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THE
KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU
CHRISTIANITY NOT AS A MYSTIC
RELIGION
BUT AS A NEW THEORY OF LIFE
by Count Leo Tolstoy
Chapters:
Preface 1
2
3 4
5 6
7 8
9 10
11 12
CHAPTER 3
Thus the information I received, after my book
came out, went to show that the Christian doctrine, in its direct and simple
sense, was understood, and had always been understood, by a minority of men,
while the critics, ecclesiastical and freethinking alike, denied the possibility
of taking Christ's teaching in its direct sense. All this convinced me that
while on one hand the true understanding of this doctrine had never been lost to
a minority, but had been established more and more clearly, on the other hand
the meaning of it had been more and more obscured for the majority. So that at
last such a depth of obscurity has been reached that men do not take in their
direct sense even the simplest precepts, expressed in the simplest words, in the
Gospel.
Christ's teaching is not generally understood in
its true, simple, and direct sense even in these days, when the light of the
Gospel has penetrated even to the darkest recesses of human consciousness; when,
in the words of Christ, that which was spoken in the ear is proclaimed from the
housetops; and when the Gospel is influencing every side of human
life--domestic, economic, civic, legislative, and international. This lack of
true understanding of Christ's words at such a time would be inexplicable, if
there were not causes to account for it.
One of these causes is the fact that believers
and unbelievers alike are firmly persuaded that they have understood Christ's
teaching a long time, and that they understand it so fully, indubitably, and
conclusively that it can have no other significance than the one they attribute
to it. And the reason of this conviction is that the false interpretation and
consequent misapprehension of the Gospel is an error of such long standing. Even
the strongest current of water cannot add a drop to a cup which is already full.
The most difficult subjects can be explained to
the most slow- witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the
simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly
persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before
him.
The Christian doctrine is presented to the men of
our world to-day as a doctrine which everyone has known so long and accepted so
unhesitatingly in all its minutest details that it cannot be understood in any
other way than it is understood now.
Christianity is understood now by all who profess
the doctrines of the Church as a supernatural miraculous revelation of
everything which is repeated in the Creed. By unbelievers it is regarded as an
illustration of man's craving for a belief in the supernatural, which mankind
has now outgrown, as an historical phenomenon which has received full expression
in Catholicism, Greek Orthodoxy, and Protestantism, and has no longer any living
significance for us. The significance of the Gospel is hidden from believers by
the Church, from unbelievers by Science.
I will speak first of the former. Eighteen
hundred years ago there appeared in the midst of the heathen Roman world a
strange new doctrine, unlike any of the old religions, and attributed to a man,
Christ.
This new doctrine was in both form and content
absolutely new to the Jewish world in which it originated, and still more to the
Roman world in which it was preached and diffused.
In the midst of the elaborate religious
observances of Judaism, in which, in the words of Isaiah, law was laid upon law,
and in the midst of the Roman legal system worked out to the highest point of
perfection, a new doctrine appeared, which denied not only every deity, and all
fear and worship of them, but even all human institutions and all necessity for
them. In place of all the rules of the old religions, this doctrine sets up only
a type of inward perfection, truth, and love in the person of Christ, and-- as a
result of this inward perfection being attained by men--also the outward
perfection foretold by the Prophets--the kingdom of God, when all men will cease
to learn to make war, when all shall be taught of God and united in love, and
the lion will lie down with the lamb. Instead of the threats of punishment which
all the old laws of religions and governments alike laid down for non-
fulfillment of their rules, instead of promises of rewards for fulfillment of
them, this doctrine called men to it only because it was the truth. John vii.
17: "If any man will do His will, he shad know of the doctrine whether it
be of God." John viii. 46: "If I say the truth, why do ye not believe
me? But ye seek to kill me, a man that hath told you the truth. Ye shall know
the truth, and the truth shall make you free. God is a spirit, and they that
worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth. Keep my sayings, and ye
shall know of my sayings whether they be true." No proofs of this doctrine
were offered except its truth, the correspondence of the doctrine with the
truth. The whole teaching consisted in the recognition of truth and following
it, in a greater and greater attainment of truth, and a closer and closer
following of it in the acts of life. There are no acts in this doctrine which
could justify a man and make him saved. There is only the image of truth to
guide-him, for inward perfection in the person of Christ, and for outward
perfection in the establishment of the kingdom of God. The fulfillment of this
teaching consists only in walking in the chosen way, in getting nearer to inward
perfection in the imitation of Christ, and outward perfection in the
establishment of the kingdom of God. The greater or less blessedness of a man
depends, according to this doctrine, not on the degree of perfection to which he
has attained, but on the greater or less swiftness with which he is pursuing it.
The progress toward perfection of the publican of
the publican Zaccheus, of the woman that was a sinner, of the robber on the
cross, is a greater state of blessedness, according to this doctrine, than the
stationary righteousness of the Pharisee. The lost sheep is dearer than
ninety-nine that were not lost. The prodigal son, the piece of money that was
lost and found again, are dearer, more precious to God than those which have not
been lost.
Every condition, according to this doctrine, is
only a particular step in the attainment of inward and outward perfection, and
therefore has no significance of itself. Blessedness consists in progress toward
perfection; to stand still in any condition whatever means the cessation of this
blessedness.
"Let not thy left hand know what they right
hand doeth." "No man having put his hand to the plow and looking back
is fit for the Kingdom of God." "Rejoice not that the spirits are
subject to you, but seek rather that your names be written in heaven."
"Be ye perfect even as your Father in heaven is perfect." "Seek
ye first the kingdom of heaven and its righteousness."
The fulfillment of this precept is only to be
found in uninterrupted progress toward the attainment of ever higher truth,
toward establishing more and more firmly an ever greater love within oneself,
and establishing more and more widely the kingdom of God outside oneself.
It is obvious that, appearing as it did in the
midst of the Jewish and heathen world, such teaching could not be accepted by
the majority of men, who were living a life absolutely different from what was
required by it. It is obvious, too, that even for those by whom it was accepted,
it was so absolutely opposed to all their old views that it could not be
comprehensible in its full significance.
It has been only by a succession of
misunderstandings, errors, partial explanations, and the corrections and
additions of generations that the meaning of the Christian doctrine has grown
continually more and more clear to men. The Christian view of life has exerted
an influence on the Jewish and heathen, and the heathen and Jewish view of life
has, too, exerted an influence on the Christian. And Christianity, as the living
force, has gained more and more upon the extinct Judaism and heathenism, and has
grown continually clearer and clearer, as it freed itself from the admixture of
falsehood which had overlaid it. Men went further and further in the attainment
of the meaning of Christianity, and realized it more and more in life.
The longer mankind lived, the clearer and clearer
became the meaning of Christianity, as must always be the case with every theory
of life.
