Part 8 (1/2)
Hitherto I had been a child, thinking as a child, understanding as a child and speaking as a child.
Henceforth I was to be a man, the greatest, conscious, personal being who has anything to do with this world; and as a man, I put away the things of a child, especially the most childish of all things, fear, the fear of G.o.d, the fear of devil and the fear of man.
Preachers of the supernaturalistic interpretations of religion say that the fear of G.o.d is salvation. It is d.a.m.nation. No one who has fear of any conscious, personal master whomsoever or wheresoever, G.o.d in heaven, devil in h.e.l.l or man on earth, is free or other than a slave. Nor has any such attained to the full stature of manhood.
There is only one fear which saves and that is the fear of ignorance.
The world's destroyer-G.o.d is ignorance. There is no other devil on earth or in h.e.l.l below it, and this one lives, moves and has his being in the fear of knowledge.
The world's saviour-G.o.d is knowledge. There is no other Christ on earth or in any heaven above it, and this one lives, moves and has his being in the fear of ignorance.
Happily, I listened to my soul and I have found the pearl of great price, yes, a whole bed of them, so that I am now in position to subst.i.tute in my preaching a truth for every lie I used to preach, and thus save myself; but woe unto me unless I make the subst.i.tution by ringing out the lie and ringing in the truth.
Within the last three years I have learned that, as I have not been, since the beginning of my Christian ministry, more than a generation ago, a producer, I have nothing of my own to give to charity, and what is true of me is true of Mrs. Brown.
No one is a producer who does not grow things on the farm, make things in a shop, discover things in a laboratory or render some necessary or helpful service to those who do such things. I have done nothing of the kind. If I had been preaching truths I might have rendered such service, but I preached lies.
Every possession rightfully belongs to the productive worker and nothing to the unproductive idler. This is one of the two greatest and most salutary among all the truths known to mankind. Recently I made acknowledgment of it on the pledges to a good cause, that of the Red Cross, by writing on their upper left hand corners: ”The gift of Unknown Laborers through Bishop and Mrs. Brown, whose possessions are the fruits of their enforced toil and sacrifices.”
By this acknowledgment I rang out a great lie--the lie which makes the salvation of the world depend upon the capitalists with their servants, the preachers on the right and the politicians on the left hand.
Salvation or, what is the same reality, civilization, always has been and always will be dependent upon the producer. It will never be attained until the laboring cla.s.s has done away with the capitalist cla.s.s. The ideal civilization (which is the salvation of the world from its unnecessary sufferings, especially the overwhelming ones due to the great trinity of evils, war, poverty and slavery) is in the very nature of things an impossibility on the basis of cla.s.s sectarianism, such as we have even in our Anglo-American Christianity, the best interpretation of traditional religion, and in our American democracy, the best interpretation of traditional politics.
Among the pathetic things about war, there is this, the laboring cla.s.s makes by far the greater sacrifices, not only of life and limb, but also of money.
Quite contrary to the general impression, capitalists, as such, pay no part of the enormous and ruinous pecuniary cost of war. When Mr.
Rockefeller pays out three million dollars in war taxes he is disposing of what rightfully belongs to laborers, because they, not he, earned it.
Capitalists, as such, neither earn nor pay anything, in time of either war or peace.
So much for one of the two great truths. The other, which is the greater because it includes its companion, is this: Man has within himself all the potentialities of his own life. This is true of the universe as a whole, and, therefore, necessarily so of all that therein is.
The sum of both truths is that the salvation of the world is wholly dependent upon productive laborers and that they must look individually only to the exertion of their own mental and physical powers and collectively to co-operation with each other for the accomplishment of their mission.
Through the whole of my past ministry in the field I rang out these great truths and rang a great lie in by representing that the salvation of the world depends upon a potentiality which is in the sky and not in man, that heaven is above the earth and h.e.l.l below it, not on it.
When I commenced my present ministry in the study,
I sent my Soul through the Invisible, Some letter of that After-life to spell; And by and by my Soul return'd to me, And answer'd 'I Myself am Heaven and h.e.l.l!'
Omar, the poetic astronomer, might have added a stanza which would have closed. ”I myself am G.o.d.” This is, in effect, what Jesus did say: ”I and my Father are one.” This is as true of you and me and of every man, woman and child as it was of Jesus.
And Jesus represented that G.o.d, both as Father and Son, dwells in the hearts of believers. But every relevant fact which has been scientifically established as such (and there is a whole mountain of such facts) points to the conclusion that Christians are no more divine than other people, and that, as to his essential nature, no man would be less divine than he is if Jesus had never been born.
G.o.ds in the skies (Jesus, Jehovah, Allah, Buddha) are all right as subjective symbols of human potentialities and attributes and of natural laws, even as the Stars and Stripes on a pole, Uncle Sam in the capitol and Santa Claus in a sleigh are all right as such symbols; but such G.o.ds are all wrong, if regarded as objective realities existing independently of those who created them as divinities and placed them in celestial habitations.
What is true of the G.o.ds is equally so of all the supernaturalistic dogmas of the several traditional interpretations of religion. Insofar as they are not pure superst.i.tions they are symbols of imaginary events which people think should or must have occurred in the past or should or must occur in the future; not statements of historical events which have occurred or are to occur.
So far I have not found it necessary to renounce the Christian G.o.d or any of the things which go with him and I have no idea of doing this, any more than I have of renouncing the American Uncle Sam and the things which go with him, but I place the Brother Jesus of the Christian religion and the Uncle Sam of the American politics on the same footing with each other and with others of their kind as subjective realities. I could be a Jew and an Englishman as conscientiously as a Christian and an American. Many of the early Christians were also Pagans, wors.h.i.+ppers of other G.o.ds than Jesus.
Nor is this all or even much more than half of my religious and political levelism.