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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Church Reform, by Richard Carlile
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Church Reform
- The Only Means to that End, Stated in a Letter to Sir
- Robert Peel, Bart. First Lord of The Treasury
-
-Author: Richard Carlile
-
-Release Date: July 11, 2012 [EBook #40211]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHURCH REFORM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger
-
-
-
-
-
-CHURCH REFORM:
-
-THE ONLY MEANS TO THAT END, STATED IN A LETTER TO Sir ROBERT PEEL, Bart.
-FIRST LORD OF THE TREASURY, &c.
-
-By Richard Carlile.
-
-TO WHICH IS PREFACED A CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE BISHOP OF LONDON ON THE
-SAME SUBJECT.
-
-London:
-
-PRINTED & PUBLISHED. By R. CARLILE, 62 FLEET STREET.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE BISHOP OF LONDON, IN 1833, ON THE SUBJECT OF A
-REFORM IN THE CHURCH.
-
-"To the Right Reverend Father in God, the Lord Bishop of London.
-
-"62, Fleet Street, November 18,1833.
-
-"My Lord,
-
-"I have long and deliberately thought, that the state of the Country,
-the state of the Church, and the state of the Public Mind in relation
-to the Church, calls upon me to offer myself for an interview with your
-Lordship, as my Diocesan, that your Lordship may hear from me what I
-have to advance against the present state and condition of the Church,
-and what I have to propose as an immediately necessary and proper
-Reform.
-
-"I offer to wait on your Lordship, with your Lordship's consent;
-and promise, that my conversation shall be altogether courteous and
-reasonable.
-
-"I am one of your Lordship's scattered sheep, wishing for the fold of a
-good shepherd,--(which is Christ Jesus),--
-
-"RICHARD CARLILE."
-
-"P. S.--I may add, my Lord Bishop, that I am altogether a Christian; save
-the mark at which superstition has been planted upon Christianity."
-
-
-*****
-
-
-"Fulham, November 20,1833.
-
-"Sir,
-
-"I have to acknowledge the receipt of your letter, in which you propose
-an interview with me, for the purpose of making known to me your
-opinions respecting the present state of the Church.
-
-"I beg to say, that I shall be ready to receive, and to give all due
-consideration to any communication which you may think proper to make
-me in writing; as being, on many accounts, a more convenient method than
-that of personal conference.
-
-"I remain, Sir,
-
-"Your obedient Servant,
-
-"C. J. LONDON."
-
-
-*****
-
-
-"To the Right Reverend Father in God, the Lord Bishop of London.
-
-"62, Fleet Street, November 24,1833.
-
-"My Lord Bishop,
-
-"In answer to my proposal to meet your Lordship in conversation, on
-the state of the Country, the state of the Church, and the state of the
-Public Mind with relation to the Church, your Lordship has encouraged me
-to write what I have to say, and has promised to receive it and to give
-it due consideration. I write as early as my circumstances have afforded
-me the necessary leisure and composure of mind.
-
-"The first point to which I beg leave to call your Lordship's attention
-is--that there is a very numerous degree of dissent from the Established
-Church among the people of this country.
-
-"The second point is, that this spirit of dissent has led to a very
-extended opposition to the support of the Church in its fiscal claims.
-
-"The third point is, that there is a preparation of a public mind going
-forward for the putting of the present Established Church on the same
-footing as the present Establishments of the Dissenters--the footing of
-voluntary rather than legal support; and that the preparation of this
-state of mind is accelerated by the embarrassed state of the country.
-
-"The evidence of these three points in prospect is, that the present
-state of the Church will be entirely overthrown in the course of two or
-three Sessions of Parliament.
-
-"On the principle of dissent from the Established Church, I have to
-observe, that it is desirable there should be no dissent; but then the
-Church should be invulnerable. There can be no popular dissent from any
-Institution that can be defended as good and best; and though I am
-instructed to allow that the general body of dissenters from the Church
-have dissented on very frivolous, even on indefensible grounds,
-(inasmuch as the Dissenters have not corrected in themselves the errors
-of the Church), there still remains the proof that where the Church has
-been assailed or dissented from, it has not been in a condition to
-defend and justify itself.
-
-"This incapability of the Church to defend and justify itself, where
-assailed, must have arisen from a defective state of its doctrine and
-discipline.
-
-"This doctrine and discipline is founded upon the literal reading of the
-Sacred Scriptures, or the books of the Old and New Testament.
-
-"I impugn the literal as an erroneous reading: it claims to be local
-and temporal history, and is not. Not one of its apparent historical
-subjects can be verified. Every one of them can be falsified, upon the
-principle that other things were being done at the time, and that other
-people dwelt in the places; and that nothing of contemporary character,
-purporting to be history, has corroborated the historical claims of the
-Old and New Testament.
-
-"It is said of the writings of the Old and New Testament, that they are
-allegorical, and that they contain the moral of human salvation from
-evil. Under this view, they may be true, and may be important as a
-matter of instruction. I so believe them to be true, and to be important
-as a matter of instruction; but as your Lordship may put me on the task
-of mentioning some particular facts and grounds on which I impugn the
-literal reading of the Sacred Scriptures, and may properly suggest that
-it is necessary this ground should be first cleared before we try them
-on the other ground, I submit, as two well-weighed and conclusive
-propositions:--
-
-"1st. That the person of Jesus Christ, or the name, is not in mention by
-any author of the first century, if the passage in Josephus be excepted
-as an interpolation; and that this defect in the evidence is fatal to
-the historical claim.
-
-"2nd. That the people called Jews, or Israelites, neither formed colony
-nor nation in that part of the earth which is now called Judea, or Holy
-Land, before the time of Alexander of Macedon; consequently all that is
-said of their dwelling in and going out of Egypt, their sojourn in the
-Wilderness, their warfare with the Canaanites and Philistines, their
-occupation of that country, their subsequent conquest, captivity, and
-restoration, is entirely fiction or allegory.
-
-"I read it as political and moral instruction veiled in allegory \
-and as it is to be desired, that, in the removal of a system, all its
-defects be made apparent, so it becomes a desideratum, that we account
-for the origin of the sects named Jews and Christians.
-
-"This may be done in two ways---one, that they were public philosophical
-sects; the other, that they were degrees of order in the ancient
-mysteries.
-
-"The moral of the allegory belonging to each is throughout the same, and
-is an encouragement to the resistance and overthrow of the tyranny of
-man, when it appears in the open authority of a King, or in the covert
-authority of a Priest; and the preparing of a people to do this, and
-the doing it, is precisely what is meant by human salvation,--which is a
-sure and certain salvation from earthly evils.
-
-"The absence of a proof of personal identity in the characters sketched
-in the Old and New Testament, is the presence of proof (if utility
-of any kind there be in the form of the allegory), that the persons
-mentioned are like what all the gods and goddesses of ancient religion
-were--personifications of principles, either physical or moral, or both.
-
-"In so receiving the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, I find
-them pregnant with the most important political and moral instruction.
-In receiving them according to the literal or historical reading, I find
-difficulties insuperable, and such as justify all that Thomas Paine or
-any other straightforward critic has advanced on the subject, while the
-moral and the allegory were concealed from their view.
-
-"The point at which this personification of principles begins, is the
-point at which superstition begins; for though knowledge may justify the
-poetic licence taken with language, ignorance mistakes and evil design
-misrepresents, until the personification is extensively dwelt on as a
-reality.
-
-"Here I trace the fundamental errors of the present doctrine and
-discipline of the Established Church; the errors upon which dissent has
-progressed, upon which an outcry of infidelity has been raised, but upon
-which the Church could not defend itself and maintain its position.
-
-"My remedy for the present difficulties, and my proposition \ for
-a Reform in the Church is, that no difficulties, mysteries, or
-superstition be allowed to remain attached to its doctrines and
-discipline; that the allegory of the Sacred Scriptures be avowed, the
-personifications taught upon their principles as known principles of
-nature, and not as personified incomprehensibilities; that the Church,
-in short, be made a school for the people, than which, if it originally
-meant any good thing, could mean no other thing, where from time to time
-all acquired or acquirable knowledge should be taught. On this ground,
-the utility of the Institution is evident, the benefit to the people
-certain, the idea of dissent inadmissible.
-
-"In this first letter, I have thought it necessary only to give your
-Lordship the leading points of objection to the present doctrine and
-discipline of the Church. With details in proof, I can proceed to a
-voluminous length; and I now offer myself to submit to the catechism of
-your Lordship, or to that of any person whom your Lordship shall appoint
-to see me, with the distinct promise, that I will not evade the giving
-of a direct answer to any distinct and intelligible question that can be
-put to me upon any part of this important subject.
-
-"It may not be improper that I now declare to your Lordship, that, after
-having worn out the spirit of persecution by a large amount of personal
-and pecuniary suffering, I have never been acting upon any other motive
-than a love of truth, and honesty, and public good; that it is under
-such a motive, and no other mixed motive, that I have now presented
-myself to your Lordship, viewing your Lordship as a public functionary
-that has inherited and not created the error of which I complain; and
-hoping that I shall be met with the disposition of a fair investigation,
-when so much good is at this moment the promised consequence,
-
-"I am, My Lord,
-
-"Your Lordship's most obedient humble servant,
-
-"RICHARD CARLILE."
-
-
-
-
-LETTER TO SIR ROBERT PEEL
-
-Sir,
-
-I write as a politician to a politician, with oblivion of the past,
-without any profession of respect for the present, waiting and watching
-your future.
-
-I am stimulated to address you, and the country through your name,
-on reading your Address to the Electors of Tamworth, after taking the
-offices of First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer.
-
-The portion of your Address which I select as my subject, is that
-relating to the Church--the first of all political subjects. Not to
-understand how to deal with this, is to be utterly deficient in every
-other political branch. Not to reform this, is to reform nothing. State
-ever did, and ever will, depend upon the Church.
-
-As far as your individual promise is sufficient, it is, that Church
-Rates shall be abolished. This is so far good. It has been a disgrace to
-all parties concerned, and an injury to every housekeeper, that a Church
-Rate has existed. Such a rate has existed only because of the dishonest
-application of that Church Property which was the legitimate supply for
-all Church Buildings and repairs. And should the rate be continued
-under any other form of taxation, and not supplied from existing Church
-Property, an injury and an injustice will still be inflicted upon the
-people.
-
-You seem willing to abate the religious ceremony of marriage, so far as
-to allow each couple to let it be to its liking. Pray go a step farther,
-and let the law cease to trammel that civil contract with religious
-ceremony, while each couple will be at liberty of its own accord to go
-through whatever religious ceremony it may think proper. And while
-on this subject, I pray you to give, or seek for the poor, justice in
-facile divorce. The mystery of marriage is too sacred for constraint.
-It should never be other than a spirit of pure and mutual liberty and
-consent, subject to some legal recognition for the care of offspring.
-Much of the morals of society must depend on the freedom of marriage and
-facility of divorce. We have not hitherto been right on this subject.
-That can be no good tie which opposes the will of an individual in
-so sacred and delicate an affair as that of marriage. The beginning,
-middle, and end of marriage should be the love of affection and
-friendship. Marriage should cease when affection between the parties has
-ceased. It may be truly added, that marriage has morally ceased, when
-affection has ceased. Then the legal tie becomes an abomination, a
-source of vice and wrong; and, in nine cases out of ten, the religious
-ceremony is treated as a burlesque, save the idea, that it is a
-fashionable distinction to have observed it as the chief criterion of
-legal marriage.
-
-I entirely agree with you, that Church Property should not be alienated
-from strictly ecclesiastical purposes. I have changed my view, and see
-more than formerly on this head.
-
-For the same reason, I entirely disagree with you on any commutation of
-tithes. Let the original application be restored, and no one will find
-fault but he who loses by that just principle, that first and best of
-Church Property and most important of popular rights.
-
-The point, in your address, on which my letter is to be based, is the
-following paragraph:--
-
-"With regard to alterations in the laws which govern our ecclesiastical
-establishment, I have had no recent opportunity of giving that grave
-consideration to a subject of the deepest interest, which could alone
-justify me in making any public declaration of opinion. It is a subject
-which must undergo the fullest deliberation, and into that deliberation
-the Government will enter with the sincerest desire to remove every
-abuse that can impair the efficiency of the Establishment, extend the
-sphere of its usefulness, and to strengthen and confirm its just claims
-upon the respect and affections of the people."
-
-This is just what I wanted you to say. It is honest, if you will but act
-up to it. This is the sort of Church Reform that I propose. Here we have
-from you, as the Chief Minister, a promise that your Administration will
-enter into the fullest deliberation, with the sincerest desire to remove
-every abuse that can impair the efficiency of the Church Establishment,
-extend the sphere of its usefulness, and strengthen and confirm its just
-claims upon the respect and affections of the people. Had I been called
-to your situation, I could not have promised more; but I should have
-acted up to that promise, and I hope you will so act. In the performance
-of that promise, everlasting fame will be yours. So act--and greater
-than the name of Lycurgus or Solon--greater than that of Cicero,
-Constantine, or Napoleon--greater than the name of any past man will
-be that of Robert Peel. If the Duke of Wellington join you in this
-sentiment, and goes manly and honestly forward to its accomplishment,
-his, too, will be an imperishable name. This would wreathe him an
-evergreen chaplet, that would survive the memory of all his physical
-victories! This is the great moral victory to be obtained before any
-society can settle down into peace, welfare, and happiness:--_the best
-use that can be made of the Church_. It is a subject of the deepest
-interest; it requires grave consideration; I pray that it may have that
-consideration. I pray that I may be heard by a Commission, in grave
-consideration of that subject of the deepest interest, before any
-legislative change be entered upon. I put myself forward in this letter.
-Many will be the schemes proposed to your consideration: let mine be
-one, and then select and improve the best.
-
-The first consideration is--What is now the Church? What are its
-defects? What the cause of that dissent, which has made a revision
-necessary?
-
-The second consideration will be--What ought the Church to be, so as to
-leave no ground and reason of dissent? To some minds, the fickleness and
-fallibility of human nature will appear as an insurmountable obstacle
-to the construction of such a Church. I see farther and will propose in
-order.
-
-I flatter myself that I am writing this letter with very proper feelings
-toward all institutions and all persons. I suspend, _pro tem_., all
-quarrels that I have with all men, to assist you in this common good,
-in which you deserve and will have, in the ratio of their goodness,
-the assistance of all good men. If I can sink the past in oblivion for
-common good, who should say he cannot? To the altar and shrine of that
-Reformed Church, which you contemplate, I have sacrificed property
-much--all I had, and years of liberty many. I am still worshipping,
-still so sacrificing, both property and personal liberty, and will so
-continue to the end. I say it not boastfully; but in comparative claim
-to attention, and in encouragement and example of union to assist you in
-the performance of your present promise.