Succeeding generations corrected the errors of
their predecessors, and grew ever nearer and nearer to a comprehension of the
true meaning. It was thus from the very earliest times of Christianity. And so,
too, from the earliest times of Christianity there were men who began to assert
on their own authority that the meaning they attribute to the doctrine is the
only true one, and as proof bring forward supernatural occurrences in support of
the correctness of their interpretation.
This was the principal cause at first of the
misunderstanding of the doctrine, and afterward of the complete distortion of
it.
It was supposed that Christ's teaching was
transmitted to men not like every other truth, but in a special miraculous way.
Thus the truth of the teaching was not proved by its correspondence with the
needs of the mind and the whole nature of man, but by the miraculous manner of
its transmission, which was advanced as an irrefutable proof of the truth of the
interpretation put on it. This hypothesis originated from misunderstanding of
the teaching, and its result was to make it impossible to understand it rightly.
And this happened first in the earliest times,
when the doctrine was still not so fully understood and often interpreted
wrongly, as we see by the Gospels and the Acts. The less the doctrine was
understood, the more obscure it appeared and the more necessary were external
proofs of its truth. The proposition that we ought not to do unto others as we
would not they should do unto us, did not need to be proved by miracles and
needed no exercise of faith, because this proposition is in itself convincing
and in harmony with man's mind and nature; but the proposition that Christ was
God had to be proved by miracles completely beyond our comprehension.
The more the understanding of Christ's teaching
was obscured, the more the miraculous was introduced into it; and the more the
miraculous was introduced into it, the more the doctrine was strained from its
meaning and the more obscure it became; and the more it was strained from its
meaning and the more obscure it became, the more strongly its infallibility had
to be asserted, and the less comprehensible the doctrine became.
One can see by the Gospels, the Acts, and the
Epistles how from the earliest times the non-comprehension of the doctrine
called forth the need for proofs through the miraculous and incomprehensible.
The first example in the book of Acts is the
assembly which gathered together in Jerusalem to decide the question which had
arisen, whether to baptize or not the uncircumcised and those who had eaten of
food sacrificed to idols.
The very fact of this question being raised
showed that those who discussed it did not understand the teaching of Christ,
who rejected all outward observances--ablutions, purifications, fasts, and
sabbaths. It was plainly said, "Not that which goeth into a man's mouth,
but that which cometh out of a man's mouth, defileth him," and therefore
the question of baptizing the uncircumcised could only have arisen among men
who, though they loved their Master and dimly felt the grandeur of his teaching,
still did not understand the teaching itself very clearly. And this was the
fact.
Just in proportion to the failure of the members
of the assembly to understand the doctrine was their need of external
confirmation of their incomplete interpretation of it. And then to settle this
question, the very asking of which proved their misunderstanding of the
doctrine, there was uttered in this assembly, as is described in the Acts, that
strange phrase, which was for the first time found necessary to give external
confirmation to certain assertions, and which has been productive of so much
evil.
That is, it was asserted that the correctness of
what they had decided was guaranteed by the miraculous participation of the Holy
Ghost, that is, of God, in their decision. But the assertion that the Holy
Ghost, that is, God, spoke through the Apostles, in its turn wanted proof. And
thus it was necessary, to confirm this, that the Holy Ghost should descend at
Pentecost in tongues of fire upon those who made this assertion. (In the account
of it, the descent of the Holy Ghost precedes the assembly, but the book of Acts
was written much later than both events.) But the descent of the Holy Ghost too
had to be proved for those who had not seen the tongues of fire (though it is
not easy to understand why a tongue of fire burning above a man's head should
prove that what that man is going to say will be infallibly the truth). And so
arose the necessity for still more miracles and changes, raisings of the dead to
life, and strikings of the living dead, and all those marvels which have been a
stumbling-block to men, of which the Acts is full, and which, far from ever
convincing one of the truth of the Christian doctrine, can only repel men from
it. The result of such a means of confirming the truth was that the more these
confirmations of truth by tales of miracles were heaped up one after another,
the more the doctrine was distorted from its original meaning, aid the more
incomprehensible it became.
Thus it was from the earliest times, and so it
went on, constantly increasing, till it reached in our day the logical climax of
the dogmas of transubstantiation and the infallibility of the Pope, or of the
bishops, or of Scripture, and of requiring a blind faith rendered
incomprehensible and utterly meaningless, not in God, but in Christ, not in a
doctrine, but in a person, as in Catholicism, or in persons, as in Greek
Orthodoxy, or in a book, as in Protestantism. The more widely Christianity was
diffused, and the greater the number of people unprepared for it who were
brought under its sway, the less it was understood, the more absolutely was its
infallibility insisted on, and the less possible it became to understand the
true meaning of the doctrine. In the times of Constantine the whole
interpretation of the doctrine had been already reduced to a RÉSUMÉ--supported
by the temporal authority-- of the disputes that had taken place in the
Council--to a creed which reckoned off--I believe in so and so, and so and so,
and so and so to the end--to one holy, Apostolic Church, which means the
infallibility of those persons who call themselves the Church. So that it all
amounts to a man no longer believing in God nor Christ, as they are revealed to
him, but believing in what the Church orders him to believe in.
But the Church is holy; the Church was founded by
Christ. God could not leave men to interpret his teaching at random--therefore
he founded the Church. All those statements are so utterly untrue and unfounded
that one is ashamed to refute them. Nowhere nor in anything, except in the
assertion of the Church, can we find that God or Christ founded anything like
what Churchmen understand by the Church. In the Gospels there is a warning
against the Church, as it is an external authority, a warning most clear and
obvious in the passage where it is said that Christ's followers should
"call no man master." But nowhere is anything said of the foundation
of what Churchmen call the Church.
The word church is used twice in the
Gospels--once in the sense of an assembly of men to decide a dispute, the other
time in connection with the obscure utterance about a stone--Peter, and the
gates of hell. From these two passages in which the word church is used, in the
signification merely of an assembly, has been deduced all that we now understand
by the Church.
But Christ could not have founded the Church,
that is, what we now understand by that word. For nothing like the idea of the
Church as we know it now, with its sacraments, miracles, and above all its claim
to infallibility, is to be found either in Christ's words or in the ideas of the
men of that time.
The fact that men called what was formed
afterward by the same word as Christ used for something totally different, does
not give them the right to assert that Christ founded the one, true Church.
Besides, if Christ had really founded such an
institution as the Church for the foundation of all his teaching and the whole
faith, he would certainly have described this institution clearly and
definitely, and would have given the only true Church, besides tales of
miracles, which are used to support every kind of superstition, some tokens so
unmistakable that no doubt of its genuineness could ever have arisen. But
nothing of the sort was done by him. And there have been and still are different
institutions, each calling itself the true Church.
The Catholic catechism says: "L'Église est
la société des fidéles établie par notre Seigneur Jésus Christ, répandue
sur toute la terre et soumise à l'authorité des pasteurs légitimes,
principalement notre Saint Père le Pape," [see Footnote] understanding by
the words "pasteurs légitimes" an association of men having the Pope
at its head, and consisting of certain individuals bound together by a certain
organization.
