Part 3 (1/2)
I may allude, to conclude my quotations, to a description of h.e.l.l which I myself heard from an eminent prelate of the English Church, one who is a scholar and a gentleman, a man of moderate views in Church matters, by no means a zealot in an ordinary way. In preaching to a country congregation composed mainly of young men and girls, he warned them specially against sins of the flesh, and threatened them with the consequent punishment in h.e.l.l. Then, in language which I cannot reproduce, for I should not dare to sully my pages by repeating what I then listened to in horrified amazement, there ensued a description drawn out in careful particulars of the state of the suffering body in h.e.l.l, so sickening in its details that it must suffice to say of it that it was a description founded on the condition of a corpse flung out on a dungheap and left there to putrefy, with the additional horror of creeping, slowly-burning flames; and this state of things was to go on, as he impressed on them with terrible energy, for ever and ever, ”decaying but ever renewing.”
I should almost ask pardon of tender-hearted men and women for laying before them language so abominable; but I urge on all who are offended by it that this is the teaching given to our sons and daughters in the present day. Father Furniss, Dr. Pusey, Mr. Spurgeon, an English Bishop, surely these are honoured names, and in quoting them I quote from the teaching of Christendom. Nor mine the fault if the language be unfit for printing. I _quote_, because if we only a.s.sert, Christians are quick to say, ”you are misrepresenting our beliefs,” and I quote from writers of the present day only, that none may accuse me of hurling at Christians reproaches for a doctrine they have outgrown or softened down. Still, I own that it seems scarcely credible that a man should believe this and remain sane; nay, should preach this, and walk calmly home from his Church with G.o.d's suns.h.i.+ne smiling on the beautiful world, and after preaching it should sit down to a comfortable dinner and very likely a quiet pipe, as though h.e.l.l did not exist, and its awful misery and fierce despair.
It is said that there is no reason that we should not be contented in heaven while others suffer in h.e.l.l, since we know how much misery there is in this world and yet enjoy ourselves in spite of the knowledge.
I say, deliberately, of every one who does realise the misery of this world and remains indifferent to it, who enjoys his own share of the good things of this life, without helping his brother, who does not stretch out his hand to lift the fallen, or raise his voice on behalf of the down-trodden and oppressed, that that man is living a life which is the very ant.i.thesis of a Divine life--a life which has in it no beauty and no n.o.bility, but is selfish, despicable, and mean. And is this the life which we are to regard as the model of heavenly beauty? Is the power to lead this life for ever to be our reward for self-devotion and self-sacrifice here on earth? Is a supreme selfishness to crown unselfishness at last? But this is the life which is to be the lot of the righteous in heaven. s.n.a.t.c.hed from a world in flames, caught up in the air to meet their descending Lord, his saints are to return with him to the heaven whence he came; there, crowned with golden crowns, they are to spend eternity, hymning the Lamb who saved them to the music of golden harps, harps whose melody is echoed by the curses and the wailings of the lost; for below is a far different scene, for there the sinners are ”tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and the presence of the Lamb; and the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever, and they have no rest day nor night.”
It is worth while to gaze for a moment at the scene of future felicity; there is the throne of G.o.d and rejoicing crowds: ”Rejoice over her, thou heaven, and ye holy apostles and prophets,” so goes out the command, and they rejoice because ”G.o.d has avenged them on her,” and again they said ”Alleluia, and her smoke rose up for ever and ever.” Truly G.o.d must harden the hearts of his saints in heaven as of old he hardened Pharaoh's heart, if they are to rejoice over the anguished mult.i.tude below, and to bear to live amid the lurid smoke ascending from the burning bodies of the lost. To me the idea is so unutterably loathsome that I marvel how Christians endure to retain such language in their sacred books, for I would note that the awful picture drawn above is not of my doing; it is not the scoffing caricature of an unbeliever, _it is heaven as described by St. John the divine_. If this heaven is true I do not hesitate to say that it is the duty of every human being to reject it utterly and to refuse to enter it. We might even appeal to Christians by the example of their own Jesus, who could not be content to remain in heaven himself while men went to h.e.l.l, but came down to redeem them from endless suffering. Yet they, who ought to imitate him, who do, many of them, lead beautiful lives of self-devotion and compa.s.sion, are suddenly, on death, to lose all this which makes them ”partakers of the Divine Nature,” and are to be content to win happiness for themselves, careless that millions of their brethren are in woe unspeakable. They are to reverse the aim of their past lives, they are to become selfish instead of loving, hard instead of selfless, indifferent instead of loving, hard instead of tender. Which is the better reproduction of the ”mind of Christ,” the good Samaritan tending the wounded man, or the stern Inquisitor gloating over the fire which consumes heretics to the greater glory of G.o.d? Yet the latter is the ideal of heavenly virtue.