-
-Let me be permitted to say, too, that the Church is a subject which I
-have studied in its origin, its history, its first principle, all its
-dissent or variation from that first principle, down to its present
-standing. I have so studied it, that I cannot now find author or
-preacher who can present me any thing new as to its general merits, past
-or present. This is the chief ground on which I solicit your and the
-public attention to my view of this subject of Church Reform. I presume
-to know what the Church is, and what it ought to be.
-
-It may be taken as a point to be yielded by all parties, that the desire
-with regard to the Law Established Church is, the removal of all ground
-of dissent, so as not to leave it a mere sectarian Church, which any
-mere abatement of existing dissenting objections will do. No Dissenter
-can complain, if the ground of his dissent be removed from the Church.
-And if there be no ground of future dissent left, there can be no
-future complaint, no new dissension arising. Without the absence of the
-possibility of dissent, there can be no just holding and application of
-a public and common property for the business of the Church. With
-that absence, the property is justly held and applied. Any law that
-recognizes and tolerates the Dissenter, recognizes and tolerates the
-justness of his dissent, and calls for the primary justice of removing
-the ground of dissent. No man can reasonably say, _let us not be of one
-Church_; but every man can reasonably say, _let the Church be purified
-of its errors_; and while any man can show an error, it is his duty to
-call for the purification, and the duty of authorities to attend to
-his call and to purify. A permanent Church then must be an improving,
-self-purifying Church, and continue a true picture of the best state
-of the human mind, meeting every well-founded and majority-decided call
-upon its utility.
-
-Any idea of keeping up a Law Established Church with public property,
-surrounded by Dissenting Churches, without a public property, can enter
-the head of no man who understands the subject. There can be no peace
-or final settlement under such an arrangement. The effect to be
-accomplished is, not to break up the Church Property; but to break up
-the Dissenters from the Church. This will startle the present state of
-mind and feeling. I propose no abridgement of equal liberty. Is not this
-the grand _desideratum?_ Can it be accomplished?--I think it can, and so
-proceed to unfold the two-fold consideration.
-
-First.--What is now the Church? What are its defects? What the cause of
-that dissent which has made a revision necessary?
-
-This, in reality, is but one question, with a three-fold expression.
-
-The Church is now the Theatre of the Drama of the Books of Common
-Prayer, the Thirty-nine Articles, and the Old and New Testament; to
-which is generally added a sermonic epilogue or exhortation, commonly
-called a Sermon.
-
-Be not offended at my use of the word _Theatre_ here: no other
-would substitute. Its root is the Greek [------], God, and signified
-originally, the house, place or stage, where the Drama of Theism or
-attributes of Deity were exhibited. The word is now much distorted
-from its root, in being made to describe the place of modern dramatic
-performances.
-
-Nor must the word _Drama_ be objected to; because the ceremony of the
-Church was originally so constructed, so meant, and so practised, as I
-will prove in the course of this letter.
-
-Even the word _Tragedy_ has its root in the Greek word [------], a goat,
-and signifies, in the dramatic exhibition of Theism, the death of the
-year, under the form of a personification, in the twelfth or zodiacal
-month of the goat. So that the death sorrowed for and lamented, was,
-dramatically, the apparent death of the sun, the death of the year, in
-the sign or month of the goat; and on St. Thomas's day, as we read in
-the Prophet Ezekiel, chap. viii. v. 14--"_and behold there sat women
-weeping for Tammuz;_" and v. 16--"_about five and twenty men, with their
-backs toward the temple of the Lord, and their faces toward the east;
-and they worshipped the sun toward the east_," which is no other than
-a representation of the performance of the tragedy, in which the
-performers had lost the moral of the Lord's Temple: precisely the
-present state and condition of the Church. All ancient mythology is
-in harmony with this conclusion; and the Christian tragedy is only a
-continued version, uniting the general drama of human morals with the
-annual tragedy of solar physics, and forming a two-fold or two-keyed
-allegory or mystery, physical and moral, as it was known even in the
-Celtic or Druid Church. Christianity was never new, or young, in this
-country, by existing records.
-
-There are not many persons in this secret, perhaps, not even you, the
-first Minister of the country; so it will be deemed too abstruse and
-mystical on which to find a warrant for legislation or change of law:
-but I strenuously maintain, that such was the origin of the Christian
-Church, and such is now its generally lost meaning. The proof of the
-solar part of the allegory is not so much to my present purpose as
-the proof of the general drama of human morals being the basis of the
-present mystery of the Christian Church.
-
-To stay a growing difficulty, we must go to the root:--it will grow
-again, if we do not go to the root. It will be so with the present
-Church, and all attempts to reform it.
-
-In plainer language, then, I will describe the existing Church, as
-having, in its ceremonies and business, the mystery of the Christian
-Religion, without its revelation; that all the defects and all the
-grounds of dissent from it are the absence of the revelation, or want of
-knowing the meaning of the mystery. Whatever are called its doctrines,
-are all mysterious; its discipline is equally mysterious, and by its
-present ministers, unaccountable. Dissenters have dissented without
-being able to assign a reason for their dissent, and have set up for
-themselves something equally mysterious and unaccountable; and so the
-whole principle and practice of Religion in the country is in confusion
-and conflict; and no measure can reconcile the dissentients, short
-of developing the first principles of the Church and the Christian
-Religion, the one language, the one course of reason, the one ground of
-human welfare, the one system of morals, which is now buried in a
-Babel of confused tongues, doctrines, idol-houses, and superstitious
-ceremonies.
-
-The ground, then, on which I proceed, is, that TO REFORM THE CHURCH, THE
-DISSENTERS MUST BE ANNIHILATED.
-
-Not annihilated by slaughter or physical force; but by superior
-knowledge, and consequent superior teaching, by openness, by honesty, by
-throwing off the mask of hypocrisy, and leaving the Church of Christ to
-be no longer a theatre of dramatic ceremony in mystery, with parts and
-actors as ignorant as automata of their subject, and who not knowing,
-can value it not, beyond the salaries they receive for its performance
-in unrevealed mystery.
-
-Can that be a Reform of the Church, with "just claims upon the respect
-and affections of the people," which shall leave a ground and excuse
-for dissent by any one of the people? I say, NO. Can it be a Church of
-Christ? I say, NO. Do we know what a Church of Christ is in reality? For
-myself, I say, YES. A Church, too, founded upon an understanding of the
-_Sacred_ Scriptures, of the Old and New Testament, upon the revelation
-of the mystery of those Scriptures, and upon all the first principles
-essential and conducive to general human and social welfare; that
-shall no more admit of dissent than the multiplication table, or the
-accurately placed sun-dial, than the elements of Euclid, and all the
-never-failing tests of the science of chemistry. The Apostle that told
-us to "_prove all things, and hold fast that which is good_," gave us
-a definition of the exhortation of the Evangelist or the
-Baptist--"_Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand_." A repenting
-and a proving people are necessary to make a Church of Christ.
-Repentance and enquiry are the pillars and foundations of that Church;
-without repentance and enquiry there can be no Church of Christ; and I
-ask, confidently ask, with the assurance that a true answer must be in
-the negative,--has anything calling itself a Christian Church in Europe,
-established by law, or dissenting from such an establishment, anything
-to do with the two principles of repentance and proving, the one meaning
-reflection by animadversion, the other a trial by outward tests of that
-reflection? There is not a congregation of people in Europe, calling
-itself a Church, that is founded upon an understanding of the Sacred
-Scriptures, the understanding which shows that the "letter killeth, but
-the spirit giveth life."
-
-I impugn, as being in error,--I denounce, as that error is the cause of
-all dissent, of dissent uninstructed,--all the churches or congregations
-called churches in the British dominions; and I call for a reform that
-shall eradicate that dissent, and make all become one in efficiency,
-usefulness, and respect and affections of the people.
-
-The present state of the Church is, that it is a theatre of mystery,
-giving no solid satisfaction to the people, and for which, among the
-receivers of salaries and benefits only, can there be a particle of real
-respect and affection. Its defects are, that none understand, neither
-priests nor people understand what any part of its dramatic ceremonies
-mean. And this is the cause of that dissent which has made a revision
-necessary.
-
-What, then, ought the Church to be, so as to have no ground and reason
-of dissent?
-
-In two words, I answer, A SCHOOL.
-
-What kind of a school?
-
-A school for knowledge only; for revelation without mystery; and for
-practical use and benefit to every member, without parade or pomp, even
-without ceremony, beyond what order and good may require.
-
-And would such be a Church of Christ?
-
-Such alone can be a Church of Christ. Christ the Logos, Jesus the
-Saviour of Man, is, in principle, nothing more in its dramatic or
-mystified and present church presentation, than a personification of the
-principle of reason, or of the knowledge of which the human being is a
-recipient, and without which can have no salvation, has no relation to
-the idea of a salvation, or any evil from which to be saved. Such is a
-true revelation of the mystery of Christ.
-
-And a Church of Christ has no other true meaning, than a convenient and
-sessional gathering of the people in districts, for purposes of mutual
-enquiry and mutual instruction; for catechism and intelligible and
-useful exhortation; for revelation of knowledge, or mind, or reason;
-for mental improvement; and not for mystery, nor dramatic ceremony, nor
-superstition, nor idolatry. It is in this sense only, that the Church
-of Christ is superior to all other Churches--the word Church meaning a
-gathering or association of the people for mental improvement.
-
-This generation has no proof, nor has history a warrant, that any other
-generation of man has had a proof of the material existence of the being
-called Jesus Christ. The seeming narrative of such a purport is the
-current mythology of the ancients, or people of two thousand years ago,
-taken up by us in its literal sense, and so mistaken; so mistaken, as to
-warrant a belief in the literality and fact of the material, temporal,
-and local existence of every one of the Gods of the Pantheon, or of
-human imagination, and then we shall have rivalry enough for the best.
-But then, I should make a choice of Christ, as the only one that makes
-due provision for the right cultivation of the human mind; the only one
-that has laid the foundations of the kingdom of Heaven, in the peace and
-good-will of mankind, dwelling upon a land flowing with milk and honey,
-and overflowing with knowledge.
-
-I challenge the Bishops and the whole priesthood, to produce me any
-knowledge that is intelligible to themselves or to any other person, as
-an interpretation of the narratives in the Old and New Testament, about
-Jehovah or Christ, other than that which I am now unfolding. Mine has
-a warrant in the spirit of the language of the books, in the roots of
-words, and in all the principles of things that relate to man's welfare;
-and more particularly in that to man most important of all, MORAL
-SCIENCE.
-
-I am not insensible to the circumstance, that a man might have a
-knowledge of a thing, of a train of circumstances, of causes and
-effects, in his own mind, with a difficulty to find language in which
-to communicate it, that shall be equally and immediately clear to all
-other states of mind. A resemblance, nearness, or similarity of mind,
-almost an equality of knowledge, is requisite to a clear understanding.
-It is thus, that men, in different languages, understand each other,
-when other men, bystanders, do not understand them. And it so happens,
-in all first developments of science, the new discovery wants a new
-language in which to be presented to others, and it often happens, that
-first words made or chosen are not the best and clearest.
-
-Know you not, Sir, that knowledge is power? You must have read that
-celebrated axiom of Bacon's; but have you considered it, have you
-reflected, have you repented and proved that axiom? I may add, by way
-of explanation, that knowledge is the only moral power. What seeks your
-Church to be? Or what should it seek to be, other than a moral power? On
-what rock, then, must the Church of Christ be built, so that the gates
-of hell, or of evil design, or of dissent, may not prevail against it?
-On what, but KNOWLEDGE? Is it now so built? Is not, rather, the present
-ministry of the Church more afraid of knowledge than of the people's
-ignorant dissent; more of "Carlile and his crew," than of all the
-dissenters; more of free discussion, than of any kind of superstition?
-The dissent of knowledge and the dissent of ignorance, though disunited,
-are becoming too powerful for your knowledgeless Church; and you, at
-last, have consented to speak of its necessary reform! To which will you
-yield, or whom will you join? Those who dissent by knowledge, or those
-by ignorance? If you take the former, your work will be perfected at
-once; if the latter, your work will never be done, and you will become
-weaker and weaker; for I know not one body of worshipping associated
-dissenters, whose ground of association and dissent is better than that
-of the Established Church. Find me the minister of one of them, who will
-stand up in discussion before a public audience with me, so as to have
-his language reported. I have not yet found him in England or Scotland.
-The pretences of the kind that have been made, have been so deficient
-in respectability of character and of good manners, that I do not think
-them worth a recognition.
-
-I am not insensible to the circumstance, that you have a difficult task
-to perform, and I am not sure that you are equal to it: I hope you
-are; that is, I would have you so, or any other who may be the King's
-adviser, and the real head of the Church. Nothing is wanted for this
-reform but honesty and moral courage. Where the will and the power
-exist, the task is an easy one. _I desire to save the Church and its
-property, and to annihilate the Dissenters_. I would have the present
-dignities of the Church dignify themselves in a triumph over the
-Dissenters. A collusion with the Dissenters will be a hugging of
-pestilence and death to the bosom of the Church. There can be no
-co-existence: there was proof enough of that in the seventeenth century,
-and still in Scotland. A revolution in the affairs and manners of
-the Church must take place, even by your own confession, in language
-admitting of the inference; and I desire that good may be educed from
-that revolution. I would make the Church triumph in the correction of
-every mental error in the country, and noble would be that triumph!
-
-You may ask, how is this to be done? I will tell you. Let the Church
-become the oracle of truth, the fountain of knowledge, the mistress
-and dispenser of all science. Let its ministers declare this great
-truth:--_that, hitherto, the mystery of Christ has alone been taught in
-the Church, without the revelation of that mystery; that the Church has
-been the depository of that sacred mystery, until the fulness of time,
-in which it is promised, that all people shall be prepared to partake of
-the revelation; that the mystery has been kept up in outward form
-and without any spiritual grace; that the spiritual grace and all the
-pro-mises are to be fulfilled in the understanding of the revelation;
-that the spirit or revelation has been buried in a resting on the letter
-of the Sacred Scriptures; that Christ is only now risen or beginning to
-rise, after thousands of years, we may say three thousand years, rather
-than three days of crucifixion, death and burial_. In me, he has risen
-indeed, as, in me, he has been last crucified; and I crave the pleasure
-of seeing his principles rise in the Church; for that craving is the
-nature of Christ. Let the Church declare _that the time is now come to
-reveal the mystery of Christ_. Exhibition has not been revelation.