[Footnote: "The Church is the society of
the faithful, established by our Lord Jesus Christ, spread over the whole earth,
and subject to the authority of its lawful pastors, and chief of them our Holy
Father the Pope."
The Greek Orthodox catechism says: "The
Church is a society founded upon earth by Jesus Christ, which is united into one
whole, by one divine doctrine and by sacraments, under the rule and guidance of
a priesthood appointed by God," meaning by the "priesthood appointed
by God" the Greek Orthodox priesthood, consisting of certain individuals
who happen to be in such or such positions.
The Lutheran catechism says: "The Church is
holy Christianity, or the collection of all believers under Christ, their head,
to whom the Holy Ghost through the Gospels and sacraments promises,
communicates, and administers heavenly salvation," meaning that the
Catholic Church is lost in error, and that the true means of salvation is in
Lutheranism.
For Catholics the Church of God coincides with
the Roman priesthood and the Pope. For the Greek Orthodox believer the Church of
God coincides with the establishment and priesthood of Russia. [See Footnote]
[Footnote: Homyakov's definition of the
Church, which was received with some favor among Russians, does not improve
matters, if we are to agree with Homyakov in considering the Greek Orthodox
Church as the one true Church. Homyakov asserts that a church is a collection of
men (all without distinction of clergy and laymen) united together by love, and
that only to men united by love is the truth revealed (let us love each other,
that in the unity of thought, etc.), and that such a church is the church which,
in the first place, recognizes the Nicene Creed, and in the second place does
not, after the division of the churches, recognize the popes and new dogmas. But
with such a definition of the church, there is still more difficulty in
reconciling, as Homyakov tries to do, the church united by love with the church
that recognizes the Nicene Creed and the doctrine of Photius. So that Homyakov's
assertion that this church, united by love, and consequently holy, is the same
church as the Greek Orthodox priesthood profess faith in, is even more arbitrary
than the assertions of the Catholics or the Orthodox. If we admit the idea of a
church in the sense Homyakov gives to it--that is, a body of men bound together
by love and truth--then all that any man can predicate in regard to this body,
if such an one exists, is its love and truth, but there can be no outer signs by
which one could reckon oneself or another as a member of this holy body, nor by
which one could put anyone outside it; so that no institution having an external
existence can correspond to this idea.
For Lutherans the Church of God coincides
with a body of men who recognize the authority of the Bible and Luther's
catechism.
Ordinarily, when speaking of the rise of
Christianity, men belonging to one of the existing churches use the word church
in the singular, as though there were and had been only one church. But this is
absolutely incorrect. The Church, as an institution which asserted that it
possessed infallible truth, did not make its appearance singly; there were at
least two churches directly this claim was made.
While believers were agreed among themselves and
the body was one, it had no need to declare itself as a church. It was only when
believers were split up into opposing parties, renouncing one another, that it
seemed necessary to each party to confirm their own truth by ascribing to
themselves infallibility. The conception of one church only arose when there
were two sides divided and disputing, who each called the other side heresy, and
recognized their own side only as the infallible church.
If we knew that there was a church which decided
in the year 51 to receive the uncircumcised, it is only so because there was
another church--of the Judaists--who decided to keep the uncircumcised out.
If there is a Catholic Church now which asserts
its own infallibility, that is only because there are churches--Greco- Russian,
Old Orthodox, and Lutheran--each asserting its own infallibility and denying
that of all other churches. So that the one Church is only a fantastic
imagination which has not the least trace of reality about it.
As a real historical fact there has existed, and
still exist, several bodies of men, each asserting that it is the one Church,
founded by Christ, and that all the others who call themselves churches are only
sects and heresies.
The catechisms of the churches of the most
world-wide influence-- the Catholic, the Old Orthodox, and the Lutheran--openly
assert this.
In the Catholic catechism it is said: "Quels
sont ceux qui sont hors de l'église? Les infidèles, les hérétiques, les
schismatiques." [Footnote: "Who are those who are outside the Church?
Infidels, heretics, and schismatics."] The so-called Greek Orthodox are
regarded as schismatics, the Lutherans as heretics; so that according to the
Catholic catechism the only people in the Church are Catholics.
In the so-called Orthodox catechism it is said:
By the one Christian Church is understood the Orthodox, which remains fully in
accord with the Universal Church. As for the Roman Church and other sects (the
Lutherans and the rest they do not even dignify by the name of church), they
cannot be included in the one true Church, since they have themselves separated
from it.
According to this definition the Catholics and
Lutherans are outside the Church, and there are only Orthodox in the Church.
The Lutheran catechism says: "Die wahre
kirche wird darein erkannt, dass in ihr das Wort Gottes lauter und rein ohne
Menschenzusätze gelehrt and die Sacramente treu nach Christi Einsetzung
gewahret werden." [Footnote: "The true Church will be known by the
Word of God being studied clear and unmixed with man's additions and the
sacraments being maintained faithful to Christ's teaching."
According to this definition all those who have
added anything to the teaching of Christ and the apostles, as the Catholic and
Greek churches have done, are outside the Church. And in the Church there are
only Protestants.
The Catholics assert that the Holy Ghost has been
transmitted without a break in their priesthood. The Orthodox assert that the
same Holy Ghost has been transmitted without a break in their priesthood. The
Arians asserted that the Holy Ghost was transmitted in their priesthood (they
asserted this with just as much right as the churches in authority now). The
Protestants of every kind--Lutherans, Reformed Church, Presbyterians,
Methodists, Swedenborgians, Mormons--assert that the Holy Ghost is only present
in their communities. If the Catholics assert that the Holy Ghost, at the time
of the division of the Church into Arian and Greek, left the Church that fell
away and remained in the one true Church, with precisely the same right the
Protestants of every denomination can assert that at the time of the separation
of their Church from the Catholic the Holy Ghost left the Catholic and passed
into the Church they professed. And this is just what they do.
Every church traces its creed through an
uninterrupted transmission from Christ and the Apostles. And truly every
Christian creed that has been derived from Christ must have come down to the
present generation through a certain transmission. But that does not prove that
it alone of all that has been transmuted, excluding all the rest, can be the
sole truth, admitting of no doubt.
Every branch in a tree comes from the root in
unbroken connection; but the fact that each branch comes from the one root, does
not prove at all that each branch was the only one. It is precisely the same
with the Church. Every church presents exactly the same proofs of the
succession, and even the same miracles, in support of its authenticity, as every
other. So that there is but one strict and exact definition of what is a church
(not of something fantastic which we would wish it to be, but of what it is and
has been in reality)--a church is a body of men who claim for themselves that
they are in complete and sole possession of the truth. And these bodies, having
in course of time, aided by the support of the temporal authorities, developed
into powerful institutions, have been the principal obstacles to the diffusion
of a true comprehension of the teaching of Christ.
It could not be otherwise. The chief peculiarity
which distinguished Christ's teaching from previous religions consisted in the
fact that those who accepted it strove ever more and more to comprehend and
realize its teaching. But the Church doctrine asserted its own complete and
final comprehension and realization of it.
