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UNIVERSE NOT CONVINCED?

Percy Bysshe Shelley

There is this passage in the Christian Scriptures: ‘Those who obey not

God, and believe not the Gospel of his Son, shall be punished with

everlasting destruction.’ This is the pivot upon which all religions

turn:—they all assume that it is in our power to believe or not to

believe; whereas the mind can only believe that which it thinks true. A

human being can only be supposed accountable for those actions which are

influenced by his will. But belief is utterly distinct from and

unconnected with volition: it is the apprehension of the agreement or

disagreement of the ideas that compose any preposition. Belief is a

passion, or involuntary operation of the mind, and, like other passions,

its intensity is precisely proportionate to the degrees of excitement.

Volition is essential to merit or demerit. But the Christian religion

attaches the highest possible degrees of merit and demerit to that which

is worthy of neither, and which is totally unconnected with the peculiar

faculty of the mind, whose presence is essential to their being.

 

Christianity was intended to reform the world: had an all-wise Being

planned it, nothing is more improbable than that it should have failed:

omniscience would infallibly have foreseen the inutility of a scheme

which experience demonstrates, to this age, to have been utterly

unsuccessful.

 

Christianity inculcates the necessity of supplicating the Deity. Prayer

may be considered under two points of view;—as an endeavour to change

the intentions of God, or as a formal testimony of our obedience. But

the former case supposes that the caprices of a limited intelligence can

occasionally instruct the Creator of the world how to regulate the

universe; and the latter, a certain degree of servility analogous to the

loyalty demanded by earthly tyrants. Obedience indeed is only the

pitiful and cowardly egotism of him who thinks that he can do something

better than reason.

 

Christianity, like all other religions, rests upon miracles, prophecies,

and martyrdoms. No religion ever existed which had not its prophets, its

attested miracles, and, above all, crowds of devotees who would bear

patiently the most horrible tortures to prove its authenticity. It

should appear that in no case can a discriminating mind subscribe to the

genuineness of a miracle. A miracle is an infraction of nature’s law, by

a supernatural cause; by a cause acting beyond that eternal circle

within which all things are included. God breaks through the law of

nature, that He may convince mankind of the truth of that revelation

which, in spite of His precautions, has been, since its introduction,

the subject of unceasing schism and cavil.

 

Miracles resolve themselves into the following question (See Hume’s

Essay, volume 2 page 121.):—Whether it is more probable the laws of

nature, hitherto so immutably harmonious, should have undergone

violation, or that a man should have told a lie? Whether it is more

probable that we are ignorant of the natural cause of an event, or that

we know the supernatural one? That, in old times, when the powers of

nature were less known than at present, a certain set of men were

themselves deceived, or had some hidden motive for deceiving others; or

that God begat a Son, who, in His legislation, measuring merit by

belief, evidenced Himself to be totally ignorant of the powers of the

human mind—of what is voluntary, and what is the contrary?

 

We have many instances of men telling lies;—none of an infraction of

nature’s laws, those laws of whose government alone we have any

knowledge or experience. The records of all nations afford innumerable

instances of men deceiving others either from vanity or interest, or

themselves being deceived by the limitedness of their views and their

ignorance of natural causes: but where is the accredited case of God

having come upon earth, to give the lie to His own creations? There

would be something truly wonderful in the appearance of a ghost; but the

assertion of a child that he saw one as he passed through the churchyard

is universally admitted to be less miraculous.

 

But even supposing that a man should raise a dead body to life before

our eyes, and on this fact rest his claim to being considered the son of

God;—the Humane Society restores drowned persons, and because it makes

no mystery of the method it employs, its members are not mistaken for

the sons of God. All that we have a right to infer from our ignorance of

the cause of any event is that we do not know it: had the Mexicans

attended to this simple rule when they heard the cannon of the

Spaniards, they would not have considered them as gods: the experiments

of modern chemistry would have defied the wisest philosophers of ancient

Greece and Rome to have accounted for them on natural principles. An

author of strong common sense has observed that ‘a miracle is no miracle

at second-hand’; he might have added that a miracle is no miracle in any

case; for until we are acquainted with all natural causes, we have no

reason to imagine others.

 

There remains to be considered another proof of Christianity—Prophecy.

A book is written before a certain event, in which this event is

foretold; how could the prophet have foreknown it without inspiration?

how could he have been inspired without God? The greatest stress is laid

on the prophecies of Moses and Hosea on the dispersion of the Jews, and

that of Isaiah concerning the coming of the Messiah. The prophecy of

Moses is a collection of every possible cursing and blessing; and it is

so far from being marvellous that the one of dispersion should have been

fulfilled, that it would have been more surprising if, out of all these,

none should have taken effect. In Deuteronomy, chapter 28, verse 64,

where Moses explicitly foretells the dispersion, he states that they

shall there serve gods of wood and stone: ‘And the Lord shall scatter

thee among all people, from the one end of the earth even to the other;