-
-What, then, is the revelation of the mystery of Christ?
-
-It is, that Christ is God and not man, that it is God in man; that it is
-knowledge, reason, or all its essences in moral principle; and that
-it is not an idol to be worshipped as a statue, but a principle to be
-taught and inherited by the human race. The mystery sets forth Christ as
-a statue or image to be worshipped after the fashion of the Pagan world.
-The revelation teaches, that it is the principle of knowledge, to
-be gained by labour, by asking, seeking and knocking, or prayer; by
-repentance, that is, reflection; by enquiry, that is, proving all
-things, and holding fast that which is good; by mutual instruction, by
-free discussion, by whatever constitutes a school for useful knowledge,
-and that constitution is a Church of Christ: all the rest is mistake
-or imposture, whether it be established by law, or ignorantly dissented
-from; whether it have a King for its head, or be carried on in a garret
-or a cellar.
-
-I must go to the root of my subject, and leave no excuse for evasion.
-The root of religion is the relation of God to man, and man to God.
-
-What does man know of God?
-
-Books can teach him nothing, unless those books be written pictures of
-existing things and things that have existed. Things that have existed
-have no source of trial or test, but in the similarity of things that do
-exist.
-
-Man's knowledge of existence is of a twofold nature: the things that
-do exist, and the power by which he has that knowledge. The first is
-distinguished as material existence; the second, as spiritual existence.
-Material and spiritual existence are the only two positive existences
-of which man can speak or write, to which no inspiration can add; for
-inspiration is only knowledge; and the recognition of material and
-spiritual existence is the limitation of knowledge. The details of
-knowledge can be nothing more than definitions and descriptions of
-existing things,--the plantings of art upon nature.
-
-All knowledge is matter of art. Nature is the thing known--art the
-knowledge of the thing. This art can not only know nature, but can
-invent descriptions of unreal things; can describe things by types, and
-principles by figurative allegories; can imitate nature by appearances,
-such as pictures, statues, &c.; and can, by mysterious constructions
-of language, make the appearance of a thing to represent a principle or
-describe qualities in the absence of the thing: this is spiritual power.
-Nothing of the kind is seen beyond human life; certainly not beyond
-animal life. We may, therefore, reasonably speak of spiritual power or
-spiritual existence as confined to the human race--speech and language
-being a primary necessity to its existence: the art of other animals
-extending not beyond their wants.
-
-Man, then, is the creator of spirit; and, beyond man, spirit is not
-known. Man is not known to be the creature, but the creator of art; not
-the creature, but the creator of spirit, soul, mind, reason, knowledge,
-or whatever other term relates to the mental phenomena.
-
-I maintain, because it is a truth of the deepest importance to the human
-race, and without the knowledge of which nothing can work well in human
-society, that man is the creator of all spiritual existence; and in the
-sense in which God is a spirit, man is the creator of that God, and has
-been the creator of every description of existence that has been made of
-such a God.
-
-We may also correctly speak of this two-fold existence as physical and
-moral. The physical, its forms and compositions excepted, is eternal and
-immutable--the moral is evanescent, mortal, and mutable in its personal
-existence, but immutable and immortal as to principle. The root of God,
-therefore, as of man, is in physical power, which is correctly described
-as almighty, immutable and omnipresent: it is only omniscient, as being
-the fountain of knowledge--the all that can be known. Science is art;
-therefore, there can be no science in an infinite or eternal sense, as
-we can speak of the physical power of Deity; but science, as art, is
-limited to human power,--the all that is known, and not the all that
-exists to be known.
-
-This is evidence, that man has created not only all the descriptions
-that have been made of spiritual existence, but that existence itself:
-and so it is true, that man has been the inventor of a spiritual God;
-that religion and all its appurtenances have been the offspring of
-the art of man; and that man alone is capable of correcting any of its
-errors,--which is to be done in the same way by which I propose to put
-down the Dissenters--the acquisition and communication of knowledge by
-the Church.
-
-I pass by the Pagan mythology, which, in its understood personifications
-and allegories, is as beautiful a picture of physical and moral nature,
-as the Christian Religion itself; and I rest on the Christian, as,
-when understood, the only religion for human improvement that has been
-presented to the notice of the human race.
-
-As man is the inventor of the Spiritual Deity, which is peculiarly the
-Deity of the Christian Religion, so I infer, by evidence to come, that
-the Deity of the Christian Religion is no other, nothing more, than a
-personification of the mental phenomena of the human race, which was
-the work of the philosophers and scientific men of the Pagan world: and
-noble was their task--important for man was their production. Not the
-thing called the Christian Religion now in existence, which is no other
-than a religion mistaken, a corruption and Pagan superstition, the dregs
-and drivellings of the gross ignorance and superstition of the dark
-ages; something two thousand times worse than the Paganism of the
-Millenium before the so-called Christian era. But a personification
-after deifications of the mental phenomena, is a sounding, preaching,
-writing, carving or painting God, as the perfection of knowledge;
-Christ, as the perfection of reason; and the Holy Spirit of
-communication, as the perfection of all attainable moral power by the
-human race: making those perfections to be things sought, the things
-worshipped, the best religion, as it undoubtedly is, for the whole human
-race. It was the best plan of scholastic improvement, when acted upon,
-that human wisdom could have devised, and to this I would have you bring
-our Church.
-
-There is a two-fold way of reading the Bible, which I have before
-described, as it is described in the Second Epistle to the Corinthians,
-chap. iii. v. 6, a reading or a ministration according to the letter,
-and another according to the spirit. The Apostle or author of that
-Epistle declares himself to have been a minister of the New Testament
-according to the spirit, and complains, that the Jews, in his time, did
-not know how to read the Old Testament. I declare that the Church now
-existing ministers to nothing but the letter of the Bible, which is a
-ministration not to life, but to death; and such is the evidence of the
-whole era of such a ministration; such has been the cause of the dark
-ages, on which no dissenting sect has yet thrown a ray of light; and the
-reform that is now required throughout the Church, that established by
-law and all others, is the understanding of the Sacred Scriptures, that
-shall cause them to be taught according to the spirit, the spirit of
-knowledge, reason and constant human improvement. I now see, that none
-of the people called Jews or Christians know how to read either Old or
-New Testament according to the spirit.
-
-To read the Bible according to the letter, is to make it a piece of
-human history; to make a creation of the world, and an attempt to
-account for everything past, present and future. I proclaim this conduct
-to be the folly of ignorance, opposed by all real history of the human
-race, and by all the developments of science, in relation to the earth's
-existence, its qualities, and its relation to the general planetary
-system.
-
-I challenge the proof of any one apparent historical fact, in either Old
-or New Testament. I challenge the production of the existing mention
-of any one of the supposed facts about the personal or material Jesus
-Christ, within one hundred years of the time at which it is said to have
-happened, putting the disputed passages of Josephus and Tacitus out of
-the question.
-
-I challenge the proof of the existence of the Jews, in any country, as a
-distinct nation, before the time of Alexander the Great.
-
-No other contemporaneous history recognizes such an assumed history as
-that which I challenge.
-
-And farther, I am prepared to prove that Christianity existed among
-Romans, Greeks, Persians, Hindoos, and Celtic Druids, or the northern
-nations, before the Christian era.
-
-The present ministration of the Church entirely depends on the necessity
-of a clear historical proof of the literal contents of the Old and New
-Testaments.
-
-But a spiritual reading of that volume solves every difficulty, and
-teaches us how to extract the truth, the system of religion that is
-a necessary and sure salvation for the human race, when reduced to
-practice, and to see it as a part of the wisdom of all ancient men of
-all times and countries.
-
-It is ten years and upwards since I sent a petition to you, Sir, to be
-laid before the King, asking for a commission to examine my oppugnancy
-to the religion and administration of the existing Church. Will you now
-grant that commission? If you will not, you, while you remain in power,
-will blunder on in and through growing troubles and difficulties,
-until you, or some other person, be compelled to come to my school for
-information. It may be a galling pain, a conscience-smitten task to you
-to do so; but you have no alternative with honesty and wisdom. It is
-not a little of this cry for Church Reform, that has sprung out of my
-labours and sufferings. And here am I, though still in prison through
-that Church's iniquity, in the proud and triumphant position, clearly
-seeing that you can reform nothing in the Church that will satisfy the
-people without coming to my ground.
-
-Your pledge is so to reform the Church as to make it meet the respect
-and affection of the people. I rejoiced when I read that sentiment; for
-I saw and felt, that I alone had proposed a reform equal to that end;
-and mine, as well as others, by the glorious power of the printing
-press, must come into consideration. I assure you that the
-correspondence with the Bishop of London, which I shall append to this
-letter, has been sold to the extent of many thousands, and is in great
-demand. This is but an enlargement of my second letter to the Bishop. So
-that my lamp has been constantly trimmed for your advent as a Reformer
-of the Church. It is not what you and others call "the rabble," "the
-destructives," "the mob," that I seek. I seek you and the Bishops,
-all the learned men in the country, as in application of mind to mind,
-learning to learning, and wisdom to wisdom.
-
-I will now proceed to explain the distinction between the mystery and
-the revelation of Christ, between the letter and the spirit of the books
-of the Old and New Testament, between false and true religion, between
-superstition and idolatry on one side, and reason with growing knowledge
-in the Church on the other. I begin with the doctrine of the Holy
-Trinity.
-
-The Church of the dark ages has taught the doctrine professedly founded
-upon the letter of the Sacred Scriptures: of God, as consisting of three
-persons in one person, coexistent, co-equal, and co-eternal, which, in
-expression, has been abridged, under the name of Trinity, and described
-as the Holy Trinity; and, in definition or distinction, as Father,
-Son and Holy Ghost. This doctrine has always been dissented from while
-dissent has been tolerated. It is no more a physical absurdity than the
-doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, or the changing of water to
-wine, or the feeding of five thousand with five small loaves and two
-fishes, or any other narrated miracle: still it has been dissented from,
-and when dissented from, no defence could be made of it. In every other
-case of dissent, the Church could make no defence and no other apology
-than ancientness of the doctrine in the Church. Truly this has been a
-verification of the blind leading the blind, until both fell into the
-ditch together.
-
-With a doctrine of personality in Deity, including the ideas of physical
-and moral power, this of the Trinity has been declared a mystery
-incomprehensible to the human mind; and I declare that a mystery
-incomprehensible to the human mind, pressed upon human attention, as
-of importance, is an absurdity, and must be an imposture; for who has
-comprehended it so to state? This is the matter-of-fact view of the
-subject.
-
-But the subject being a declared mystery in the theological sense, there
-is a spiritual interpretation to be put upon the language of the letter;
-and that I take to be thus:--
-
-That the Trinity is not to be considered as of persons, but of
-principles; and then we shall find it a philosophical doctrine, true to
-nature, and proved by science; true to physical and to moral science.
-
-All the ideas that physical science can bring us of creation is the root
-of three in one. Whatever admits of analysis sets forth the truth and
-doctrine of the Trinity. Water, the great parent of production on this
-planet, is known to be composed of two gases--hydrogen and oxygen. They
-become water through contact and decomposition by electric action. Thus,
-in the order of a Trinity in Unity, we may describe it as of hydrogen,
-oxygen, electric contact=water. I do not mention this as any thing new;
-but it is new in application to a definition of the doctrine of the
-Trinity. Water had not been made but by the electric contact of hydrogen
-with oxygen, by the power of a Trinity in Unity. Chemistry teaches us,
-that this power of a Trinity in Unity is an all-creating power; and so
-far it is man's comprehension of the creating power or Deity, and not
-a thing or principle incomprehensible: it is a doctrine older than the
-Christian era; was a doctrine among the Pagan Philosophers, and is true
-as to principles or powers; but not true in our modern sense of persons,
-as identical and separate beings.
-
-A great mistake, too, has been made in the understanding of the word
-_person_, in relation to theology: it never was meant to express beings
-in the image of you and me; but the dramatic manner of presenting a
-description of the principles of nature in the theatre, _per sonantem_,
-by sound or song, by fiction, by disguise, by allegory, by mask or
-mystery, by representative action: the revelation of which would be to
-understand the principles of nature so personated on the stage, as I
-have defined the Trinity. And it is in this, and no other sense, that
-I read the names of Deity in the Old or New Testament, as brought
-apparently on the stage of human affairs, in person, by the authors;
-that _personating_ meaning nothing more than a present picture or
-representation of an absent or infinite power, by sounds or voice,
-and sometimes by masks, as was the earliest known practice in dramatic
-exhibition, which explains everything about gods and oracles, and makes
-the Hymns of Orpheus as sacred as the Psalms of David; as they are as
-certainly beautiful in poetic composition, and equally useful to human
-welfare.
-
-You, Sir, if you enter the House of Commons next month, may be said to
-personate the Electors of Tamworth; a power in the abstract greater than
-you, because many and supposed qualified to reject your personation
-and to elect another. Therefore, the personation is not the power
-personated. As the King's chief Minister, you will also personate the
-King's Government in the House of Commons; but you are not in reality
-that governing power; because, it is something distinct from you, and
-greater than can be concentrated in your person. You, as plain Robert
-Peel, and I, as Richard Carlile, are not persons; and though it is a
-custom so to use the word and so to describe us, yet it is a mistake and
-misuse of the word, unless the body may be said to personate the mind,
-soul, &c. I hope you see that much of the error of our Church has turned
-upon this point; because a person was never the reality of the power,
-and consequently the persons of the Trinity are not to be considered
-the reality of the Trinity: and hence the Unitarian Dissenter has
-no reasonable ground of dissent. The doctrine of the Trinity, as a
-description of Deity, is a valid theological and philosophical doctrine,
-admitting of no rational dissent.
-
-I wish the Bishops to learn this before the Dissenters, so that the
-Church may be taught how to call back her errant and ignorant children,
-that her property may be held together for useful purposes, and not be
-wasted at the shrine of dissenting ignorance or bankrupt government.
-
-And now, Sir, can you yet see your way with me, "to remove every abuse
-that can impair the efficiency of the establishment; extend the sphere
-of its usefulness, and strengthen and confirm its just claims upon
-the respect and affections of the people?" If you cannot, I beg you to
-follow me farther.
-
-It is not only in physics that the doctrine of the Trinity is
-theologically and scientifically correct, but in morals also; and this
-is the foundation of the Christian Religion.