Strange though it may seem to us who have been
brought up in the erroneous view of the Church as a Christian institution, and
in contempt for heresy, yet the fact is that only in what was called heresy was
there any true movement, that is, true Christianity, and that it only ceased to
be so when those heresies stopped short in their movement and also petrified
into the fixed forms of a church.
And, indeed what is a heresy? Read all the
theological works one after another. In all of them heresy is the subject which
first presents itself for definition; since every theological work deals with
the true doctrine of Christ as distinguished from the erroneous doctrines which
surround it, that is, heresies. Yet you will not find anywhere anything like a
definition of heresy.
The treatment of this subject by the learned
historian of Christianity, E. de Pressensé, in his "Histoire du Dogme"
(Paris, 1869), under the heading "Ubi Christus, ibi Ecclesia," may
serve as an illustration of the complete absence of anything like a definition
of what is understood by the word heresy. Here is what he says in his
introduction (p. 3):
"Je sais que l'on nous conteste le droit de
qualifier ainsi [that is, to call heresies] les tendances qui furent si vivement
combattues par les premiers Pères. La désignation même d'hérésie semble une
atteinte portée à la liberté de conscience et de pensée. Nous ne pouvons
partager ce scrupule, car il n'irait à rien moins qu'à enlever au
Christianisme tout caractère distinctif." [see Footnote]
[Footnote: "I know that our right to qualify
thus the tendencies which were so actively opposed by the early Fathers is
contested. The very use of the word heresy seems an attack upon liberty of
conscience and thought. We cannot share this scruple; for it would amount to
nothing less than depriving Christianity of all distinctive character."
And though he tells us that after Constantine's
time the Church did actually abuse its power by designating those who dissented
from it as heretics and persecuting them, yet he says, when speaking of early
times:
"L'église est une libre association; il
y a tout profit a se séparer d'elle. La polémique contre l'erreur n'a d'autres
ressources que la pensée et le sentiment. Un type doctrinal uniforme n'a pas
encore été élaboré; les divergences secondaires se produisent en Orient et
en Occident avec une entière liberté; la théologie n'est point liée a
d'invariables formules. Si au sein de cette diversité apparait un fonds commun
de croyances, n'est-on pas en droit d'y voir non pas un système formulé et
composé par les représentants d'une autorité d'école, mais la foi elle-même
dons son instinct le plus sûr et sa manifestation la plus spontanée? Si cette
même unanimité qui se révèle dans les croyances essentielles, se retrouve
pour repousser telles ou telles tendances ne serons nous pas en droit de
conclure que ces tendances étaient en désacord flagrant avec les principes
fondamentaux du christianisme? Cette présomption ne se transformerait-elle pas
en certitude si nous reconnaissons dans la doctrine universellement repoussée
par l'Église les traits caractéristiques de l'une des religions du passé?
Pour dire que le gnosticisme ou l'ébionitisme sont les formes légitimes de la
pensée chrétienne il faut dire hardiment qu'il n'y a pas de pensée
chrétienne, ni de caractère spécifique qui la fasse reconnaître. Sous
prétexte de l'élargir, on la dissout. Personne au temps de Platon n'eût osé
couvrir de son nom une doctrine qui n'eut pas fait place à la théorie des
idées; et l'on eût excité les justes moqueries de la Grèce, en voulant faire
d'Epicure ou de Zénon un disciple de l'Académie. Reconnaissons donc que s'il
existe une religion ou une doctrine qui s'appelle christianisme, elle peut avoir
ses hérésies." [see Footnote]
[Footnote: "The Church is a free
association; there is much to be gained by separation from it. Conflict with
error has no weapons other than thought and feeling. One uniform type of
doctrine has not yet been elaborated; divergencies in secondary matters arise
freely in East and West; theology is not wedded to invariable formulas. If in
the midst of this diversity a mass of beliefs common to all is apparent, is one
not justified in seeing in it, not a formulated system, framed by the
representatives of pedantic authority, but faith itself in its surest instinct
and its most spontaneous manifestation? If the same unanimity which is revealed
in essential points of belief is found also in rejecting certain tendencies, are
we not justified in concluding that these tendencies were in flagrant opposition
to the fundamental principles of Christianity? And will not this presumption be
transformed into certainty if we recognize in the doctrine universally rejected
by the Church the characteristic features of one of the religions of the past?
To say that gnosticism or ebionitism are legitimate forms of Christian thought,
one must boldly deny the existence of Christian thought at all, or any specific
character by which it could be recognized. While ostensibly widening its realm,
one undermines it. No one in the time of Plato would lave ventured to give his
name to a doctrine in which the theory of ideas had no place, and one would
deservedly have excited the ridicule of Greece by trying to pass off Epicurus or
Zeno as a disciple of the Academy. Let us recognize, then, that if a religion or
a doctrine exists which is called Christianity, it may have its heresies."
The author's whole argument amounts to this: that
every opinion which differs from the code of dogmas we believe in at a given
time, is heresy. But of course at any given time and place men always believe in
something or other; and this belief in something, indefinite at any place, at
some time, cannot be a criterion of truth.
It all amounts to this: since ubi Christus ibi
Ecclesia, then Christus is where we are.
Every so-called heresy, regarding, as it does,
its own creed as the truth, can just as easily find in Church history a series
of illustrations of its own creed, can use all Pressensé's arguments on its own
behalf, and can call its own creed the one truly Christian creed. And that is
just what all heresies do and have always done.
The only definition of heresy (the word [GREEK
WORD], means a part) is this: the name given by a body of men to any opinion
which rejects a part of the Creed professed by that body. The more frequent
meaning, more often ascribed to the word heresy, is --that of an opinion which
rejects the Church doctrine founded and supported by the temporal authorities.
[TRANSCRIBIST'S NOTE: The GREEK WORD above
used Greek letters, spelled: alpha(followed by an apostrophe)-iota(with accent)-
rho-epsilon-sigma-iota-zeta]
There is a remarkable and voluminous work, very
little known, "Unpartheyische Kirchen- und Ketzer-Historie," 1729, by
Gottfried Arnold, which deals with precisely this subject, and points out all
the unlawfulness, the arbitrariness, the senselessness, and the cruelty of using
the word heretic in the sense of reprobate. This book is an attempt to write the
history of Christianity in the form of a history of heresy.
In the introduction the author propounds a series
of questions: (1) Of those who make heretics; (2) Of those whom they made
heretics; (3) Of heretical subjects themselves; (4) Of the method of making
heretics; and (5) Of the object and result of making heretics.