Never will they who truly love man be content to s.n.a.t.c.h at bliss for themselves while others suffer, or endure to be crowned with glory while they are crowned with thorns. Better, far better, to suffer in h.e.l.l and share the pains of the lost, than to have a heart so hard, a nature so degraded, as to enjoy the bliss of heaven, rejoicing over, or even disregarding, the woes of h.e.l.l.
But there is worse than physical torture in the picture of h.e.l.l; pain is not its darkest aspect. Of all the thoughts with which the heart of man has outraged the Eternal Righteousness, there is none so appalling, none so blasphemous, as that which declares that even one soul, made by the Supreme Good, shall remain during all eternity, under the power of sin. Divines have wearied themselves in describing the horrors of the Christian h.e.l.l; but it is _not_ the furnace of flames, _not_ the undying worm, _not_ the fire which never may be quenched, that revolt us most; hideous as are these images, they are not the worst terror of h.e.l.l. Who does not know how St. Francis, believing himself ordained to be lost everlastingly, fell on his knees and cried, ”O my G.o.d, if I am indeed doomed to hate thee during eternity, at least suffer me to love thee while I live here.” To the righteous heart the agony of h.e.l.l is a far worse one than physical torture could inflict: it is the existence of men and women who might have been saints, shut out from hope of holiness for evermore; G.o.d's children, the work of his hands, gnas.h.i.+ng their teeth at a Father who has cast them down for ever from the life he might have given; it is Love everlastingly hated; good everlastingly trampled under foot; G.o.d everlastingly baffled and defied; worst of all, it is a room in the Father's house where his children may hunger and thirst after righteousness, but never, never, can be filled.
”Depart, O sinner, to the chain!
Enter the eternal cell; To all that's good and true and right, To all that's fair and fond and bright, To all of holiness and right, Bid thou thy last farewell.”
Would to G.o.d that Christian men and women would ponder it well and think it out for themselves, and when they go into the worst parts of our great cities and their hearts almost break with the misery there, then let them remember how that misery is but a faint picture of the endless, hopeless, misery, to which the vast majority of their fellow-men are doomed.
Christian reader, do not be afraid to realise the future in which you say you believe, and which the G.o.d of Love has prepared for the home of some of his children. Imagine yourself, or any dear to you, plunged into guilt from which there is no redeemer, and where the voice cannot penetrate of him that speaks in righteousness, mighty to save. In the well-weighed words of a champion of Christian orthodoxy, think there is no reason to believe that h.e.l.l is only a punishment for past offences; in that dark world sin and misery reproduce each other in infinite succession. ”What if the sin perpetuates itself, if the prolonged misery may be the offspring of the prolonged guilt?” Ponder it well, and, if you find it true, then cast out from your creed the belief in a Jesus who loved the lost; blot out from your Bible every verse that speaks of a Father's heart; tear from your Prayer-books every page that prays to a Father in heaven. If the lowest of G.o.d's creatures is to be left in the foul embraces of sin for ever, G.o.d cannot be the Eternal Righteousness, the unconquerable Love. For what sort of Righteousness is that which rests idly contented in a heaven of bliss, while millions of souls capable of righteousness are bound by it in helpless sin; what sort of love is that which is satisfied to be repulsed, and is willing to be hated? As long as G.o.d is righteous, as long as G.o.d is love, so long is it impossible that men and women shall be left by him forever in a state to which our worst dens of earth are a very paradise of beauty and purity. Bible writers may have erred, but ”Thou continuest holy, O Thou wors.h.i.+p of Israel!” There is one revelation that cannot err, and that is written by G.o.d's finger on every human heart. What man recoils from doing, even at his lowest, can never be done by his Creator, from whose inspiration he draws every righteous thought. Is there one father, however brutalized, who would deliberately keep his child in sin because of a childish fault? one mother who would aimlessly torture her son, keeping him alive but to torment? Yet this, nothing less,--nay, a thousand times more, for it is this multiplied infinitely by infinite power of torture,--this is what Christians ask us to believe about our Father and our G.o.d, a glimmer from the radiance of whose throne falls on to our earth, when men love their enemies and forgive freely those who wrong them If this so-called orthodox belief is right, then is their gospel of the Love of G.o.d to the world a delusion and a lie; if this is true, the teaching of Jesus to publicans and harlots of the Fatherhood of G.o.d is a cruel mockery of our divinest instincts; the tale of the good Shepherd who could not rest while one sheep was lost is the bitterest irony. But this awful dogma is not true, and the Love of G.o.d cradles his creation; not one son of the Father's family shall be left under the power of sin, to be an eternal blot on G.o.d's creation, an endless reproach to his Maker's wisdom, an everlasting and irreparable mistake.