-
-As God, the Father, personates all science, under the attribute of
-omniscience; that is, personates all existence, both omnipotence and
-omnipresence, and is, in that reality, the fountain of knowledge--the
-all and every part that can be known; so God the Son, Christ or
-Logos, personates the human mind, as the existence or manifestation of
-knowledge and reason, as Jesus or the principle of salvation from evil,
-in possessing that knowledge, and as the true God, in us and with us, in
-and with whom we live, and move, and have our being.
-
-So God the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Truth, the Comforter to come, to
-complete the happiness of the human race, personates that spirit of
-free communication of knowledge which should be found in the Church,
-the theatre, not of any superstition or dramatic ceremony, but of the
-freedom of the human mind, and all its emanations of free enquiry, free
-discussion, mutual instruction, which are the necessary elements of
-brotherly love and peace, in the proving of all things and holding fast
-that which is good. And thus I prove the truth of the doctrine of the
-Trinity.
-
-This, Sir, is a true picture or effigies of the moral Trinity of the
-Christian Church, which you will find to be a key to every mysterious
-sentence of the Bible; and I ask you seriously, as between man and man,
-is any thing of this kind known or practised in the present Church?
-Are not the ministers of that Church afraid of every new discovery in
-science? Have they not, as far as they could, persecuted every man who
-has attempted to publish any criticism, enquiry, or objection to their
-mysterious subjects? History says--Yes. And I say that they have known
-nothing of the subject for themselves, and that they have dreaded all
-knowledge of, all enquiry into, the subject. Will their pride let them
-learn of me? Well may I say:--"Come unto me, all that labour and are
-heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn
-of me: for I am meek and lowly of heart: and ye shall find rest unto
-your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light." That is the
-language of the personated Logos, or Principle of Reason, addressed to
-the present state of British mind, as it was formerly addressed to the
-general state of the human mind.
-
-The doctrine of the transubstantiation of bread and wine, as the
-elements of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, into the real body and
-blood of Christ, has been another stumbling-block in the Church. On this
-head, our law-established Church has dissented from its former self,
-which when I mentioned on my last jury trial, the Judge, Sir Allan Park,
-called it a vilifying of the Church. I knew better; but saw that the
-Judge was not a man to be reasoned with, and so I did not press the
-subject: but through this letter and your name, Sir, I desire to teach
-him how it has been done. Transubstantiation is no stumbling-block to my
-mind.
-
-The twenty-eighth article of the Church says on this
-subject:--"Transubstantiation (or the change of the substance of bread
-and wine) in the Supper of the Lord, cannot be proved by Holy Writ; but
-is repugnant to the plain words of Scripture, overthroweth the nature of
-a Sacrament, and hath given occasion to many superstitions. The body of
-Christ is given, taken, and eaten in the Supper, only after an heavenly
-and spiritual manner; and the mean whereby the body of Christ is
-received and eaten in the Supper, is Faith."
-
-It is very clear to me that the Bishops of that time, the sixteenth
-century, did not know how to read Holy Writ. I could defend the entire
-doctrine of transubstantiation, in its fullest application, from the
-language of the Gospel according to Saint John. This subject affords
-me another proof, that the doctrine of transubstantiation is much older
-than any of the books of the New Testament: for, where understood,
-there is nothing in theology more dear than this doctrine, or that comes
-nearer to a physical and moral truth.
-
-First, let us understand that the root of the word _Sacrament_ is a
-secret in the mind; and _Transubstantiation_ is a change of substance
-from one to another thing. Now the secret in the mind is, where
-understood, and where not understood there is no Sacrament, that,
-like the Trinity, all the appearances of God are in the principle
-of transubstantiation or change from one to another thing. All
-is motion.--Nature knows no rest. All is change, all is
-transubstantiation. It is like the Trinity,--one of the attributes of
-Deity, one not to be doubted,--because everywhere visible. The present
-Church of England calls it a damnable doctrine; but it is so called
-through ignorance. Like that of the Trinity, it is a doctrine much older
-than the Christian era; and so also was that of the Lord's Supper, as a
-practised ceremony.
-
-When the name of Christ was set up to personate all the attributes of
-Deity, the various names of the Pagan gods were decried. It had become
-a matter of wisdom thus to set up the name of Christ as a personation
-of all the gods and goddesses: it was a concentration of philosophy, to
-unite mankind in one form of religion and for one great purpose, that
-of progressive and perpetual improvement. The plan was good; but the
-principle has never been rightly developed. Teaching by mystery is a bad
-system. The mass of the people are not so to be taught. We must begin
-and teach by revelation. The Christian Religion, when revealed, will be
-eternal, and realise all its real promises of peace on earth, good-will
-among men, and a land flowing with milk and honey.
-
-Before the name of Christ was used, Bacchus was called a Saviour, as
-were many other if not all the gods, as Jehovah is declared the only
-Saviour in the Old Testament. And this Bacchus had the name of Jesus,
-or Saviour, inscribed on his altar pieces, in the very letters now
-inscribed in our Churches, the three Greek letters Iota, Eta, Sigma,
-I.H.S., not Jesus Hominum Salvator, in initials, though so in meaning;
-but Yes, which is the same as Jesus, and signifies Saviour. Isis is of
-the same root, one of whose names was Ceres. Ceres personated corn or
-bread, and Bacchus personated wine. It was a Pagan custom, in religious
-ceremonies, to break and eat bread in honour of Ceres, and to pour and
-drink wine in honour of Bacchus, as the bread and wine or body and blood
-of salvation, of both physical and moral salvation.
-
-Christ being made all, both physical and moral Saviour, was intended to
-swallow up all the various Pagan honours and ceremonies, every one
-of which, in part or whole, is still retained in our law-established
-Church; and so Christ personated both the elements, bread and wine, as
-his body and blood, as before they had been called body of Ceres and
-blood of Bacchus.
-
-Be it remembered, that the Pagans had no other ideas of these matters,
-than those of dramatic effect. The origin of the drama was in and with
-the religion of the human race. And we must come back or come up to this
-for a right understanding and use of the Christian Religion.
-
-As food, bread and wine are the best elemental representatives of the
-body and blood of the human being, and will sustain human life in health
-and vigour. As bread and wine, they are elements of the physical nature
-of God; and when taken into the human body, they transubstantiate in
-that body, and, in making blood, become the blood which is necessary
-to sustain the moral god or reason in the godly man: so, through the
-transubstantiation, they do not cease to be the body and blood of
-Christ. This is what is meant in the matter, and this solves the
-language of Saint Augustine, cited in the twenty-ninth article, that
-though the wicked eat the consecrated bread and drink the wine, they do
-not eat the real body and blood of Christ, because in leading bad
-lives they do not improve themselves, and so eat and drink but for new
-condemnation.
-
-The revelation of the mysterious word sin, in the Sacred Scriptures,
-is generally applicable to the ignorance of the human race; and so of
-original sin, which is not to be otherwise reasonably understood. Man
-is born without knowledge, but may, by due care, be made a member of the
-Church of Christ; that is, may be made a scholar, as the foundation of a
-wise and good man.
-
-I shrink not from a full and reasonable explanation of every part of
-the mysterious doctrine of the Christian Church, in this way; and I am
-prepared to maintain, before all men, that this is the true revelation
-of the mystery, the true spirit of the letter, both of the Old and New
-Testament: "the truth as it is in Jesus"--in nature: the truth, by God.
-
-This beautiful and deeply-woven allegory embraces, in its mystery,
-almost every known process of nature; and must, in my opinion, have
-been the labour of the united science of many generations of the wisest
-men---of truly inspired men. This very doctrine of transubstantiation
-in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, is descriptive, and is in fact
-and principle, the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ in. man.
-The bread and wine are swallowed, are buried in the human stomach, there
-decomposed or transubstantiated, formed into chyle, rise again into
-blood, and form the spirit of the man: which is, in reality, a death of
-the body and resurrection of the spirit: and the brain being the chief
-of the sentient principle, there becomes an ascension into that kingdom
-of heaven, which it is in a reasonable man, and than; which there can
-be, by law of nature, no other. The same or similar explanation applies
-to the first and second birth; the birth of the physical body in its
-original sin, the second the birth of the spiritual mind or inward man,
-which is the Lord Christ Jesus. It is a divine riddle, and such is the
-solution.
-
-The riddle is of larger comprehension than the mere relations of God to
-man. It is an astronomical almanack, a written and dramatized picture
-of the celestial globe; and is, in truth, a most perfect allegory of all
-known nature, both in physics and morals, in matter and spirit.
-There are no such men in the Church now as the writers of the Sacred
-Scriptures; none even with sufficient knowledge to understand them. We
-have fallen; yes, we have fallen into the dark ages; and the revelation,
-when known, is to be the millennium. We have fallen by that Scarlet
-Whore, the Babylon of Mystery; and have to rise again, by getting a
-knowledge of Christ, which is not now in the Church, nor yet among any
-of the Dissenters so called. Nothing can be imagined more anti-Christian
-in spirit and character, than that which has been called the Christian
-Church of the last fifteen hundred years.
-
-Christ, in his physical character, personates the sun and solar year,
-while his twelve disciples personate the twelve months, or the signs of
-the zodiac; and; in this sense, we have a death, descent, resurrection
-and ascension, once a year. It is in that sense he performs the miracle
-of turning the water of the pot of Aquarius (January or Winter) into the
-wine of Autumn; the story, of course, is told, in the gospel, after the
-form of a personated narrative of a dramatic incident. So the product of
-the corn-seed of five small loaves and two fishes, becomes sufficient,
-in the season, to feed five thousand. The knowledge and ingenuity of the
-state of mind, that could so construct the allegory, as an harmonious
-picture of the works of nature, is absolutely wonderful, and has my
-admiration, even my ejaculatory adoration; and I am not a little proud
-of my own ingenuity, in having penetrated thus far into so deep and
-mysterious a subject. It has brought me perfect peace of mind, as to the
-general system of nature, and left me burning with the desire to acquire
-more knowledge.
-
-In the Church now existing, is there aught but mystery that can be
-called its religion? And in mystery unexplained, unrevealed, can
-there be aught but impudent knavery in the ministration, with general
-hypocrisy or credulous folly in the reception? I have penetrated
-the subject so deeply as not to shrink from saying, that the present
-ministration of the Church is an impudent and mischievous imposture,
-sanctioned by the custom of antiquity, that neither instructs nor
-moralizes the people; for, notwithstanding all the pretences to
-religion, greater immorality than is here found cannot be supposed to
-exist among a people holding or held together as a community, in daily
-danger of disruption, and utterly without a code of moral guidance or
-guides: and this not so much among the poor as among the rich. Even this
-city is in danger, from its ill-assorted and ill-conditioned
-population, of all the disasters that befell Babylon, Jerusalem, Rome,
-Constantinople or Paris. And almost every village in the Island groans
-under want, and courts even the desolation of contested revolution for a
-change. And that very feeling and profession, which is now miscalled
-the religion of peace, will, from its state of ignorant dissension,
-only serve to whet the appetite for contention and slaughter, and make
-another war in the name of God.
-
-I call upon you to repent, by which I mean reflection. I ask you to be
-honest, and that, too, because the season of profitable dishonesty is
-exhausted, and you have wealth enough: save it. It is never too late
-to reform and do justly; but the later the reform is deferred, the more
-necessity that the justice be rigid and prompt. I feel that if I had
-your authority, I could save the Church and its property, not for a
-farther career of its iniquity and error, but as a noble institution for
-the good of the people, a sufficient school for all, and a hospital for
-the infirm; to which, I add, that this, or nothing good, must have been
-the purpose of its first institution. I believe, from what I now see
-of the foundation of the Christian Religion, that this was the first
-purpose of its institution. Banish the superstition of the Church, plant
-the tree of knowledge there, and you will quickly overthrow the
-morally pestilent Dissenters. I mean, of course, by moral means, by
-the exhibition of more knowledge and wisdom and utility than they. This
-would be salvation and reform to every good institution in the country;
-for when knowledge becomes the nation's religion and moral pole-star,
-everything good is safe, everything evil will vanish before a discussion
-of its merits. This or blood-thirsty contention is your choice. You may
-delay for a while; but you cannot otherwise reform. You, by delay, will
-merely bid the people wait until they are strong enough to combat your
-authority. Delay will be a challenge to them of physical combat.
-
-What can confer more dignity on the "Dignitaries of the Church" than
-for the Legislature to say to them:--"Feed the people with knowledge
-and no longer fill them with superstition?" If I understand human nature
-rightly, it has more pleasure in honesty than in dishonesty.
-
-Would the experimental lectures of a Faraday, desecrate the building?
-Or a beautifully reflected picture of the heavens and its explanation
-lessen true devotion? Would moral; science profane the pulpit or injure
-the congregation? Would the real catechism; and instruction, of children
-in matters of physical and moral science be of less importance than the
-parrotlike catechism of the language of the present mystery? There
-would then be some ground for a bishop's or overseer's examination
-and confirmation; but what does confirmation now mean? All that I can
-remember of it is a learn-ing to repeat from memory a prayer and a
-creed, perhaps a few commandments, which are studied to-day, to be gone
-through tomorrow, and neglected ever after. Give the people something
-which they can feel and know to be useful, which they can reduce to
-practice, and they will emulate each other in flocking to Church at
-the appointed times. You will then have need of still more churches to
-receive the increasing population. It will be an emulative pleasure
-to children, a new delight to parents, a mutual gratification to be at
-school together in church.
-
-I can say from observation, comparison and experience, that among the
-most moral of the working people in the metropolis, will be found
-those who have attended scientific lectures on the Sunday, and who have
-thereby been taught, to contemn superstition. You find them not in the
-house of intoxication; but passing soberly in the evening from their
-homes to the school; and gratifiedly after the lecture from the school
-to their homes. The greatest error that toryism and superstition have
-fallen into has been to suppose that knowledge will make a people
-disorderly. Bacon's aphorism is true, that superstition is the _primum
-mobile_ of sedition, the great agitator; and ignorance the great
-disorderer of States. Is it not so in Ireland? Is it not your greatest
-trouble in this island? The wisest act of the life of the late Lord
-Castlereagh was to propose to send _Paine's Age of Reason_ among the
-Roman Catholics of Ireland. If it had been so thoroughly done, when he
-proposed it, they would have been all quiet enough by this time. Real
-knowledge is the water-cup of sobriety for a people: with that they
-will seek to rid themselves of nothing but error and evil that cannot be
-morally defended.
-
-Make the change that I propose in the business and ceremony of the
-Church, and you instantly make a Christian Religion, eminently Catholic,
-that will not only annihilate the Dissenters, but convert Jew, Mahometan
-and Pagan. It will be irresistible to all mankind. They cannot argue
-against science; but each argues against the superstition of the other.