On each of these points he propounds ten more
questions, the answers to which he gives later on from the works of well-known
theologians. But he leaves the reader to draw for himself the principal
conclusion from the expositions in the whole book. As examples of these
questions, in which the answers are to some extent included also, I will quote
the following. Under the 4th head, of the manner in which heretics are made, he
says, in one of the questions (in the 7th): "Does not all history show
that the greatest makers of heretics and masters of that craft were just these
wise men, from whom the Father hid his secrets, that is, the hypocrites, the
Pharisees, and lawyers, men utterly godless and perverted (Question 20-21)? And
in the corrupt times of Christianity were not these very men cast out, denounced
by the hypocrites and envious, who were endowed by God with great gifts and who
would in the days of pure Christianity have been held in high honor? And, on the
other hand, would not the men who, in the decline of Christianity raised
themselves above all, and regarded themselves as the teachers of the purest
Christianity, would not these very men, in the times of the apostles and
disciples of Christ, have been regarded as the most shameless heretics and
anti-Christians?"
He expounds, among other things in these
questions, the theory that any verbal expression of faith, such as was demanded
by the Church, and the departure from which was reckoned as heresy, could never
fully cover the exact religious ideas of a believer, and that therefore the
demand for an expression of faith in certain words was ever productive of
heresy, and he says, in Question 21:
"And if heavenly things and thoughts
present themselves to a man's mind as so great and so profound that he does not
find corresponding words to express them, ought one to call him a heretic,
because he cannot express his idea with perfect exactness?"
And in Question 33:
"And is not the fact that there was no
heresy in the earliest days due to the fact that the Christians did not judge
one another by verbal expressions, but by deed and by heart, since they had
perfect liberty to express their ideas without the dread of being called
heretics; was it not the easiest and most ordinary ecclesiastical proceeding, if
the clergy wanted to get rid of or to ruin anyone, for them to cast suspicion on
the person's belief, and to throw a cloak of heresy upon him, and by this means
to procure his condemnation and removal?
"True though it may be that there were sins
and errors among the so-called heretics, it is no less true and evident,"
he says farther on, "from the innumerable examples quoted here (i. e., in
the history of the Church and of heresy), that there was not a single sincere
and conscientious man of any importance whom the Churchmen would not from envy
or other causes have ruined."
Thus, almost two hundred years ago, the real
meaning of heresy was understood. And notwithstanding that, the same conception
of it has gone on existing up to now. And it cannot fail to exist so long as the
conception of a church exists. Heresy is the obverse side of the Church.
Wherever there is a church, there must be the conception of heresy. A church is
a body of men who assert that they are in possession of infallible truth. Heresy
is the opinion of the men who do not admit the infallibility of the Church's
truth.
Heresy makes its appearance in the Church. It is
the effort to break through the petrified authority of the Church. All effort
after a living comprehension of the doctrine has been made by heretics.
Tertullian, Origen, Augustine, Luther, Huss, Savonarola, Helchitsky, and the
rest were heretics. It could not be otherwise.
The follower of Christ, whose service means an
ever-growing understanding of his teaching, and an ever-closer fulfillment of
it, in progress toward perfection, cannot, just because he is a follower, of
Christ, claim for himself or any other that he understands Christ's teaching
fully and fulfills it. Still less can he claim this for any body of men.
To whatever degree of understanding and
perfection the follower of Christ may have attained, he always feels the
insufficiency of his understanding and fulfillment of it, and is always striving
toward a fuller understanding and fulfillment. And therefore, to assert of one's
self or of any body of men, that one is or they are in possession of perfect
understanding and fulfillment of Christ's word, is to renounce the very spirit
of Christ's teaching.
Strange as it may seem, the churches as churches
have always been, and cannot but be, institutions not only alien in spirit to
Christ's teaching, but even directly antagonistic to it. With good reason
Voltaire calls the Church l'infâme; with good reason have all or almost all
so-called sects of Christians recognized the Church as the scarlet woman
foretold in the Apocalypse; with good reason is the history of the Church the
history of the greatest cruelties and horrors.
The churches as churches are not, as many people
suppose, institutions which have Christian principles for their basis, even
though they may have strayed a little away from the straight path. The churches
as churches, as bodies which assert their own infallibility, are institutions
opposed to Christianity. There is not only nothing in common between the
churches as such and Christianity, except the name, but they represent two
principles fundamentally opposed and antagonistic to one another. One represents
pride, violence, self-assertion, stagnation, and death; the other, meekness,
penitence, humility, progress, and life.
We cannot serve these two masters; we have to
choose between them.
The servants of the churches of all
denominations, especially of later times, try to show themselves champions of
progress in Christianity. They make concessions, wish to correct the abuses that
have slipped into the Church, and maintain that one cannot, on account of these
abuses, deny the principle itself of a Christian church, which alone can bind
all men together in unity and be a mediator between men and God. But this is all
a mistake. Not only have churches never bound men together in unity; they have
always been one of the principal causes of division between men, of their hatred
of one another, of wars, battles, inquisitions, massacres of St. Bartholomew,
and so on. And the churches have never served as mediators between men and God.
Such mediation is not wanted, and was directly forbidden by Christ, who has
revealed his teaching directly and immediately to each man. But the churches set
up dead forms in the place of God, and far from revealing God, they obscure him
from men's sight. The churches, which originated from misunderstanding of
Christ's teaching and have maintained this misunderstanding by their
immovability, cannot but persecute and refuse to recognize all true
understanding of Christ's words. They try to conceal this, but in vain; for
every step forward along the path pointed out for us by Christ is a step toward
their destruction.
To hear and to read the sermons and articles in
which Church writers of later times of all denominations speak of Christian
truths and virtues; to hear or read these skillful arguments that have been
elaborated during centuries, and exhortations and professions, which sometimes
seem like sincere professions, one is ready to doubt whether the churches can be
antagonistic to Christianity. "It cannot be," one says, "that
these people who can point to such men as Chrysostom, Fénelon, Butler, and
others professing the Christian faith, were antagonistic to Christianity."
One is tempted to say, "The churches may have strayed away from
Christianity, they may be in error, but they cannot be hostile to it." But
we must look to the fruit to judge the tree, as Christ taught c us. And if we
see that their fruits were evil, that the results of their activity were
antagonistic to Christianity, we cannot but admit that however good the men
were-- the work of the Church in which these men took part was not Christian.
The goodness and worth of these men who served the churches was the goodness and
worth of the men, and not of the institution they served. All the good men, such
as Francis of Assisi, and Francis of Sales, our Tihon Zadonsky, Thomas à Kempis,
and others, were good men in spite of their serving an institution hostile to
Christianity, and they would have been still better if they had not been under
the influence of the error which they were serving.
But why should we speak of the past and judge
from the past, which may have been misrepresented and misunderstood by us? The
churches, with their principles and their practice, are not a thing of the past.
The churches are before us to-day, and we can judge of them to some purpose by
their practical activity, their influence on men.
What is the practical work of the churches
to-day? What is their influence upon men? What is done by the churches among us,
among the Catholics and the Protestants of all denominations--what is their
practical work? and what are the results of their practical work?
The practice of our Russian so-called Orthodox
Church is plain to all. It is an enormous fact which there is no possibility of
hiding and about which there can be no disputing.