No amount of argument, however powerful, should make us believe a doctrine from which our hearts recoil with such shuddering horror as they do from this doctrine of eternal torture and eternal sin. There is a divine instinct in the human heart which may be trusted as an arbiter between right and wrong; no supernatural revelation, no miracle, no angel from heaven, should have power to make us accept as divine that which our hearts proclaim as vile and devilish. It is not true faith to crush down our moral sense beneath the hoof of credulity; true faith believes in G.o.d only as a ”Power which makes for _Righteousness_” and recks little of threats or curses which would force her to accept that which conscience disapproves. And what is more, if it were possible that G.o.d were not what we dream, if he were not ”righteous in all his ways and holy in all his works,” then were it craven cowardice to wors.h.i.+p him at all. It has been well said, ”that to wors.h.i.+p simple power, without virtue, is nothing but devil-wors.h.i.+p;” in that case it were n.o.bler to refuse to praise him and to take what he might send. Then indeed we must say, with John Stuart Mill, in that burst of pa.s.sion which reads so strangely in the midst of his pa.s.sionless logic, that if I am told that this is justice and love, and that if I do not call it so, G.o.d will send me to h.e.l.l, then ”to h.e.l.l I'll go.”
I have purposely put first my strong reprobation of eternal h.e.l.l, because of its own essential hideousness, and because, were it ever so true, I should deem myself disgraced by acknowledging it as either loving or good. But it is, however, a satisfaction to note the feebleness of the arguments advanced in support of this dogma, and to find that justice and holiness, as well as love, frown on the idea of an eternal h.e.l.l.
The first argument put forth is this: ”G.o.d has made a law which man breaks; man must therefore in justice suffer the penalty of his transgression.” This, like so many of the orthodox arguments, sounds just and right, and at first we perfectly agree with it. The instinct of justice in our own b.r.e.a.s.t.s confirms the statement, and looking abroad into the world we see its truth proved by facts. Law is around us on every side; man is placed in a realm of law; he may-strive against the laws which encircle him, but he will only dash himself to pieces against a rock; he is under a code which he breaks at his peril. Here is perfect justice, a justice absolutely unwavering, deaf to cries, unseducible by-flatteries, unalloyed by favouritism: a law exists, break it, and you suffer the inevitable consequences. So far, then, the orthodox argument is sound and strong, but now it takes a sudden leap. ”The penalty of the broken law is h.e.l.l.” Why? What common factor is there between a lie, and the ”lake of fire in which all liars shall have their part?” Nature is absolutely against the orthodox corollary, because h.e.l.l as a punishment of sin is purely arbitrary, the punishment might quite as well have been something else; but in nature the penalty of a broken law is always strictly in character with the law itself, and is derived from it. Men imagine the most extraordinary ”judgment.” A nation is given to excessive drinking, and is punished with cattle-plague; or shows leanings towards popery, and is chastised with cholera. It is as reasonable to believe this as it would be to expect that if a child fell down stairs he would be picked up covered with blisters from burning, instead of his receiving his natural punishment of being bruised.
Why, because I lie and forget G.o.d, should I be punished with fire and brimstone? Fire is not derivable from truth, nor is brimstone a stimulus to memory. There is also a strange confusion in many minds about the punishment of sin. A child is told not to put his hand into the fire, he does so, and is burnt; the burning is a punishment, he is told; for what? Not for disobedience to the parent, as is generally said, but for disregarding the law of nature which says that fire burns. One often hears it said: ”G.o.d's punishments for sin are not equal: one man sins once and suffers for it all his life, while another sins twenty times and is not punished at all.” By no means: the two men both break a moral law, and suffer a moral degradation; one of them breaks in addition some physical law, and suffers a physical injury. People see injustice where none exists, because they will not take the trouble to distinguish what laws are broken when material punishments follow. There is nothing arbitrary in nature: cause and effect rule in her realm. h.e.l.l is then unjust, in the first place, because physical torture has nothing in common with moral guilt.
It is unjust, secondly, because it is excessive. Sin, say theologians, is to be punished infinitely, because sin is an offence committed against an infinite being. Of course, then, good must logically be rewarded infinitely, because it is duty offered to an infinite being.
