mr. Kingsley seems to think; or running over with
potential religious unction, as our High Church lady novelists insinuate
in multitudinous single volumes; Do they believe in Mr. Ernest Jones as
they believed in Mr. Feargus O'Conner? Do they listen to such instructors
as Mr. Holyoake, as Lord Stanley hinted to the House of Commons, not
without some facts to back him?---THE SATURDAY REVIEW, March 26, 1859.
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WORKS BY G.J. HOLYOAKE
THE TRIAL OF THEISM. 1858.) In this work the object is to TRY leading
arguments for Theism, after hearing the testimony of eminent WITNESSES on
its behalf. 2s. 6d.
"I avail myself of the critical privileges of old age to say of the 'Trial
of Theism' that it is a book of full ability, of eloquence, and of the
manliest as well as most touching evidences of honourable and kindly
dealing towards all men. I wish the majority of your professed Christian
antagonists had shown half of its Christian charity."--LEIGH HUNT.
SELF-HELP BY THE PEOPLE. HISTORY OF CO-OPERATION IN ROCHDALE. (1857.)
Third Edition. Price 1s.
"As an illustration of the new social economy expounded and advocated by
so many French and English writers, as well as an attestation to the value
of the principle of 'Self-help by the People,' Mr. Holyoake's 'History of
Co-operation in Rochdale,' is entitled to emphatic notice. The narrative
itself, so satisfactory as an exposition, has the additional attractions
which a pleasant, genial manner, and a generous, tolerant and appreciating
spirit always impart."--WESTMINSTER REVIEW, October, 1858.
LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM IN ENGLAND. Before Mr. Justice Erskine.
(1841.) Second thousand. Cloth lett., 1s. 6d.
"I was present in the court and heard Holyoake defend himself during nine
hours. The judge and jury would, if they could, have suppressed every word
of it. I heard Wooler and Hone defend themselves successfuly in 1817; but
I would prefer being declared guilty with Holyoake, to being acquitted on
the ground of Wooler and Hone.--RICHARD CARLILE
PRINCIPLES OF SECULARISM ILLUSTRATED. A Manual of the Constitution of
Secular Societies. 6d.
PHILOSOPHIC TYPE OF RELIGION. A Review of Professor Newman's volume, "The
Soul: Her Sorrows and Her Aspirations." (Included in "Trial of Theism,"
"Mr. Holyoake has lectured ON and AGAINST my book on the 'Soul,' and has
behaved with fairness, courtesy, and generosity. He has not garbled nor
ridiculed me: he leaves it to one [the author of the 'Eclipse of Faith']
who calls himself Christian, to scoff at sentiments I have learned from
Christianity."--PROFESSOR NEWMAN, "Phases of Faith," Second edition, p.
192.
RATIONALISM. (1844.) Price 4d.
Towards the close of his life Mr. Owen expressed his approval of this
statement. "It shows the celebrated saying, that 'the character of man is
formed for him not by him,' to be only half of the truth, and vindicates
Mr. Owen from the supposition of considering it as the whole
truth."--MORNING STAR (of that day.)
THE LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RICHARD CARLILE, who underwent Imprisonment
exceeding Nine Years, in the struggle for the Political and Theological
Freedom of the Press. (1850.) Price 6d.
THE CASE OF THOMAS POOLEY. The subject of the article in FRASER, by Thomas
Henry Buckle; to which Sir J.D. Coleridge replied. Price 3d.
LIFE AND LAST DAYS OF ROBERT OWEN, of New Lanark. An Oration, delivered in
the Public Hall, Rochdale--Jacob Bright, M.P. in the chair. Price 4d.
THE WORKMAN AND THE SUFFRAGE. Four Letters to Lord John Russell, M.P.
Price 2d.
"Mr. Holyoake purposes an educational test. I agree with him in the
general tenour of his remarks, and he fairly expresses the principle that
I have endeavoured to establish, admission of the working class by
selection, and not in mass."--LORD STANLEY, House of Commons. March 21,
1859.
LOGIC OF DEATH, Sixtieth Thousand. 1d.
THE REASONER (29 vols, £6.) Review Series. 2d. |