What constitutes the practical work of this
Russian Church, this immense, intensely active institution, which consists of a
regiment of half a million men and costs the people tens of millions of rubles?
The practical business of the Church consists in
instilling by every conceivable means into the mass of one hundred millions of
the Russian people those extinct relics of beliefs for which there is nowadays
no kind of justification, "in which scarcely anyone now believes, and often
not even those whose duty it is to diffuse these false beliefs." To instill
into the people the formulas of Byzantine theology, of the Trinity, of the
Mother of God, of Sacraments, of Grace, and so on, extinct conceptions, foreign
to us, and having no kind of meaning for men of our times, forms only one part
of the work of the Russian Church. Another part of its practice consists in the
maintenance of idol-worship in the most literal meaning of the word; in the
veneration of holy relics, and of ikons, the offering of sacrifices to them, and
the expectation of their answers to prayer. I am not going to speak of what is
preached and what is written by clergy of scientific or liberal tendencies in
the theological journals. I am going to speak of what is actually done by the
clergy through the wide expanse of the Russian land among a people of one
hundred millions. What do they, diligently, assiduously, everywhere alike,
without intermission, teach the people? What do they demand from the people in
virtue of their (so-called) Christian faith?
I will begin from the beginning with the birth of
a child. At the birth of a child they teach them that they must recite a prayer
over the child and mother to purify them, as though without this prayer the
mother of a newborn child were unclean. To do this the priest holds the child in
his arms before the images of the saints (called by the people plainly gods) and
reads words of exorcizing power, and this purifies the mother. Then it is
suggested to the parents, and even exacted of them, under fear of punishment for
non-fulfillment, that the child must be baptized; that is, be dipped by the
priest three times into the water, while certain words, understood by no one,
are read aloud, and certain actions, still less understood, are performed;
various parts of the body are rubbed with oil, and the hair is cut, while the
sponsors blow and spit at an imaginary devil. All this is necessary to purify
the child and to make him a Christian. Then it is instilled into the parents
that they ought to administer the sacrament to the child, that is, give him, in
the guise of bread and wine, a portion of Christ's body to eat, as a result of
which the child receives the grace of God within it, and so on. Then it is
suggested that the child as it grows up must be taught to pray. To pray means to
place himself directly before the wooden boards on which are painted the faces
of Christ, the Mother of God, and the saints, to bow his head and his whole
body, and to touch his forehead, his shoulders and his stomach with his right
hand, holding his fingers in a certain position, and to utter some words of
Slavonic, the most usual of which as taught to all children are: Mother of God,
virgin, rejoice thee, etc., etc.
Then it is instilled into the child as it is
brought up that at the sight of any church or ikon he must repeat the same
action--i. e., cross himself. Then it is instilled into him that on holidays
(holidays are the days on which Christ was born, though no one knows when that
was, on which he was circumcised, on which the Mother of God died, on which the
cross was carried in procession, on which ikons have been set up, on which a
lunatic saw a vision, and so on)--on holidays he must dress himself in his best
clothes and go to church, and must buy candles and place them there before the
images of the saints. Then he must give offerings and prayers for the dead, and
little loaves to be cut up into three-cornered pieces, and must pray many times
for the health and prosperity of the Tzar and the bishops, and for himself and
his own affairs, and then kiss the cross and the hand of the priest. Besides
these observances, it is instilled into him that at least once a year he must
confess. To confess means to go to the church and to tell the priest his sins,
on the theory that this informing a stranger of his sins completely purifies him
from them. And after that he must eat with a little spoon a morsel of bread with
wine, which will purify him still more. Next it is instilled into him that if a
man and woman want their physical union to be sanctified they must go to church,
put on metal crowns, drink certain potions, walk three times round a table to
the sound of singing, and that then the physical union of a man and woman
becomes sacred and altogether different from all other such unions.
Further it is instilled into him in his life that
he must observe the following rules: not to eat butter or milk on certain days,
and on certain other days to sing Te Deums and requiems for the dead, on
holidays to entertain the priest and give him money, and several times in the
year to bring the ikons from the church, and to carry them slung on his
shoulders through the fields and houses. It is instilled into him that on his
death-bed a man must not fail to eat bread and wine with a spoon, and that it
will be still better if he has time to be rubbed with sacred oil. This will
guarantee his welfare in the future life. After his death it is instilled into
his relatives that it is a good thing for the salvation of the dead man to place
a printed paper of prayers in his hands; it is a good thing further to read
aloud a certain book over the dead body, and to pronounce the dead man's name in
church at a certain time. All this is regarded as faith obligatory on everyone.
But if anyone wants to take particular care of
his soul, then according to this faith he is instructed that the greatest
security of the salvation of the soul in the world is attained by offering money
to the churches and monasteries, and engaging the holy men by this means to pray
for him. Entering monasteries too and kissing relics and miraculous ikons, are
further means of salvation for the soul.
According to this faith ikons and relics
communicate a special sanctity, power, and grace, and even proximity to these
objects, touching them, kissing them, putting candles before them, crawling
under them while they are being carried along, are all efficacious for
salvation, as well as Te Deums repeated before these holy things.
So this, and nothing else, is the faith called
Orthodox, that is the actual faith which, under the guise of Christianity, has
been with all the forces of the Church, and is now with especial zeal, instilled
into the people.
And let no one say that the Orthodox teachers
place the essential part of their teaching in something else, and that all these
are only ancient forms, which it is not thought necessary to do away with. That
is false. This, and nothing but this, is the faith taught through the whole of
Russia by the whole of the Russian clergy, and of late years with especial zeal.
There is nothing else taught. Something different may be talked of and written
of in the capitals; but among the hundred millions of the people this is what is
done, this is what is taught, and nothing more. Churchmen may talk of something
else, but this is what they teach by every means in their power.
All this, and the worship of relics and of ikons,
has been introduced into works of theology and into the catechisms. Thus they
teach it to the people in theory and in practice, using every resource of
authority, solemnity, pomp, and violence to impress them. They compel the
people, by overawing them, to believe in this, and jealously guard this faith
from any attempt to free the people from these barbarous superstitions.
As I said when I published my book, Christ's
teaching and his very words about non-resistance to evil were for many years a
subject for ridicule and low jesting in my eyes, and Churchmen, far from
opposing it, even encouraged this scoffing at sacred things. But try the
experiment of saying a disrespectful word about a hideous idol which is carried
sacrilegiously about Moscow by drunken men under the name of the ikon of the
Iversky virgin, and you will raise a groan of indignation from these same
Churchmen. All that they preach is an external observance of the rites of
idolatry. And let it not be said that the one does not hinder the other, that
"These ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone."
"All, therefore, whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do; but
do not ye after their works: for they say, and do not" (Matt. xxiii. 23,
3).