There is no man who has never done a single good act, so every man deserves an infinite reward. There is no man who has never done a single bad act, so every man deserves an infinite punishment. Therefore every man deserves both an infinite reward and an infinite punishment, ”which,” as Euclid says, ”is absurd.” And this is quite enough answer to the proposition. But I must protest, in pa.s.sing, against this notion of ”sin against G.o.d” as properly understood. If by this expression is only meant that every sin committed is a sin against G.o.d, because every sin is done against man's higher nature, which is G.o.d in man, then indeed there is no objection to be made to it. But this is not what is generally meant by the phrase. It usually means that we are able, as it were, to injure G.o.d in some way, to dishonour him, to affront him, to trouble him. By sin we make him ”angry,” we ”provoke him to wrath;”
because of this feeling on his own part he punishes us, and demands ”satisfaction.” Surely a moment's reflection must prove to any reasonable being that sin against G.o.d in this sense is perfectly impossible. What can the littleness of man do against the greatness of the Eternal! Imagine a speck of dust troubling the depths of the ocean, an aphis burdening an oak-tree with its weight: each is far more probable than that a man could ruffle the perfect serenity of G.o.d.
Suppose I stand on a lawn watching an ant-heap, an ant twinkles his feelers at me scornfully; do I fly into a pa.s.sion and rush on the insect to destroy it, or seize it and slowly torture it? Yet I am far less above the level of the ant than G.o.d is above mine.
But I must add a word here to guard against the misapprehension that in saying this I am depriving man of the strength he finds in believing that he is personally known to G.o.d and an object of his care. Were I the ant's creator familiar with all the workings of its mind, I might regret, for its sake, the pride and scorn of its maker shown by its-action, because it was not rising to the perfection of nature of which it was capable. So, in that nature in which we live and move, which is too great to regard anything as-little, which is around all and in all, and which we believe to be conscious of all, there is--I cannot but think--some feeling which, for want of a better term, we must call a desire for the growth of his creatures (because in this growth lies their own happiness), and a corresponding feeling of regret when they injure themselves. But I say this in fear and reverence, knowing that human language has no terms in which to describe the nature we adore, and conscious that in the very act of putting ideas about him into words, I degrade the ideas and they no longer fully answer to the thought in my own mind. Silent adoration befits man best in the presence of his maker, only it is right to protest against the more degrading conceptions of him, although the higher conceptions are themselves far below what he really is. Sin then, being done against oneself only, cannot deserve an eternity of torture. Sin injures man already, why should he be further injured by endless agony? The infliction of pain is only justifiable when it is the means of conveying to the sufferer himself a gain greater than the suffering inflicted; therefore punishment is only righteous when reformatory. But _endless_ torture cannot aim at reformation; it has no aim beyond itself, and can only arise, therefore, from vengeance and vindictiveness, which we have shown to be impossible with G.o.d. h.e.l.l is unjust, secondly, because its punishment is excessive and aimless. It is also unjust, because to avoid it needs an impossible perfection. It is no answer to this to say that there is an escape offered to us through the Atonement made by Jesus Christ. Why should I be called on to escape like a criminal from that which I do not deserve? G.o.d makes man imperfect, frail, sinful, utterly unable to keep perfectly a perfect law: he therefore fails, and is--what? To be strengthened? by no means; he is to go to h.e.l.l. The statement of this suffices to show its injustice. We cavil not at the wisdom which made us what we are, but we protest against the idea which makes G.o.d so cruelly unjust as to torture babies because they are unable to walk as steadily as full-grown men. h.e.l.l is unjust, in the third place, because man does not deserve it.
To all this it will probably be retorted, ”you are arguing as though G.o.d's justice were the same as man's, and you were therefore capable of judging it, an a.s.sumption which is unwarrantable, and is grossly presumptuous.” To which I reply: ”If by G.o.d's justice you do not mean justice at all, but refer to some Divine attribute of which we know nothing, all my strictures on it fall to the ground; only, do not commit the inconsistency of arguing that h.e.l.l is _just_, when by 'just' you mean some unknown quality, and then propping up your theories with proofs drawn from human justice. It would perhaps tend to clearness in argument if you gave this Divine attribute some other name, instead of using for it an expression which has already a definite meaning.”