-Science is the essence of Judaism, but the men called Jews understand it
-not. It is the foundation of their name, the ground on which they have
-been considered a chosen people, it is the only sign of God in man, the
-only proof of true religion. Science and morals are the whole duty and
-all needful to man; beyond which he can gain nothing but superstition,
-error and evil. Science and morals, then, are the only proper business
-of the Church. Let us have our National Education in the Church. Let
-the Church be the fountain of knowledge, and all be there baptized, as a
-true sign of mental birth and membership of Christ.
-
-Gather together all the property that was ever ecclesiastical; get
-it back from whoever may hold it; take it out of the hands of the
-priesthood or the ministers of the Church, tithes and all; and give
-it into the hands of its true owners, the people, each parish with its
-separate share, and let the majority of the parishioners make the best
-use of it they can for ecclesiastical, that is scholastical purposes;
-and with it, also, provide for their infirm and accidentally poor. This
-one act of public justice and public good would go far toward settling
-the affairs of this distracted and unsettled nation, and do injury to no
-one. Let the State Parliament be also the Church Convocation, which may
-be well done when there are no superstitious disputes, all will go on
-smoothly with due and sufficient authority and order, and Britain look
-forward to happy days. It would be the regeneration of the whole earth
-in a few years. This is what is meant by the promise of the knowledge of
-the Lord covering the earth as the waters fill the ocean.
-
-Somebody must publicly break through the trammels of superstition, I
-have done it as far as a private man can do it; but wo public man in
-England has yet dared to approach the subject. Be you the first. No
-other circumstance could bring you a more imperishable name and fame.
-Of wealth you have enough. I ask nothing more than that you fulfil the
-promise of your administration made to the Electors of Tamworth. If you
-say, that you did not mean what I express, I shall answer you, that you
-could have no other meaning. Were I in Parliament, I would carry the
-subject in spite of prejudice; so strong is my faith in the power of
-knowledge. I would move, in such a clear and simple way, that a man
-should not hold up his face to his fellow man after voting against me.
-
-Give us a commission, with power to enquire into this subject. I will be
-content to wait all the time that justice to all concerned may require.
-If religion be any thing more than I make it--mental cultivation from
-infancy to death, it must be the private business of every man's life
-and nothing national; like national sobriety, it must be made up of
-the sobriety of each individual, and cannot rest on social forms and
-ceremonies. Ceremonial sobriety would be but the mockery of a good
-principle. I care not how much repenting and proving we have, how much
-trial, let us but have free, full, and fair enquiry and discussion, in
-Parliament and out of Parliament. Giving a man knowledge cannot be a
-disqualification for true religion. Feeding him with science can have no
-tendency to injure his morals. Occupying his time well can be no source
-of bad habits. Spurring him on to a moral emulation in the acquisition
-of equal or more knowledge than his neighbour, will not create ill will
-toward that neighbour.
-
-The best occupation of time is a question at the very root of individual
-happiness and national prosperity: I find it everywhere sadly neglected;
-here in prison, out in church, at the theatre, in public and private
-business, in families, in pursuit of pleasure, in the army--everywhere.
-It can be scarcely said, that there is anything solid in our actions;
-frivolity prevails everywhere, and is mixed up with our most serious
-professions. I cannot look back to Pagan times without seeing that they
-were a superior people to ourselves, and that we have fallen, through
-the management of our religion and politics, from, rather than risen,
-above them: we exceed them in nothing but hard and lengthy labour for
-small wages, insufficient for the necessaries of life. We have not
-learnt from Seneca, "that he lives longest who has made the best use of
-his time."
-
-Be it your study to seek to give us some sound moral reforms, and sink
-party politics in the moral of public good; withdraw all licences from
-houses of intoxication and late hours; let there be no public resort,
-in Parliament or elsewhere, after ten at night; if it would be no
-abridgement of general liberty, confine shop business to limited
-hours, that the conductors and assistants may have due time for mental
-improvement. Some of the young men and women in London shops, bitterly
-lament the want of more time for rational recreation, for health and
-improvement. They are among the veriest of slaves in confinement. Let
-knowledge be once legislatively encouraged, remove all taxes from it,
-and then a hundred minor arrangements, by legislation, may be made
-conducive to public good, and a bar be set against injurious, offensive,
-and slavish competition. It is the Tory fear--and, in justice, I will
-add, Whig fear too--of knowledge that has produced all the present
-wrongs and evils of the country; for if cunning men have legislated,
-it has not been done for the public good; because there has not been
-sufficient public responsibility.
-
-This is all Church as well as State business that I am proposing. The
-clear distinction as to Church and State is--that the Church means the
-people, congregated for mental improvement; and the State means the
-exercise of that mental improvement in their public business: so true it
-is, that Church must precede and give character to the State.
-
-Tithes are a recognition of the original proprietorship of the
-whole people in the land; a rent paid under that consideration,
-appropriate-able to the sustenance of the poor, and the mental
-improvement of all.
-
-Church Property is the property of the whole people who constitute the
-Church; and not, as now, of the ministers, who profess to be, and ought
-to be, the servants of the Church. At present, the servants are set
-above, defy, and tyrannize over the masters. All public officers in
-Church and State, from the King to the Beadle, should be subject to the
-periodical election of an intelligent people: without this, there can be
-no just and dignified authority--no proper public officers,--all will be
-tyranny, corruption, and inefficiency!
-
-In thus stating my subject, I am not insensible to the state of mind
-and conflicting interests with which you have to deal: but you are in
-a dilemma, from which nothing but wisdom and honesty can relieve you;
-every false or inefficient step will weaken you; any attempt to patch
-the holes made by Time in the mystery of the Church, will be like the
-tinker's work of mending one and making two: it is rusty and rotten,
-and must be knocked to pieces and burnt up, to produce the brilliant
-revelation from its ashes! There can be no mixture of the mystery with
-the revelation. The latter is a spirit that will explode the former;
-and, if you be a good Christian, let me tell you that the advent of the
-revelation will be the fulfilment of the promise of the gospel. We have
-had nothing but the mystery, nothing but the dark ages of ignorance and
-superstition: the mystery is not Christianity; the revelation alone,
-which we have not had, is Christianity. The mystery and the revelation
-are as unlike each other, as the grossest superstition is unlike reason.
-
-What a delightful state of society do I see before me, when the
-watchword of all shall be--GET KNOWLEDGE! The Bible abounds with this
-exhortation; tells us all our disorders are lack of knowledge; and yet
-we have been through centuries, almost through millenia, studiously and
-tyrannically keeping each other blind and ignorant. This has been the
-reign of the devil, Anti-Christianity, and not Christianity. When the
-portico of each Church-build-ing shall bear the inscription of--KNOW
-THYSELF, AND ENTER HERE TO GET KNOWLEDGE, the communicant will see a
-friend in his minister, and the minister will strive to raise up wisdom
-in his communicant.
-
-Now what do we see? Studied ignorance, and suppression of knowledge with
-both: each ashamed to look in the face of the other. And wherever a
-man advances beyond the existing state of mind, and publishes his
-sentiments, he is persecuted as an outcast, and unrelentingly subjected
-to prison-discipline, since the law has ceased to make the "offence"
-capital.
-
-The unrevealed mystery of religion has been the curse and moral devil
-of the human race. A statesman cannot be wise and honest without
-setting his face against it, and seeking to rid of it the minds of
-his countrymen. With it, a state can have no permanent peace, nor can
-statesmanship be an honour. If you are not master of this subject, I am;
-if you will not press it upon the attention of the country, I will;
-and I have not a doubt, but that, by its superior moral power, it will
-enable me to succeed you in office. I invite you to take the task in
-your hands, and I will be content to be anything, to remain in prison,
-if this great reform be but put in motion while I live.
-
-It is simply to begin to teach the people something useful in the
-Church, to give them useful knowledge, as easy in practicability as it
-is for a ripe scholar to become a schoolmaster to uninstructed youth. We
-have teachers all prepared for the purpose in the Clergy themselves. You
-have now to deal with a suspected and not a respected clergy. Though the
-great mass of the people do not understand where the fault theologically
-lies, yet they have instinctive discernment enough to see, that the
-relation of their condition to that of the Clergy is not founded in
-honesty and social utility. As sure as I, who see through the whole
-subject, the people feel that they are not fairly dealt with by the
-Clergy; and thus feeling, with such a Clergy, there can be no social
-peace. The feeling will increase as they get knowledge on the subject,
-and I have thrown that knowledge into the market, in defiance of all the
-power you have possessed or can possess; and that knowledge you cannot
-withdraw from the market of human intellect: the whole people will get
-at it in time.
-
-Your boast is now that of being chief or leader of the CONSERVATIVES.
-This is not what the nation wants. It needs purgation of error,
-abuse and wrong, and a restoration of all the first principles of its
-Institutions. It is a fair question to put to you and your party, if
-you know the first principles of the Institutions of this country? You
-certainly have seen none of them in practice; for your scholarship and
-administration have been full of error and wickedness. As I told Sir
-Allan Park, that the Church had dissented from itself, so I now tell
-you, that every Institution in this country that is a thousand years
-old in name, has dissented from itself, and has, in fact, been changed
-diabolically--which means directly opposite, or from good to evil; and
-there never was a country whose cup of iniquity was more filled.
-
-Conservation means preservation, and there is nothing in the present
-Institutions of this country but public wrongs and private abuses to
-be preserved. The name of a Destructive is far more honourable, in
-the present state of the country; the only name indeed that can be
-honourable, if it be interpreted, an intended destruction of error and
-abuses, of which the country is brim-full, and the fermentation pouring
-over.
-
-I dislike all these names. They are all dishonestly used. They form no
-real distinction between man and man. The word Radical has always been
-to me an offensive word; the more particularly so as I have seen some
-very bad and ignorant men making a great noise under it and about it. We
-want knowledge and honesty to make it practicable, and no names by which
-to be distinguished: such names spring from ignorance and dishonesty.
-
-The origin of our ancient Institutions has its foundation laid in the
-moral of law springing from the law of morals; and the restoration would
-be easy, if existing authority would resign itself to the change, or
-if it could be overpowered and made so to do. One or the other of these
-changes is necessary, before anything can be done, and the first the
-wisest and to be preferred. I believe there was a time when they existed
-without a mixture of any kind of deception practised upon the people,
-and that is just what I desire to see restored; and which, I am sure,
-from the growth of knowledge and criticism, is the one thing needful to
-keep the country in a state of inward peace.
-
-Knowledge is the only spiritual interest of the people: it should be
-fostered, promoted and increased in the Church, so as to be equalized
-as far as possible among the mass or greater number. The ignorance of
-the people has been an excuse for many an act of hypocrisy, deception
-and tyranny: its continuance is now the fault of the Church, and of
-those who have its direction. Cunning cannot invent an assumption that
-any qualification can better serve the spiritual and temporal interests
-of the people than knowledge. Their degree of knowledge is the all that
-is spiritual or of good within them. It is an affair, too, where honest
-brokerage is scarcely probable; because no check can be kept upon it.
-What, therefore, is not to be defended as knowledge is not of God but of
-the devil. In that sense, I arraign the whole Church as now constituted,
-and challenge it to stand a trial. I fear it is now too corrupt even to
-be militant.
-
-Let us suppose you about to attempt a reconciliation with the present
-Dissenters, as to the doctrines and ceremonies of the Church. To please
-the advocates of adult baptism, you must exchange the infant for adult
-baptism, and then you will displease those who are not pleased with
-adult baptism. To please the Unitarians, you must give up the doctrine
-of the Trinity; and then you will displease all the Trinitarians. What
-is to be done to satisfy the Wesleyans or Methodists? They will have
-irregular prayers and preachings, which are contrary to the discipline
-of the Church. What is to be done with the Swedenborgians, the
-Muggletonians, and Southcotians? How can you furnish spirit and noise
-enough for the Unknown Tongues of the Irvingites? And what but the
-spirit of silence will conciliate the Quakers? All of them will require
-the abolition of your bishopricks and other offices, while none of them
-will object, and all will claim if a chance offer, to divide the Church
-Property among them. The spirit of dissent, in matters of religion,
-prevailing in this country, is nothing more than an infectious mental
-disease: with it, there is no reason mixed. The moment it becomes a
-profit to lead such a congregation, men of comparative talent as to
-capability will take it up and lead; and thus the thing has gone on
-to confusion and mental distraction, because the Church was not in a
-condition to defend itself and set a better example. You cannot please
-one sect of the Dissenters, without increasing the displeasure of the
-other: and thus your task is hopeless, on any other ground than
-that which I propose, to beat them in the superior communication of
-knowledge.
-
-On the other hand, let us suppose the Church of England to begin to
-reveal the mystery of Jesus Christ, which I define, and maintain, to
-consist of a cultivation of the human mind, with all possible knowledge
-and reason; all other Churches must instantly bow to its superiority.
-The effect among men throughout the earth would be wonderful and
-intellectually electric. It is the only system that can be imagined to
-be a Catholic Christianity, and the very thing that is meant by the word
-Catholic, something alike suited to the welfare of every man, and which
-presents the principle of a moral equality, which is the only foundation
-for true liberty, and the only guarantee for an improvement of public
-morals; one that would make the Church an attraction to the wisest
-as well as to the most ignorant of men; those as teachers, these as
-learners.
-
-We may carry the idea farther; and as in the present state of
-mind, millions in Europe and America are attached to an idea of the
-superiority of the Church authorities at Rome, through ignorance and
-custom I grant, but not less attached,--I would, to humour that conceit
-and turn it to good, consent to make the Pope of Rome the centre of
-communication from all parts of the earth for discovered knowledge, as
-it would be desirable to have such a central recipient and fountain to
-give it forth again in the best possible manner. This would accelerate
-the reconciliation of the dissenting race, without an idea of
-dishonourable submission on the part of an individual. Indeed, the
-perfection of my proposition is, that no man can feel injury or
-degradation in the change. It is an overthrow of nothing, but simply
-the development and better understanding of the mystery that has
-existed since the world of human intellect began: the revelation of that
-mystery; and, consequently, the completion or carrying out of the true
-Christian scheme.
-
-It is not to be expected, that, in a pamphlet letter, I can do more than
-briefly notice a few leading points of this important subject; but I am
-quite prepared to extend it through volumes, and shall go on so to do. I
-am quite prepared to meet or be one of any commission on the subject.