This was spoken of the Pharisees, who fulfilled
all the external observances prescribed by the law, and therefore the words
"whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do," refer to works
of mercy and goodness, and the words "do not ye after their works, for they
say and do not," refer to their observance of ceremonies and their neglect
of good works, and have exactly the opposite meaning to that which the Churchmen
try to give to the passage, interpreting it as an injunction to observe
ceremonies. External observances and the service of truth and goodness are for
the most part difficult to combine; the one excludes the other. So it was with
the Pharisees, so it is now with Church Christians.
If a man can be saved by the redemption, by
sacraments, and by prayer, then he does not need good works.
The Sermon on the Mount, or the Creed. One cannot
believe in both. And Churchmen have chosen the latter. The Creed is taught and
is read as a prayer in the churches, but the Sermon on the Mount is excluded
even from the Gospel passages read in the churches, so that the congregation
never hears it in church, except on those days when the whole of the Gospel is
read. Indeed, it could not he otherwise. People who believe in a wicked and
senseless God-- who has cursed the human race and devoted his own Son to
sacrifice, and a part of mankind to eternal torment--cannot believe in the God
of love. The man who believes in a God, in a Christ coming again in glory to
judge and to punish the quick and the dead, cannot believe in the Christ who
bade us turn the left cheek, judge not, forgive these that wrong us, and love
our enemies. The man who believes in the inspiration of the Old Testament and
the sacred character of David, who commanded on his deathbed the murder of an
old man who had cursed him, and whom he could not kill himself because he was
bound by an oath to him, and the similar atrocities of which the Old Testament
is full, cannot believe in the holy love of Christ. The man who believes in the
Church's doctrine of the compatibility of warfare and capital punishment with
Christianity cannot believe in the brotherhood of all men.
And what is most important of all--the man who
believes in salvation through faith in the redemption or the sacraments, cannot
devote all his powers to realizing Christ's moral teaching in his life.
The man who has been instructed by the Church in
the profane doctrine that a man cannot be saved by his own powers, but that
there is another means of salvation, will infallibly rely upon this means and
not on his own powers, which, they assure him, it is sinful to trust in.
The teaching of every Church, with its redemption
and sacraments, excludes the teaching of Christ; most of all the teaching of the
Orthodox Church with its idolatrous observances.
"But the people have always believed of
their own accord as they believe now," will be said in answer to this.
"The whole history of the Russian people proves it. One cannot deprive the
people of their traditions." This statement, too, is misleading. The people
did certainly at one time believe in something like what the Church believes in
now, though it was far from being the same thing. In spite of their
superstitious regard for ikons, housespirits, relics, and festivals with wreaths
of birch leaves, there has still always been in the people a profound moral and
living understanding of Christianity, which there has never been in the Church
as a whole, and which is only met with in its best representatives. But the
people, notwithstanding all the prejudices instilled into them by the government
and the Church, have in their best representatives long outgrown that crude
stage of understanding, a fact which is proved by the springing up everywhere of
the rationalist sects with which Russia is swarming to-day, and on which
Churchmen are now carrying on an ineffectual warfare. The people are advancing
to a consciousness of the moral, living side of Christianity. And then the
Church comes forward, not borrowing from the people, but zealously instilling
into them the petrified formalities of an extinct paganism, and striving to
thrust them back again into the darkness from which they are emerging with such
effort.
"We teach the people nothing new, nothing
but what they believe, only in a more perfect form," say the Churchmen.
This is just what the man did who tied up the full-grown chicken and thrust it
back into the shell it had come out of.
I have often been irritated, though it would be
comic if the consequences were not so awful, by observing how men shut one
another in a delusion and cannot get out of this magic circle.
The first question, the first doubt of a Russian
who is beginning to think, is a question about the ikons, and still more the
miraculous relics: Is it true that they are genuine, and that miracles are
worked through them? Hundreds of thousands of men put this question to
themselves, and their principal difficulty in answering it is the fact that
bishops, metropolitans, and all men in positions of authority kiss the relics
and wonder-working ikons. Ask the bishops and men in positions of authority why
they do so, and they will say they do it for the sake of the people, while the
people kiss them because the bishops and men in authority do so.
In spite of all the external varnish of
modernity, learning, and spirituality which the members of the Church begin
nowadays to assume in their works, their articles, their theological journals,
and their sermons, the practical work of the Russian Church consists of nothing
more than keeping the people in their present condition of coarse and savage
idolatry, and worse still, strengthening and diffusing superstition and
religious ignorance, and suppressing that living understanding of Christianity
which exists in the people side by side with idolatry.
I remember once being present in the monks'
bookshop of the Optchy Hermitage while an old peasant was choosing books for his
grandson, who could read. A monk pressed on him accounts of relics, holidays,
miraculous ikons, a psalter, etc. I asked the old man, "Has he the
Gospel?" "No." "Give him the Gospel in Russian," I said
to the monk. "That will not do for him," answered the monk. There you
have an epitome of the work of our Church.
But this is only in barbarous Russia, the
European and American reader will observe. And such an observation is just, but
only so far as it refers to the government, which aids the Church in its task of
stultification and corruption in Russia.
It is true that there is nowhere in Europe a
government so despotic and so closely allied with the ruling Church. And
therefore the share of the temporal power in the corruption of the people is
greatest in Russia. But it is untrue that the Russian Church in its influence on
the people is in any respect different from any other church.
The churches are everywhere the same, and if the
Catholic, the Anglican, or the Lutheran Church has not at hand a government as
compliant as the Russian, it is not due to any indisposition to profit by such a
government.
The Church as a church, whatever it may
be--Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, Presbyterian--every church, in so far as it is
a church, cannot but strive for the same object as the Russian Church. That
object is to conceal the real meaning of Christ's teaching and to replace it by
their own, which lays no obligation on them, excludes the possibility of
understanding the true teaching of Christ, and what is the chief consideration,
justifies the existence of priests supported at the people's expense.
What else has Catholicism done, what else is it
doing in its prohibition of reading the Gospel, and in its demand for
unreasoning submission to Church authorities and to an infallible Pope? Is the
religion of Catholicism any other than that of the Russian Church? There is the
same external ritual, the same relics, miracles, and wonder-working images of
Notre Dame, and the same processions; the same loftily vague discussions of
Christianity in books and sermons, and when it comes to practice, the same
supporting of the present idolatry. And is not the same thing done in
Anglicanism, Lutheranism, and every denomination of Protestantism which has been
formed into a church? There is the same duty laid on their congregations to
believe in the dogmas expressed in the fourth century, which have lost all
meaning for men of our times, and the same duty of idolatrous worship, if not of
relics and ikons, then of the Sabbath Day and the letter of the Bible. There is
always the same activity directed to concealing the real duties of Christianity,
and to putting in their place an external respectability and cant, as it is so
well described by the English, who are peculiarly oppressed by it. In
Protestantism this tendency is specially remarkable because it has not the
excuse of antiquity. And does not exactly the same thing show itself even in
contemporary revivalism--the revived Calvinism and Evangelicalism, to which the
Salvation Army owes its origin?
