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<h2> MR. GLADSTONE ON DEVILS. </h2>
<p>When the Grand Old Man crossed swords with Professor Huxley on the miracle
of Gadara, he spent all his time in discussing whether the pigs belonged
to Jews or Gentiles. The more serious point, whether a legion of devils
were actually cast out of one or two men and sent into a herd of swine, he
sedulously avoided. Professor Huxley, however, is too wide-awake to be
drawn off the scent; and while he disputed the points of geography and
ethnology, he insisted upon the fact that their only importance was their
relation to a miraculous story, which marked the parting of the ways
between Science and Christianity.</p>
<p>The demonic theory of disease, including insanity, is universal among
savages. For proof and illustration the reader has only to consult Dr.
Tylor's splendid work on <i>Primitive Culture</i>. There are special
demons for every malady, and the way to cure the disease is to cast out
the evil spirit. Of course insanity is a striking disorder, and in default
of the pathological explanation the savage regards the wild, wandering
words and inexplicable actions of the sufferer as the words and actions of
a demon, who has taken possession of the man's body, and driven his soul
abroad or put it in abeyance. This theory of madness survived through all
the centuries of Christian history until the advent of modern science. Mad
people were chained up, exhibited as objects of derision, and often beaten
unmercifully. It was the <i>devil</i> in them, as in the poor witches,
that was treated in this fashion. And it was a recognised part of a
clergyman's business to cast out devils. The Church of England canon is
still unrepealed which provides that the clergy, before engaging in this
useful if not agreeable occupation, must obtain the written authority of
their bishops.</p>
<p>Laugh or smile as we will at this superstition, it is an integral part of
the New Testament. The demonic theory of disease is confessed in the story
of Jesus rebuking the fever of Peter's mother-in-law, so that it left her
instantaneously, flying out of the door or window, or up the chimney.
Jesus repeatedly cast out devils. He expelled seven, in succession or at
one fell swoop, from Mary Magdalene. He turned a legion—that is,
several thousands—out of the possessed Gadarenes; there being at
least one apiece for the bedevilled swine who were driven to destruction.
Paul likewise cast out devils. Indeed, if demonic possession in the New
Testament is explained away, there is no reason why every other miraculous
element should not be dealt with in the same manner.</p>
<p>Mr. Gladstone perceives this, although he does not commit himself in his
<i>Impregnable Rock of Holy Scripture</i>. "I am afraid," he says, in a
letter to the Rev. J. W. Belcher, "that the objections to demoniacal
possession involve in germ the rejection of all belief in the
supernatural." This is wonderfully clear and straightforward for the Grand
Old Man. Give up the belief that mad people may be tenanted by devils, and
you should immediately join the National Secular Society. You have taken
the first decisive step on the broad road of "infidelity," and nothing but
a want of logic or courage prevents you from hastening to the inevitable
conclusion.</p>
<p>Archbishop Trench, in his <i>Notes on the Miracles of Our Lord</i>,
rejects the theory that the "demoniacs" were simply insane. No doubt, he
says, there was "a substratum of disease, which in many cases helped to
lay open the sufferer to the deeper evil." But "our Lord Himself uses
language which is not reconcileable" with the naturalist theory. "It may
well be a question moreover," says Trench, "if an Apostle, or one with
apostolic discernment of spirits, were to enter now into one of our
madhouses, how many of the sufferers there he might not recognise as thus
having more immediately fallen under the tyranny of the powers of
darkness."</p>
<p>Dean Milman, the discreet, plausible, and polished historian of the
Christian superstition, did not shrink from regarding the New Testament
demoniacs as merely insane; and "nothing was more probable," he remarked,
"than that lunacy should take the turn and speak the language of the
prevailing superstition of the times." Precisely so. But why did Jesus
imitate the lunatics? He addresses the evil spirit and not the madman.
"Hold thy peace," he says, "and come out of him." No doubt the demoniacs
were simply insane; but in that case Jesus himself was mistaken, or the
evangelists put into his mouth words that he never used. The first
alternative destroys the divinity of Jesus; the second destroys the
authority of the evangelists.</p>
<p>Mr. Gladstone's position is the only honest and logical one for a
professed Christian. Demonic possession cannot be cut out of the New
Testament without leaving a gap through which all the "infidelity" in the
world might pass freely. Devils are not confined to hell. They are
commercial travellers in brimstone and mischief. They go home
occasionally; the rest of the time they are abroad on business. When they
see a promising madman they get inside him, and find warmer quarters than
the universal air. Very likely they have started Theosophy, in order to
provide themselves with fresh residences.</p>
<p>Little devils of course involve the big Devil—Apollyon, Beelzebub,
Abaddon, Satan, Lucifer, Old Nick. He commands the infernal armies, and is
one of the deities in Mr. Gladstone's pantheon. He is even embedded in the
revised version of the Lord's Prayer—like a fly in amber. "Deliver
us from evil" now reads "Deliver us from the Evil One." Thus the Devil
triumphs, and the first of living English statesmen is reduced by
Christian superstition to the level of modern savages and ancient
barbarians. Mr. Gladstone is perhaps the highest type of the Christian
statesman. But how small and effeminate he appears, after all, in
comparison with a great Pagan statesman like Julius Cæsar, whose brain was
free from all superstition! Were the "mighty Julius" to re-appear on
earth, and see a great statesman believing the story of devils being
turned out of men into pigs, he would wonder what blight had fallen upon
the human intellect in two thousand years.</p>
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