-I would willingly put my life upon the hazard of verifying my present
-views of original Christianity. It would have been done in former ages,
-had the printing press existed. Its doing now is consequent on the
-gradual power of criticism which the Press has brought with it into
-existence. It is the truth, and must prevail. It is the God in man.
-It is the Church of Christ, against which the gates of Hell shall not
-prevail. They have certainly prevailed against every other existing
-Church, and the whole of the past is a wreck.
-
-When speaking of the original Christian Religion, or of the revelation
-of the mystery, I wish to be understood, as not meaning that the
-revelation was ever before preached or openly taught to the human race
-on any part of the earth. We have no evidence of it beyond the reasoning
-and moral precepts of the philosophical world, which were not put forth
-as a scheme or system of religion. But when it is confessedly the fact,
-that something called a Christian scheme has been talked about for
-eighteen hundred years; and when we can trace the fac simile of that
-something, even in its whole nomenclature, principle and practice,
-through Greeks and Romans, Persians and Hindoos, up to the Celtic Druids
-and earliest known universal worship of Budha, the first personation of
-Jesus Christ now on record;--I mean, that the mystery has been the only
-general public part of it, and that the knowledge of the revelation was
-confined to the learned class and ancient mysteries of all countries,
-was the esoteric doctrine of the initiated into those mysteries; and
-the breaking up of those mysteries, from the time of Alexander to the
-Augustan era, was the cause of the first publication in writing of the
-books or traditions handed down through the agency of those secret and
-sacred Associations, bearing the mystery only on its surface and by the
-letter; and that after the mystery was so published, the very ministers
-of it lost the revelation, which is what the Freemasons profess to be
-in search of, the lost word, the word that I have found and now declare,
-that the salvation by Jesus Christ is only to be found in the increasing
-cultivation of the human mind with all attainable knowledge; that the
-true worship of God has no other meaning, the root of the word worship
-being to cultivate, and the field to be cultivated the human mind; that
-repentance is reflection for improvement; the second birth is the birth
-of mind, as distinguished from physical birth or birth of body, the one
-describing the man Adam, the other the God Christ; and that the kingdom
-of Heaven is to be established upon a general knowledge and practice of
-this revelation, is to be upon this earth, in successive generations
-of the human race, and not reasonably to be sought under any other
-speculation, calculation or hope. These are not only possibilities but
-probabilities, and immediate practicabilities, if the existing Devil
-will be pleased to retire: if not, we must resist him, and, as we are
-promised, on that condition, he will flee.
-
-Such is the foundation of a Catholic Church, from which there can be no
-dissent; for what is understood cannot be dissented from: the existing
-dissent is ignorance dissenting from ignorance. In the common use of the
-word, I am not a Dissenter; but a trier, prover, teacher, revealer of
-that which is the true meaning of the mystery that has been through
-ignorance the cause of the dissent. The personation of Deity in the
-written mystery has been nothing more than a drama prepared for stage
-effect, which, to the initiated only, would be matter of instruction or
-refreshment of memory. The ancient mystery meant a play, a drama, in our
-modern sense; but was first called a mystery, then a morality; was first
-private, and afterwards made common to the public, and is now for
-the first time revealed to the general understanding, through the
-instrumentality of the printing press.
-
-In my lecturings and discussions, both in town and country, I find this
-revelation has a great charm among all classes who have good temper and
-good manners to hear patiently. It is pure reason, pure knowledge, pure
-translation of language; it clashes with no other man's knowledge, and
-I have not found the man who can raise an argument against it. Of its
-final and complete success in regenerating the world, I have not a
-doubt; it is only a question of time. It is now a question, if you and
-the Parliament will look at it. I know you well enough to know, that you
-will not like its propounder; but who else has been ripe and bold enough
-to do it? Who else deserves the honour of being its propounder; but
-I, its honest martyr and zealous student, through a ten years'
-imprisonment? I call you to witness my fidelity in this matter. I was
-your prisoner through four years; you sanctioned the two years I had
-suffered before you came to the Home Department: you sanctioned my
-imprisonment by Lord Melbourne, through thirty-two months: and, by
-virtue of your office, you are sanctioning my present imprisonment. I
-do not say this in anger. I am retaliating upon you, as I would have you
-retaliate upon the Dissenters, by superior knowledge. If you do not
-now or early take me by the hand, I shall drive you out of the field of
-politics, and all who may succeed of your disposition.
-
-It is not to be denied, that there are moral exhortations put forth in
-every Church; the mystery would not pass on the people without them. But
-it is a truth, that, in all of them, morals are treated as a secondary
-consideration; and in some of the madder dissenting Churches, are
-counted as of no weight in the question of religion. The truth, as it is
-in Jesus, is, that morals are every thing as to practice, and knowledge
-with succeeding reason, the principles of speculation, the WORD to be
-sought, or the prize to be gained, the crown of glory, the spiritual
-and immortal life, which is emphatically the language of Saint John's
-Gospel; and this is the totality of the root and principle of the
-Christian Religion, the promotion of which is the only proper business
-of the ministration in the Church. No mystery: down with mystery. It
-is the folly of the human race, and worse than ignorance, or knowing, or
-confessing to know, nothing. There is no Christ in the mystery. "How can
-we reason, but from what we know?" The knowledge must be first. Nothing
-precedes knowledge but the thing to be known. Nothing is required after;
-but a dealing with the thing known by principle of reason. Unknown
-worlds, unknown spirits, unknown matter, is nothing to us, until the
-knowledge is obtained. Our knowledge is our all, in moral power, and we
-can have nothing of a religious nature but our knowledge. Superstitious
-fears, we know to be the property or sensation of ignorance and
-misconception. We are morally responsible for nothing but an improper
-use of our knowledge. It is wickedness to teach ignorance any other
-doctrine.
-
-My Christian proposition for the Reform of the Church harmonizes with
-all science, and clashes with nothing but positive error and wicked
-policy; and I venture to tell you, that you can find no other scheme to
-produce the same effect, and to give satisfaction to the present and to
-all future generations of men, to make the Church "meet the respect and
-affections of the people."
-
-Each paltry sect now considers its tenets as a Catholic Faith; but
-the truth is, as Dr. Oeddes well observed, "that what is Christian
-is Catholic, and what is Catholic must be Christian;" but then, this
-follows, that neither Christianity nor Catholicity will bear a union
-with the word dissent, unless the dissenter be an intelligent corrector
-at the same time: they are adverse to every admissible idea of
-undiscussed dissent. All standing dissent is of the devil; while
-Christianity and Catholicity are of God and Heaven. The multiplication
-table, the elements of Euclid, the doctrines of the Trinity and
-Transubstantiation, the proved analysis and composition of all known
-substances, are Catholic doctrines, from which nothing but ignorance can
-dissent. The whole of the present Church Ritual is a mass of words
-that conceal a truth; but that truth is not known in the Church, cannot
-therefore be used or worshipped, and the words can only be deemed the
-lumber of the memory: treating man as man treats a parrot, teaching him
-constantly to exclaim "pretty Poll," without giving him understanding
-whom or what "Poll" personates.
-
-If I were to sit in Church through a morning or evening service, I
-should have a perfect understanding of all the words used, and,
-consequently, should be worshipping according to the limit of THE WORD
-there presented; because I have in me the spirit of revelation.
-
-But this is not the case with those who now attend the Church, their
-attendance is upon form, ceremony, mystery, hypocrisy, which is the
-real meaning of the whole present business of the Church: hypocrisy,
-or dramatical acting, set forth in a mystery, without a mixture or
-accompanying revelation; and like the flimsy gildings of a theatre,
-or the spangles of an actress' dress, gilded over with a little moral
-exhortation, that you may observe or not, as you please, so as you are
-a cheerful payer of all dues, rates, and oblations. The first revision
-wanted in the Church is a translation of the revelation from the dead
-language of its mystery, into language comprehensible by all. Consequent
-upon such a revision would be, that the parishioners would take the
-management of their own Church Property into their own hands, and
-recover and hold THEIR MOST SACRED RENT OF TITHE, on recovery of the
-knowledge that they are the first and inalienable proprietors of the
-land.
-
-My subject is so far novel as to justify a little repetition. That twice
-two is four need not be repeated; but where the human being is enveloped
-in a cloud of verbose mystery, that cloud can only be dispelled by
-continued flashes of moral lightning. So I will return to methodical
-statement.
-
-The mystery of the existing Church, in all its grades of dissent, having
-set forth and caused the belief of a temporal and local existence of the
-personated principles of Deity, as distinct and separate from ourselves,
-in imitation of the Pagan Mythology, and not as simulated beings; it
-is requisite, as matter of proof, sooth and truth, that a case of clear
-human history of the circumstances be first made out, the doing of which
-my knowledge, after trial, challenges; and if that could be done,
-the more difficult task would remain, to prove, that such beings, the
-authors of such circumstances, as could be historically proved, were
-super-human. If the first cannot be done, the clumsy mystery falls to
-the ground, as the Dagon of the day, before historical criticism: and
-if the first be done, and the second cannot bear the light of scientific
-and philosophical criticism, the mystery is still but a mummery, which
-belief can no longer prop, nor physical power farther propagate; it is
-thrown into the crucible of moral criticism, and men will not longer
-consent to believe that the same causes will demonstrate differing
-effects, nor that varying causes may be made to demonstrate the same
-effect.
-
-I have read in public prints of your creditable attendance at the Royal
-Institution of Albemarle Street, on the demonstrative Lectures of Mr.
-Faraday in the Science of Chemistry. When there, were you asked to
-believe anything?
-
-Was not everything demonstrated, so that the words were verified by the
-acts of the Lecturer? If Mr. Faraday had played you _hocus pocus_ or
-legerdemain tricks, as a pretence of chemistry, would you have been
-satisfied? If he had told you of strange and incomprehensible things,
-which he could not demonstrate, would you have believed?--I think not:
-I give you credit for a better state of mind. Take a lesson from the
-inference, and grasp this truth, that the Royal Institution in Albemarle
-Street is the best Church in the country, and is, in reality, the
-nearest existing approach to the Catholic Church of Christ. It would be
-rational, it would be wisdom, if all were spending their Church time at
-such lectures, who are old enough to receive such instruction.
-
-I hope it will not offend you, nor be an untruth, to say, that you
-learnt something on every occasion of attending Mr. Faraday; that you,
-a Secretary of State, there found you had something to learn; and that
-a field was there opened to knowledge, which would, had it pleased you,
-before all other occupation, have wisely and usefully engaged the whole
-time of your remaining life. On the other hand, in the spirit of truth
-and charity, but of free enquiry, allow me to ask, if you could ever
-say the same, after an attendance at Church, on leaving, that you had
-learned something that was, without pretence, matter of real learning,
-an acquisition in knowledge possessed, that was not previously known in
-your school-hours and as a matter of school-business, or that might not
-have been learned from a book at home?
-
-I extend the question, in asking, whether anything that may be taught
-a boy at seven years of age, is improved on, by an attendance on the
-present state of the Church to seventy or four score years of age?
-If not, and I say--No, to what good purpose does this expensive
-establishment exist? Or, may it not be put to a better purpose? and if
-it may, why not? To talk about Church Reform, without doing something
-that shall tend to a full amount of practical and permanent good, is to
-insult the Nation; because the existing state of the Church is really a
-burthen and a grievance, and of no general utility.
-
-No Church was ever reformed by and with the consent of its Priesthood.
-I am of opinion that the Bishops and Clergy ought not to be consulted in
-this affair:--they are not the Church; but the ministers or servants
-of the people, which form, or ought to form, the Church. A Royal or
-Parliamentary Commission, with unlimited powers of enquiry, is the first
-power necessary with which to commence this subject of Reform in the
-Church.
-
-If we did not know human nature, history affords the warrant, that the
-Bishops and Clergy generally will follow the profits of the Church:
-those in the reign of the Tudors changed back and forward five times
-from Catholic to Protestant. But under this proposition of mine,
-what dignity is evident in the change! Instead of making the Bishops
-overseers and the Clergy generally actors of a drama, I purpose to put
-the whole structure of the human mind under their superintendance and
-guidance: not to be dealt with as now, but really to be educated in all
-attainable knowledge. My purpose is as practicable as that any other
-person can teach any kind of knowledge. Give the human being a better
-occupation of time, let the human mind expand where it may, and you
-guarantee perpetual peace and improvement, with dignity to every class
-of men, with injury to none.
-
-The change which I propose will be tantamount to a national change from
-diseased and crippled infancy to healthy adolescence. General man has
-not yet had fair play. No Nation, the history of which is known, has
-made a real effort to promote the happiness of all its members. Class
-has preyed upon class; idleness has been claimed as a privilege on one
-side, and slavery, through force, been made an inevitable duty on the
-other. For the furtherance of such a state of society, superstition
-has been encouraged, that a pompous class might be decorated to preach
-submission among the labourers to the Spirit of Tyranny and Imposture
-that was riding riotously over them. There can be no liberty and solid
-happiness among a superstitious people; and all attempts, at what is
-called political reform, that leave the people mentally rotting in
-superstition, will be abortive. I take credit for one fact--that there
-has been no change made in the political spirit of this country through
-any other medium than warfare with superstition; for the baneful and
-blighting spirit of that superstition admitted not of the thought of any
-other change.
-
-There is a glimpse of light latent to show that all the monastic
-institutions, the temples, the abbeys, priories, convents, nunneries,
-the mysteries, the churches, synagogues, and oratories, were originally
-instituted as schools of useful knowledge; and for what other good
-purpose could they have been instituted? The better part of the human
-mind is now making an effort to restore the purity of that state of
-things. Nothing short of this can tend to harmonize the human race in
-their several nations, with this improvement upon the past, that all,
-and not a class only, be educated. It was this education of a class only
-that has created all the mischief of superstitious society. The class
-educated has imposed untruths upon the uneducated class, until education
-itself to that class became swallowed up in imposture; and now both
-preacher and hearer may be truly said to be alike ignorant of all the
-great truths that are important to man, and necessary to social welfare.
-In the way in which the Bible is now read, after being printed, no
-preachers or teachers are necessary: to have been taught to read
-is sufficient. Give every man his Bible from Church Property, after
-teaching him to read, and the present Church business is completed: but
-much otherwise is my view of the subject. There is not a man living
-that has now a thorough understanding of the contents and meaning of the
-Bible. Many are working for the restoration of its lost science; and it
-is a subject worthy of a Church.