Uniform is the attitude of all the churches to
the teaching of Christ, whose name they assume for their own advantage.
The inconsistency of all church forms of religion
with the teaching of Christ is, of course, the reason why special efforts are
necessary to conceal this inconsistency from people. Truly, the need only
imagine ourselves in the position of any grown-up man, not necessarily educated,
even the simplest man of the present day, who has picked up the ideas that are
everywhere in the air nowadays of geology, physics, chemistry, cosmography, or
history, when he, for the first time, consciously compares them with the
articles of belief instilled into him in childhood, and maintained by the
churches--that God created the world in six days, and light before the sun; that
Noah shut up all the animals in his ark, and so on; that Jesus is also God the
Son, who created all before time was; that this God came down upon earth to
atone for Adam's sin; that he rose again, ascended into heaven, and sitteth on
the right hand of the Father, and will come in the clouds to judge the world,
and so on. All these propositions, elaborated by men of the fourth century, had
a certain meaning for men of that time, but for men of to-day they have no
meaning whatever. Men of the present day can repeat these words with their lips,
but believe them they cannot. For such sentences as that God lives in heaven,
that the heavens opened and a voice from somewhere said something, that Christ
rose again, and ascended somewhere in heaven, and again will come from somewhere
on the clouds, and so on, have no meaning for us.
A man who regarded the heavens as a solid, finite
vault could believe or disbelieve that God created the heavens, that the heavens
opened, that Christ ascended into heaven, but for us all these phrases nave no
sense whatever. Men of the present can only believe, as indeed they do, that
they ought to believe in this; but believe it they cannot, because it has no
meaning for them.
Even if all these phrases ought to be interpreted
in a figurative sense and are allegories, we know that in the first place all
Churchmen are not agreed about it, but, on the contrary, the majority stick to
understanding the Holy Scripture in its literal sense; and secondly, that these
allegorical interpretations are very varied and are not supported by any
evidence.
But even if a man wants to force himself to
believe in the doctrines of the Church just as they are taught to him, the
universal diffusion of education and of the Gospel and of communication between
people of different forms of religion presents a still more insurmountable
obstacle to his doing so.
A man of the present day need only buy a Gospel
for three copecks and read through the plain words, admitting of no
misinterpretation, that Christ said to the Samaritan woman "that the Father
seeketh not worshipers at Jerusalem, nor in this mountain nor in that, but
worshipers in spirit and in truth," or the saying that "the Christian
must not pray like the heathen, nor for show, but secretly, that is, in his
closet," or that Christ's follower must call no man master or father--he
need only read these words to be thoroughly convinced that the Church pastors,
who call themselves teachers in opposition to Christ's precept, and dispute
among themselves, constitute no kind of authority, and that what the Churchmen
teach us is not Christianity. Less even than that is necessary. Even if a man
nowadays did continue to believe in miracles and did not read the Gospel, mere
association with people of different forms of religion and faith, which happens
so easily in these days, compels him to doubt of the truth of his own faith. It
was all very well when a man did not see men of any other form of religion than
his own; he believed that his form of religion was the one true one. But a
thinking man has only to come into contact--as constantly happens in these
days-- with people, equally good and bad, of different denominations, who
condemn each other's beliefs, to doubt of the truth of the belief he professes
himself. In these days only a man who is absolutely ignorant or absolutely
indifferent to the vital questions with which religion deals, can remain in the
faith of the Church.
What deceptions and what strenuous efforts the
churches must employ to continue, in spite of all these tendencies subversive of
the faith, to build churches, to perform masses, to preach, to teach, to
convert, and, most of all, to receive for it all immense emoluments, as do all
these priests, pastors, incumbents, superintendents, abbots, archdeacons,
bishops, and archbishops. They need special supernatural efforts. And the
churches do, with ever-increasing intensity and zeal, make such efforts. With us
in Russia, besides other means, they employ, simple brute force, as there the
temporal power is willing to obey the Church. Men who refuse an external assent
to the faith, and say so openly, are either directly punished or deprived of
their rights; men who strictly keep the external forms of religion are rewarded
and given privileges.
That is how the Orthodox clergy proceed; but
indeed all churches without exception avail themselves of every means for the
purpose --one of the most important of which is what is now called hypnotism.
Every art, from architecture to poetry, is
brought into requisition to work its effect on men's souls and to reduce them to
a state of stupefaction, and this effect is constantly produced. This use of
hypnotizing influence on men to bring them to a state of stupefaction is
especially apparent in the proceedings of the Salvation Army, who employ new
practices to which we are unaccustomed: trumpets, drums, songs, flags, costumes,
marching, dancing, tears, and dramatic performances.
But this only displeases us because these are new
practices. Were not the old practices in churches essentially the same, with
their special lighting, gold, splendor, candles, choirs, organ, bells,
vestments, intoning, etc.?
But however powerful this hypnotic influence may
be, it is not the chief nor the most pernicious activity of the Church. The
chief and most pernicious work of the Church is that which is directed to the
deception of children--these very children of whom Christ said: "Woe to him
that offendeth one of these little ones." From the very first awakening of
the consciousness of the child they begin to deceive him, to instill into him
with the utmost solemnity what they do not themselves believe in, and they
continue to instill it into him till the deception has by habit grown into the
child's nature. They studiously deceive the child on the most important subject
in life, and when the deception has so grown into his life that it would be
difficult to uproot it, then they reveal to him the whole world of science and
reality, which cannot by any means be reconciled with the beliefs that have been
instilled into him, leaving it to him to find his way as best he can out of
these contradictions.
If one set oneself the task of trying to confuse
a man so that he could not think clearly nor free himself from the perplexity of
two opposing theories of life which had been instilled into him from childhood,
one could not invent any means more effectual than the treatment of every young
man educated in our so-called Christian society.
It is terrible to think what the churches do to
men. But if one imagines oneself in the position of the men who constitute the
Church, we see they could not act differently. The churches are placed in a
dilemma: the Sermon on the Mount or the Nicene Creed--the one excludes the
other. If a man sincerely believes in the Sermon on the Mount, the Nicene Creed
must inevitably lose all meaning and significance for him, and the Church and
its representatives together with it. If a man believes in the Nicene Creed,
that is, in the Church, that is, in those who call themselves its
representatives, the Sermon on the Mount becomes superfluous for him. And
therefore the churches cannot but make every possible effort to obscure the
meaning of the Sermon on the Mount, and to attract men to themselves. It is only
due to the intense zeal of the churches in this direction that the influence of
the churches has lasted hitherto.
Let the Church stop its work of hypnotizing the
masses, and deceiving children even for the briefest interval of time, and men
would begin to understand Christ's teaching. But this understanding will be the
end of the churches and all their influence. And therefore the churches will not
for an instant relax their zeal in the business of hypnotizing grown-up people
and deceiving children. This, then, is the work of the churches: to instill a
false interpretation of Christ's teaching into men, and to prevent a true
interpretation of it for the majority of so- called believers.
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Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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