The justice of h.e.l.l disposed of, we turn to the love of G.o.d. I have never heard it stated that h.e.l.l is a proof of his great love to the world, but I take the liberty myself of drawing attention to it in this light. G.o.d, we are told, existed alone before ought was created; there perfect in himself, in happiness, in glory, he might have remained, say orthodox theologians. Then, we have a right to ask in the name of charity, why did he, happy himself, create a race of beings of whom the vast majority were to be endlessly and hopelessly miserable? Was this love? ”He created man to glorify him.” But was it loving to create those who would only suffer for his glory? Was it not rather a gigantic, an inconceivable selfishness?
”Man may be saved if he will.” That is not to the point; G.o.d foreknew that some would be lost, and yet he made them. With all reverence I say it, G.o.d had no right to create sentient beings, if of one of them it can ever be truly said, ”good were it for that man that he had never been born.” He who creates, imposes on himself, by the very act of creation, duties towards his creatures. If G.o.d be self-conscious and moral, it is an absolute certainty that the whole creation is moving towards the final good of every creature in it. We did not ask to be made; we suffered not when we existed not; G.o.d, who has laid existence on us without our consent, is responsible for our final good, and is bound by every tie of righteousness and justice, not to speak of love, to make the existence he gave us, unasked, a blessing and not a curse to us.
Parents feel this responsibility towards the children they bring into the world, and feel themselves bound to protect and to make happy those who, without them, had not been born. But, if h.e.l.l be true, then every man and woman is bound not to fulfil the Divine command of multiplying the race, since by so doing they are aiding to fill the dungeons of h.e.l.l, and they will, hereafter, have their sons and their daughters cursing the day of their birth, and overwhelming their parents with reproaches for having brought into the world a body, which G.o.d was thus enabled to curse with the awful gift of an immortal soul.
We must notice also that G.o.d, who is said to love righteousness, can never crush out righteousness in any-human soul. There is no one so utterly degraded as to be without one sign of good. Among the lowest and vilest of our population, we find beautiful instances of kindly feeling and generous help. Can any woman be more degraded than she who only values her womanhood as a means of gain, who drinks, fights, and steals?
Let those who have been among such women say if they have not been cheered sometimes by a very ray of the light of G.o.d, when the most.
degraded has shown kindness to an equally degraded sister, and when the very gains of sin have been purified by being; poured into the lap of a suffering and dying companion. Shall love and devotion, however feeble, unselfishness and sympathy, however transitory in their action, shall these stars of heaven be quenched in the blackness of the pit of h.e.l.l?
If it be so, then, verily, G.o.d is not the ”righteous. Lord who loveth righteousness.”
But we cannot leave out of our impeachment of h.e.l.l that it injures man, as much as it degrades his conceptions of G.o.d. It cultivates selfishness and fear, two of his basest pa.s.sions. There has scarcely perhaps been born into the world this century a purer and more loving soul than that of the late John Keble, the author of the ”Christian Year.” Yet what a terrible effect this belief had on him; he must cling to his belief in h.e.l.l, because otherwise he would have no certainty of heaven:
”But where is then the stay of contrite hearts?
Of old they leaned on Thy eternal word; But with the sinner's fear their hope departs, Fast linked as Thy great name to Thee, O Lord;
That Name by which Thy faithful hope is past, That we should endless be, for joy or woe;-- And if the treasures of Thy wrath could waste, Thy lovers must their promised heaven forego.”
That is to say in plain English: ”I cannot give up the certainty of h.e.l.l for others, because if I do I shall have no certainty of heaven for myself; and I would rather know that millions of my brethren should be tormented for ever, than remain doubtful about my own everlasting enjoyment.” Surely a loving heart would say, instead, ”O G.o.d, let us all die and remain unconscious for ever, rather than that one soul should suffer everlastingly.” The terrible selfishness of the Christian belief degrades the n.o.blest soul; the horror of h.e.l.l makes men lose their self-control, and think only of their personal safety, just as we see men run wild sometimes at a s.h.i.+pwreck, when the gain of a minute means life. The belief in h.e.l.l fosters religious pride and hatred, for all religious people think that they themselves at least are sure of heaven. If then they are going to rejoice through all eternity over the sufferings of the lost, why should they treat them with kindness or consideration here? Thus h.e.l.l, becomes the mother of persecution; for the heretic, the enemy of the Lord, there is no mercy and no forgiveness. Then the saints persuade themselves that true charity obliges them to persecute, for suffering may either save the heretic himself by forcing him to believe, or may at least scare others from sharing his heresy, and so preserve them from eternal fire. And they are right, if h.e.l.l is true. Any means are justifiable which may save man from that horrible doom; surely we should not hesitate to knock a man down, if by so doing we preserved him from throwing himself over a precipice.