-
-It may startle a First Lord of the Treasury into new thought, to
-be told, that neither of the Books of the Bible is a piece of human
-history, not a history of beings like you, me, or any one else. I have
-given up all idea of the kind as untenable and indefensible. It may
-startle the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who is supposed to have the
-counting or reckoning of millions of money yearly, and contemplating
-that Giant of Despair--the Debt, to be told, that the Bible is
-fundamentally a mathematical book; and that he who does not so
-understand it, understands it not at all, or but in a very small degree,
-as to its moral bearing. The Duke of Sussex can give you an opinion on
-this head, as to the Bible being a book of algebraical science; though,
-perhaps, he would not like to say it applied to astronomical motion,
-and was a record of time so calculated through myriads of ages. A Bishop
-should understand this. It is a book of much more importance than has
-been made of it in the last thousand years in England. If the Bishops
-were required to have studied this book before they took office, we
-should find them generally as lean and as sallow as a lawyer who has to
-wade through the statutes at large, and law reports as large, for his
-sort of knowledge; a knowledge that I do not like, and will have none
-of, but what is forced upon me. No kind of knowledge is requisite to
-make a modern Bishop. The very origin of the title of a Bishop is that
-of an astronomical seer, a looker-out or overseer of the subordinate
-offices of science. There is a plenty of work, so as to allow of no
-idleness in any office of the Church, if justice be done to the
-people; and I will not grudge a thousand pounds a-year as a salary to a
-competent Bishop, or even more than that, if the Property of the Church
-will afford it. Ignorant fools they must have been, to have allowed so
-important, so honourable and dignified an office to become corrupt, and
-to fall into disrepute among the people.
-
-This algebraical reading of the Bible subdues all idea of contradiction
-to any science, geology for instance, chemistry or any other science,
-as well as of the apparent language of the book in letter to letter. For
-instance, the letter-objecting Infidels have laid great stress on
-Moses being set forth as having seen God; when the author of the Gospel
-according to Saint John says "No man hath seen God at any time." This is
-ignorantly set down as a clear contradiction. The explanation is, that
-_Moses was not a man_; and then there is no appearance of contradiction.
-One is mythologically, and the other morally, true.
-
-The Hebrew and Greek alphabets, being numerical as well as literal
-signs, which was probably the case with all other ancient languages, and
-these accumulating large numbers, by additional points, it is impossible
-that we can have a clear understanding of the meaning of their
-mythological sacred books, without a full algebraical knowledge of the
-language; and this explains how the letter killeth or stupifieth, while
-the spirit or knowledge of the entire meaning alone giveth life or
-understanding. The deepest investigators of the Hebrew Bible of this
-day maintain that it should be algebraically understood as a book of
-astronomical science--as a record of time by astronomical motion, which,
-physically speaking, can alone be the WORD OF THE WORKS OF GOD.
-
-The only true religion must be founded in man's reasonable
-comprehension; all other pretences to it are presumptions and nonsense
-to be condemned. We may as properly speak of religious horses and cows,
-as of men who are ignorant of the subject, substance and meaning, of
-what is religion. Saint Anthony's preaching to fishes is not without its
-simile in the practical part of that which has been mistakenly called
-the Christian Religion. That which is in practice, under the name of the
-Christian Religion, among many grades of Dissenters, is a disgrace to
-the government of the country, and to the name of civilized society: it
-grows worse and worse. Madness is beginning to be added to mystery; or
-is now produced by the mystery without the key of revelation. Through
-revelation there can be healthy excitement and enthusiasm; but none
-through mystery.
-
-Our King is not now the head of a Church, nor the King of a People: he
-can only be truly described as the head or King of Dissenters, which is
-an office much more troublesome and dangerous than honourable. To his
-Ministers, the present state of religious mind must be a prolific
-source of trouble; and has, I believe, made them persecutors, where the
-inclination of their own hearts was not coincident with the act. The
-Dissenters are now much less tolerant than the law-established Church;
-and if they are not undermined by my proposition, it will not take
-them many years to undermine that Church, or to demand a share of
-its property. To be able to see this, it is only necessary that we
-be acquainted with the workings of human nature, where not under the
-controul of knowledge.
-
-I am not content that the Established Church shall stand merely as one
-among Dissenting Churches; no Minister of State should be so content:
-the King is thereby dishonoured, and the State in disorder. I would
-have it a Church morally dominant and militant against all error, as
-it always should be, and as it was in the beginning. The meaning of the
-word militant has been entirely lost, in the growth of mystery and decay
-of revelation in the Church. There is a great talk now about revelation,
-or of something revealed in the Church; but there is no reality in the
-revelation. There is a mystery pregnant with revelation; but not in
-itself the revelation. It is a fountain of knowledge, but the genius of
-man must draw it out. It is good for nothing, but has caused a world of
-mischief, where read and understood as merely by the letter, as we read
-an ordinary book of history. The Church now wants the revelation or
-spirit. Not one of those existing has a particle of spirit.
-
-My proposition for a Reform will annihilate infidelity as well as
-dissent. There is no infidelity toward knowledge. It has been ignorance
-all through, on both sides, that has raised the cry of infidelity: each
-has been unequal to teaching. The Infidel has rejected that literal
-reading which the professing believer could not defend; because he did
-not understand its relation, as mystery to revelation. Both, in fact,
-have been alike Infidels. If I have been the chief of Infidels, I will
-atone for it in becoming the chief defender of revelation, and the
-faith, as it is in Christ Jesus, and not as it is in any Dissenting
-Church. Already the ignorant Infidels murmur at what they mistakenly
-call my apostacy, while no member of any existing Church holds out a
-hand to my welcome.
-
-As the Church goes now, it is not required that its Ministers be learned
-men: they have nothing to do for which talent is requisite--it is a mere
-school-boy's task; and even among the Dissenters, where the prayer and
-preaching is extemporaneous, it is not learning, but memory and habit,
-that are required. In the Church, as I would have it reformed, not only
-learning but talent to teach would be necessary; and the Ministers
-would rise to Bishoprics, not through family or political interest, but
-through preparation and capability to fill the office; for it would be
-required of them to be first-rate scholars and practical men in display
-of science, that sort of science, too, of which they are now so much
-afraid--the unlimited knowledge of things, rather than of languages.
-
-In what class of ages do we place the dark ages of man's history? To
-whose account are they placed? To the Pagan, Jew, Mahometan, Infidel, or
-whose? I blush for the Church when I consider it--to the account of that
-_misnomer_, the _Christian Church!_ So your pretended light to lighten
-the Gentiles, made them all darker, did it? Yes, it did and does, as
-your Church has mistaken it! And none of you are yet out of the
-fog created by the mystery. Not one of you has gained light of mind
-sufficient to dispel a particle of that fog of the dark ages. You are
-all, as Churchmen, as dark as any of those who lived in the tenth,
-eleventh, twelfth, or any other century; talk about your Reformation,
-Printing Press, Bible Societies, Dissenters, or what you please! The
-admission which has been made, not by the adversary, but by the Church
-itself, that the dark ages are within its reign, is decisive of the
-question as between me and any who may oppose me. Let it not be said,
-that the fault was in the Roman Catholic Church, and that it has been
-removed. I deny the assumption; the fault is not removed, nor has any
-Church made the least improvement on that called Roman Catholic. The
-fault lies in the remaining unrevealed mystery of the Church and the
-Sacred Scriptures. As far as Church is in question, this Nation is as
-dark as ever it was, and such is the case throughout Europe. There
-is much thick darkness to be yet dispelled; before our gentility is
-enlightened. We are precisely in the same error as the Hindoos, to whom
-we send Missionaries; and though we talk about civilization, we have it
-not. Our general state of society would shock the moral feelings of
-an American Indian. There are, in reality, but two distinct states of
-society: the superstitious and the civilized, the dark and the light.
-Can any man reasonably say, that we have yet passed the superstitious
-state? Are we not rather in the very depth of it; the light of a few
-individuals, now and then visible, acting upon the whole like flashes of
-lightning on a dark night, are seen and spent quickly, lost or buried
-in the general darkness, though effects may be left? The liberty which I
-have won in prison, to make the printing press bear upon this darkness,
-is the first unextinguished light that has been set up and kept burning.
-I now desire to light the seven candles of the English Church from
-my lighted torch. I would not be presumptuous if I saw any other man
-putting himself forward to propose this necessary business. It is not in
-me conceit: it is a passionate desire to do good and to leave the world
-better than I found it. So many years of imprisonment (this being the
-tenth) must shorten the period of my life, so I grow the more anxious
-to do the more while I remain a bubble on the sea of matter borne. Not
-that I despair of eternal life, but I learn from the Gospel that I must
-provide it for myself.
-
-In the present state of the Church, there is no sufficient and
-satisfactory motive given for keeping holy the sabbath-day; there is
-no reason given for holding a sabbath. I state it as a necessary civil
-institution for the improvement of the human mind, since labour to live
-is the condition of life. While the honest labourer is following his
-social avocation through six days, I would have his children going
-through a course of education by the Ministers in the Church, their
-especial office--"suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid
-them not; for of such is the kingdom of Heaven"--and on the seventh, or
-sabbath day, I would have such discourses, such teaching in the Church,
-as should be suitable to the united presence of both old and young. This
-would be a satisfactory motive to keep that day holy; and such, as
-far as I can see, was the evident purpose of the Sabbath and of the
-Christian Church. No other use of the Church can be more hallowed; no
-purpose more sacred; no employment more dignified to the minister as
-well as to the people. When Peter, in the Gospel, is called upon to feed
-the lambs of Christ, what was meant?--to feed them with grass? No! to
-feed the infants of the Church with true and useful knowledge; not to do
-which is treason to society and breach of trust in the Ministers of the
-Church. Oh! here is a fine field open, in which the lambs may gambol and
-grow up in spiritual stature, without living to be led like sheep to
-the slaughter! Knowledge is the proper business of the Church, and
-the people's only spiritual interest; and this is the foundation of a
-Catholic Church and of a Christian Religion, that is to bring peace
-on earth and good-will among men, which have not yet been seen,
-notwithstanding the supposed promise of the mistaken mystery for the
-last seventeen hundred years, so many centuries of a sinking state of
-things, of a fall of man from the light into dark ages! Let there be
-light in the Church and the people shall be enlightened. The true Church
-is now eclipsed by the mystery, and is a dark body. The knowledge of
-the revelation will be the extinction of the mystery, the light of the
-Church, and the salvation of the people from war, pestilence and famine.
-
-That revelation, according to the gospel itself, I take to be, that, as
-knowledge is the only distinction between man and any other animal, the
-more can be accumulated for him in the Church, the more good will be
-done, and the more he will be saved from evil. Existing things can alone
-be the subject of man's knowledge, and it is of more importance to him
-to know their properties than their time or history. Now, nothing of the
-properties of existing things is taught in the Church; but through the
-medium of the mystery remaining unrevealed, unexplained, or untranslated
-in our language, every thing is falsified to man's credulous view and
-consideration, by the ministers of the Church; nature appears to him
-distorted, and he lives without certainty, and dies deceived as to the
-future. Knowledge is as infinite as existing things, and man's power of
-acquisition illimitable. It is, then, a proper labour and business, and
-moral duty, of each generation of men, to leave behind them, for their
-successors, the largest possible amount of knowledge. This is true
-wealth, and will increase the value of all other wealth: without
-knowledge, other wealth is mere animal gratification. The spirit of
-knowledge gives life and new properties to everything, as far as man's
-use of it be in question. The Church is the proper fountain of this
-knowledge; should be the public library, the parish laboratory for
-investigations, the school for infants and adults, and everything that
-is auxiliary to the acquisition and extension of knowledge. From all I
-can trace, I verily believe that such was the original purpose and
-construction of the Christian Church; and that back to this it may be
-easiest and best reformed.
-
-I am confirmed in the opinion, that putting knowledge under the form of
-an allegorical mystery, for the purpose of confining it to a class, has
-been the cause of the mistake and its declension, and of the scholar's
-fall from a former higher estate of knowledge. Decidedly do I conclude,
-that our stock of knowledge is much below the quantity possessed some
-two or three thousand years ago, when the holders of the sacred books
-held the revelation with the mystery. I am sure it may be recovered, if
-fairly and earnestly sought. I see an impulse gathering over both
-Europe and America for the recovery of that knowledge. The Church was
-instituted to become the repository of knowledge; and all would have
-gone on well, but for the ancient system of deceiving what were and
-are called the vulgar--of having a double doctrine, the exoteric and
-esoteric, telling the people one thing and understanding quite another
-among themselves. Such were deceivers and not teachers of the people;
-and though the revelation has really been lost, lost I may say, as
-a just punishment for the wickedness of so deceiving the people, the
-successive Clergy has been ignorantly deceivers and not teachers of the
-people. They have inherited the exoteric or mysterious doctrine, and
-have not inherited the esoteric doctrine or the revelation of the
-mystery. This they have to learn, before they can reform their Church,
-or, before any one can reform it for them.
-
-I am confident enough to say, that you have no other ground on which to
-reform the Church, than that which I am proposing. Whatever other step
-you take will only be an aggravation of the evil of which you have now
-to complain; or of which others complain. If the Bishops have one item
-of wisdom among them, they will take me by the hand, and put their
-houses in order this way: if not, you and they may dissipate the
-existing Church Property, which you say you will not do; and after,
-we shall begin to form such a-new, and recover what we can of that
-property. I shall not despair of taking an active part in this thorough
-Reform of the Church while life remains: the People can do it for
-themselves, if Clergy, Ministers and King will not consent. It is what I
-began to do in my house in the year 1828, in critical and philosophical
-lectures and free discussion on the Sunday: an example which I am happy
-to see followed in many parts of this metropolis, and which will go on,
-if it be not cordially met, until it swallows up the Church and all the
-Churches.
-
-The true meaning of Church, is STATE OF MIND. Church is the state of
-mind. It is not made up of building and clergy; but of the people,
-the proper depositaries of mind. Property belonging to the Church
-is property belonging to the People, sacred to the preservation,
-strengthening, and increase of mind or knowledge. It has been
-monopolized dishonestly by the Clergy; and, in that sense, they have
-been robbers as well as deceivers of the people. This is the matter to
-be reformed, and nothing short of this will be reform. In Tithes,
-the people stand as the original proprietors of the land, the true
-inheritors of its tithes and first-fruits. Other rent is a minor
-consideration of value in labour or capital bestowed on the land. We
-must come back to this by some means or other.
-
-The office of King, as head of the Church, is a clerical office--the
-crown both of the Church and the State; and, for the sustentation of its
-true splendour and dignity, the man or woman filling the office should
-be the first scholar and most wise and virtuous being of the Nation.
-Whether this is a principle to be conveyed by hereditary descent, I do
-not stop to enquire; but the true hereditary principle of church office
-is talent and moral character; upon which, I doubt if any improvement
-can be made for purposes of state. Originally, in this island, Church
-and State were but one. The branching into two has been the result of
-wars and evil passions, to distinguish between the instructive and the
-destructive offices, hierarchy founded upon knowledge would be equal
-to all that society wants as government. State, as well as Church,
-signifies the People. As the latter relates to their minds, knowledge,
-or spiritual affairs, so the former expresses their politics and civil
-arrangements, their local and temporal affairs: they may be well united
-in one common interest, and under one common authority, in the reign of
-a people devoted to the acquisition of knowledge.
-
-It is matter of curious observation to see how the use of names among
-political parties is abused, and how they get reversed in applicable
-meaning. The class that has lately taken the title of Conservatives, is
-the class that, by the showing of this letter, has been destructive of
-everything valuable in our Institutions, so that we have the name only
-left, without any virtuous principle that formerly existed in
-those Institutions. We have the evidence of this in all the present
-difficulties of the country, both in Church and State. The ancestors of
-this class have not known how, or not cared to preserve those ancient
-Institutions in their original purity; and the class now wanted is
-the class of Restoratives, of men whose knowledge, wisdom, honesty
-and virtue, will enable them to purge out the accumulated errors of
-centuries, and restore the Institutions of the country to their pristine
-purity. I grant that this class is not found among the men who are
-commonly called or claim to be called Radical Reformers: there is as
-much ignorance in that class as in any other. But they certainly are
-not likely to be more destructive than they who call themselves
-Conservatives; for these have left nothing to be destroyed. The true
-and real aim of the men now called Radicals is to begin something
-a-new. Their profession of respect for existing Institutions is hollow,
-hypocritical and deceitful. I have had acquaintance enough with them to
-know that; and more than for the reminiscence of which I can now find
-respect. Still they will supersede both Tory and Whig, if these do not
-something upon the principle of a true restoration of Institutions to
-original and best principles. I would have the Radicals treated as the
-Dissenters: leave them no ground of complaint, and so annihilate them.
-A wise King or a wise Minister would see that the time is now come
-at which that step should be taken, and that further delays will be
-dangerous to every man in office. Necessary Institutions, if destroyed
-for a time, will rise again. I fear no kind of change as to the prospect
-of future advantage.
-
-Is not the idea horrible, and of the worst description, that a Church
-and King, or Church and State, should exist and hold together on no
-better tenure than a military power; than that of an army constantly
-under arms to keep the people from carrying their complaints to an
-extent disagreeable or alarming to the men in office? Yet such is all
-that you can boast of in the present state of the Institutions of the
-country. These Institutions did not originate under the protection of an
-army; nor did they, at their origination, require an army to protect
-and keep them in existence. An army is a disgraceful appendage, and
-destructive of every good principle in the Church:--it is not an
-honourable appendage to the office of King. To the people, it is a
-burthen and an immoral pest; less requisite in this island than in a
-continental nation. Give the people knowledge in their Churches, and
-they will soon dispense with an army.
-
-Evils accumulate because there is error at the bottom. There is now
-no People's Church: it is, as now existing, a Church of the Clergy,
-engrossing and wasting a large property of the people's due to a most
-valuable social purpose. The Dissenters have only made the matter worse,
-in new exactions for no new benefits. Not one tittle of good, not a
-particle of utility, now proceeds from the Clergy toward the people.
-They are obstacles to the people's welfare, and their use of means of
-provision for a new and better Church.
-
-God is the subject of man's adoration. But what is God? Man is but
-an idiot if he professes adoration beyond his understanding. Indeed,
-worship is but a synonymy of reason and its cultivation; and as we
-say:--_how can we reason but from what we know?_ so we may as truly
-say:--_how can we worship what we do not know?_ There is no
-worship without knowledge; all other pretence to it is idolatry and
-superstition. I have not space to enter upon this topic largely here;
-but a voluminous treatise on the word GOD will be the subject of my next
-Essay. For the purpose of this illustration of what the Church is, and
-what it ought to be, I can say correctly, that God, as the aggregate of
-existence, is known to be a physical and moral power. We have distinct
-ideas of this two-fold power. The American Indians, who speak of God as
-a Great Spirit, make the best general definition of the word that can be
-made, and appear to me to have the clearest, purest and wisest idea
-of Deity, as far as the regulation of their actions by that word is in
-question,--the pursuit of knowledge, by the use of letters and figures
-excepted. It corresponds with the emphatic declaration of the Gospel
-according to Saint John, chap. iv., v. 24:--"God is a Spirit, and they
-that worship must worship in spirit and in truth"--which means what I
-have before stated, that they must know what they worship before they
-can worship. There is evidence of physical as well as moral spirit. Both
-are seen in man, and constitute what may be termed the Spirit of Man.
-The one in man is worshipped or cultivated by attention to health; the
-other by attention to mental improvement or increased acquisition of
-knowledge. Speaking of God, as the aggregate and source of physical
-and moral spirit, of which man is a part or unit, we experience that we
-cannot alter our physical construction, or physical spirit, other than
-by attention to rules of health in the law of nature; but we can, by
-study and labour, greatly alter the state of mind or moral spirit. It
-is here we draw from God as from a fountain; and this asking, seeking,
-drawing from God, constitutes the whole principle of right prayer and
-worship, and the structure of the true Christian Church; other than
-which, I declare, is worship of the Devil and not of God. And I do not
-shrink from saying, that, as revelation is light and knowledge of God,
-and mystery is darkness and presence of the Devil, there has not through
-the last fifteen hundred years, the dark ages, throughout Europe, been
-carried on any other kind of worship than Devil-worship, and evil has
-been the fruit thereof. It was under this knowledge that I was moved to
-exhibit the effigy of the Devil arm in arm with the Bishop, in the
-front of my house and in several prints, for which I am now suffering
-imprisonment, like all other martyrs to truth, punished for acting upon
-my knowledge. My purpose was good, to open the eyes of my neighbours and
-passers by. It might have inconvenienced some of them; but such is the
-effect of every newly-published truth in eradication of error: your
-Reform of the Church, be it what it may, will inconvenience the Bishops
-and some of the Clergy. There would be no Devil, if there were not
-pleasure in Hell as well as in Heaven; as pardon can be had by asking
-for it. If all evil were naturally punished, we should not want penal
-laws.
-
-As true worship is a getting of a knowledge of God, so it follows, that
-the Ministry of the Church should consist of a teaching that knowledge,
-which is not now the case; for nothing as knowledge is in the Church
-taught.
-
-There can be nothing more clear in mathematical demonstration, than
-that, as God is a Spirit, of which man may partake, the participation
-must increase with that only which can increase in man--the amount of
-his knowledge. The whole declaration of the Christian Creed, read by the
-spirit, is, that God is the Spirit of Knowledge, the thing known, the
-principle of omniscience; and that man approaches and lives with God, as
-his mind expands in the accumulation of knowledge. A Bishop may write
-or preach spiritually or metaphysically by the year, and he can make no
-more of the word God, of his Church, or of himself, than I have made.
-The subject now wants a radical reform in the human mind.
-
-I have mentioned, in a former page, that the Jews can trace no
-nationality to the time of the Emperor Alexander of Macedon. The highest
-antiquity that can be given to them as a colony, is the time of Ptolomy
-Lagus, who began to encourage science and literature in Alexandria; and,
-from that time, nothing but a colony could they have ever been. It
-is not in a nationality that the original character of a Jew is to be
-estimated, but in a philosophic character dispersed among the nations; a
-people devoted to science; and so a chosen or select, because a learned
-people. There is no resemblance in character between an ancient and a
-modern Jew:--the name is an Asiatic name of God; and can only apply to
-a race of men in the sense of having perfected human nature, which it is
-very probable the ancient Jews had done, as far as it was then possible
-to do it, according to the system of initiation, through a series of
-discipline, into all the schools and mysteries of that time and country.
-The first public reference to a stated existence of the Books of the Old
-Testament is the reign of Ptolomy Philadelphus. Egypt appears to have
-been the only country in which it can be said that a series of Kings
-gave encouragement to science, which appears, as far as history is
-witness, to have brought in the Augustan era. It became, as far as
-wars and tumults would permit, fashionable so to do, until superstition
-overwhelmed it and usurped all its names, leading on to the dark ages of
-what has been since mis-called the Christian era. Cultivation of science
-is the restorative power, and the only public or private act that
-confers true dignity on man. This is the only remedy for the disorder
-of the Church; and I have introduced this historical view of the Jewish
-name, to show how flimsy is that web of superstition which has been
-woven in the existing Church on the foundation of a supposed national
-history and origin of the Jews. Truth nowhere finds opposition in fact,
-date, or principle: error is opposed by endless proofs of the kind.
-
-It remains now only that I give an outline of the historical defects of
-the present received view of the mystery of the Christian Religion, and
-then draw to a conclusion.
-
-No record extant, or referred to, that, having been written in the first
-century, has mentioned the human existence of an individual of the name
-of Jesus Christ.
-
-A passage now in Josephus is a declared interpolation, inasmuch as it
-was first known to the world in the Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius,
-written in the fourth century, after Photius and Origen, of the third
-century, had written, that Josephus had not made mention of Jesus
-Christ.
-
-In the writings of Philo Judĉus, an Alexandrian Jew of the first
-century, much is said about the Logos, in carrying out the philosophy of
-Plato; but not a word about Jesus Christ.
-
-Pliny the younger, in his letter to the Emperor Trajan, written from
-Bythinia between the years 106 and 112, is the first to mention the name
-of Christ. This mention is as of a God and not as of a man: no reference
-is made to Judea or to Jews; and the worshippers of this God he
-describes under the name of Christians, and as having long existed as a
-sect in that province. He writes as if he had heard nothing of the sect
-at Rome, and describes their worship as an excessive superstition.
-
-The passage in Tacitus is rejected, as not noticed by Eusebius or
-any one before the fifteenth century; that it was found in a copy by
-Johannes de Spire at Venice.
-
-This brings us to Justin Martyr, who can only be considered a Christian
-of the Platonic order, making no reference to Gospels or Epistles.
-
-Thence we come to St. Irenĉus, Bishop of Lyons, who has very much
-the appearance of a Druidical Bishop rather than as a newly-appointed
-Christian Bishop. Irenĉus mentions the four Gospels of Matthew, Mark,
-Luke and John, and gives the reason why there should be four; as because
-there are four seasons in the year. He has many other allegorical
-extravagancies in his writings, and is not deemed the most respectable
-of the Fathers of the present Church.
-
-In the third century, and toward the latter part of that century, near
-three hundred years after the supposed birth of the man Jesus Christ, we
-have a recognition of all the Books in the New Testament, which received
-the stamp of the authority of a Council of Bishops, as a selection from
-many similar and dissimilar books under similar titles, in the fourth
-century; but whether the revelation of the mystery was then understood
-by the Bishops does not appear.
-
-The Epistles of the New Testament have no dates nor reference to any
-persons who were known to have lived at any particular time. They
-are not supported by, nor do they support, the Gospels. The idea of
-allegorism prevailed in the third century.
-
-The Christian era was not reduced to chronology until the sixth century;
-and that chronology was very little used or referred to until the tenth,
-that the era of the Hegira of Mahomet had come much into use. The real
-struggle of the present Christian Church was not with the Pagan but with
-the Mahometan Religion, and they are near a balance of numerical power
-to this day. A battle in France, in the reign of Charles Martel, checked
-the progress of the Mahometans, and saved the entire overthrow of the
-mysterious Christian Church on the continent of Europe. There was a much
-greater similarity between the Pagan and the Christian, than between the
-Christian and the Mahometan Religion.
-
-I have no objection to the religion of the Jew or the Christian, that is
-founded on the spiritual reading of the Bible. Mahometanism is superior
-to both, while founded on the reading of the letter. The restoration of
-the Jews to original character and the millennium of the Christians is
-only to be brought about by the spiritual reading, which will lead to
-a devotion to science. The future Temple of the New Jerusalem must be a
-Temple devoted to the promulgation of truth and all sciences, and such
-must be the Church of Rome, and such our English Church, under any real
-state of reformation.
-
-The practical part of my proposition for a Reform in the Church, is,
-that all indefensible superstition or mystery be banished or explained,
-that it be made the best possible general school for the people, to
-which the knowledge of the time is equal; that the people being the
-Church, and the Ministers not being the Church, the property of the
-Church in each parish shall be managed by the parishioners as their
-property, and the best provision be made with that property, including
-tithes, that can be made for all the physical and moral necessities of
-the people. The property must be put under some authority, cannot be
-allowed to remain as it is, cannot be well put under extra parochial
-authority; but may be well and honestly left to parochial management, as
-the property of the parish.
-
-As our Institutions were all so first arranged for this purpose, so it
-will be found, that every thing emanating will fall back easily into
-its natural, moral, and original use. I cannot see the least difficulty,
-beyond the dishonesty and reluctance to yield of existing spirit. Such
-as are so weak in mind as to desire the present Church ceremony, may
-have it as long as they like, so as they do not exclude more useful
-business. I repeat, that, if the Bishops and Clergy be wise, they will
-take this advice: if they do not, they will very soon be where their
-predecessors were in the seventeenth century, not to be restored again.
-
-I flatter myself, that, in this letter, I have produced a pamphlet that
-will not be dead-born. As far as possible, or as clearness of purpose
-would permit, I have endeavoured to avoid the use of offensive language.
-Whatever the world may think of me, I know nothing more of myself, than
-that of having a passion to be useful, to my country and fellow-men
-generally, in and previous to the critical coming time of change. It is
-not now to be mistaken as near. It is near, and very near. The present
-system may be dragged on through several years; but no one can insure it
-a twelve months' existence. I know that all bad passions are allied
-to ignorance, and I desire to see all those passions softened down by
-knowledge. I am sure that the new man, the spiritual man, the good and
-moral man, must be created by knowledge and independent individuality
-of action; and as I prefer (the Government having the choice) a moral to
-any other revolution, brought about by words rather than by harder and
-harsher weapons, I feel, that I have but performed a social, a civil,
-and a religious duty, in presenting this letter to your notice. That it
-may be read, marked, learned and inwardly digested, is the prayer of
-
-Your humble Servant,
-
-And prisoner in the business of Church Reform,
-
-RICHARD CARLILE.
-
-Giltspur Street Compter,
-
-January 29,1835.
-
-TENTH YEAR OF IMPRISONMENT.
-
-
-
-
-
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