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<h2> CHRISTIANITY AND COMMON SENSE. </h2>
<p>There are two things in the world that can never get on together—religion
and common sense. Religion deals with the next life, common sense with
this; religion points to the sky, common sense to the earth; religion is
all imagination, common sense all reason; religion deals with what nobody
can understand, common sense with what everybody can understand; religion
gives us no return for our investments but flash notes on the bank of
expectation, common sense gives us good interest and full security for our
capital. They are as opposite as two things can possibly be, and they are
always at strife. Religion is always trying to fill the world with
delusions, and common sense is always trying to drive them away. Religion
says Live for the next world, and common sense says Live for this.</p>
<p>It is in the very nature of things that religion and common sense should
hate and oppose each other. They are rivals for the same prize—aspirants
to the same throne. In every age a conflict has been going on between
them; and although common sense is fast getting the upper hand to-day, the
war is far from ended, and we may see some fierce struggles before the
combat closes. There can, however, be no doubt as to the issue; for
science has appeared on the scene with the most deadly weapons of
destruction, and science is the sworn ally of common sense. Nay, is not
Science the mighty child of common sense—the fruit of Reason from
the lusty embrace of Nature?</p>
<p>Common sense is primitive logic. It does not depend on books, and it is
superior to culture. It is the perception of analogy—the instinct of
causation. It guides the savage through trackless forests, and the
astronomer through infinite space. It makes the burnt child dread the
fire, and a Darwin see in a few obvious facts the solution of a mystery.
It built the first hut and the last palace; the first canoe and the last
ocean steamer. It constructed docks, and laid down railways, applied steam
to machinery and locomotion, prompted every mechanical discovery,
instigated all material progress, and transformed an ape-like beast into a
civilised man.</p>
<p>Even the highest art is full of common sense. Sanity and simplicity are
the distinguishing marks of the loftiest genius, which may be described as
inspired common sense. The great artist never loses touch of fact; he may
let his imagination soar as high as the stars, but he keeps his feet
firm-planted on the ground. All the world recognises the sublimity of
Greek sculpture and Shakespeare's plays, because they are both true to
nature and fact and coincident with everlasting laws. The true sublime is
not fantastic; it is solid and satisfying, like a mighty Alp, deep-rooted
first of all in the steadfast earth, and then towering up with its
vineyards, its pastures, its pine-forests, its glaciers, its precipices,
and last of all the silence of infinitude brooding over its eternal snows.</p>
<p>Common sense, the civiliser, has had an especially hard fight with that
particular form of religion known as Christianity. When Tertullian said
that Christianity was to be believed because it was incredible, he spoke
in the true spirit of faith; just as old Sir Thomas Browne did when he
found the marvels of religion too weak for his credulity, David Hume
expressed the same truth ironically at the conclusion of his <i>Essay on
Miracles</i>, when he said that it was not reason that persuaded any
Christian of the truth of his creed, which was established on the higher
ground of faith, and could not be accepted without a miracle.</p>
<p>Common sense is blasphemy. It is the thing which religion dreads most, and
which the priests most mortally hate. Common sense dispenses with learned
disquisitions, and tries everything with simple mother wit. If, for
instance, it hears that a whale swallowed a man, and vomited him up safe
and sound three days after, it does not want to know all the physiology of
men and whales before deciding if the story is true; it just indulges in a
hearty laugh and blows the story to Hades. Miracle-mongers are quite
helpless when a man turns round and says, "My dear sir, that story's just
a trifle too thin." They see his case is a hopeless one, and leave him to
the tender mercies of the Lord of Hosts.</p>
<p>Learning is all very well in its way, but common sense is a great deal
better. It is infinitely the best weapon to use against Christianity.
Without a knowledge of history, without being acquainted with any science
but that of daily life, without a command of Hebrew, Latin and Greek, or
any other language than his own, a plain man can take the Bible in his
hand and easily satisfy himself it is not the word of God. Common sense
tells him not to believe in contradictory statements; common sense tells
him that a man could not have found a wife in a land where there were no
women; common sense tells him that three millions of people never marched
out of any country in one night; common sense tells him that Jesus Christ
could not have "gone up" from two places at once; common sense tells him
that turning devils out of men into pigs is a fable not half as good as
the poorest of Æsop's; common sense tells him that nobody but a skunk
would consent to be saved from the penalty of his own misdeeds by the
sufferings of an innocent man; common sense tells him that while men
object to having their pockets picked and their throats cut, they want no
divine command against theft and murder; common sense tells him that God
never ordered the committal of such atrocities as those ascribed to him in
the Bible; and common sense tells him that a God of mercy never made a
hell.</p>
<p>Yes, all this is perfectly clear, and the priests know it. That is why
they cry out Blasphemy! every time they meet it. But that is also
precisely the reason why we should employ it against them. The best
antidote to superstition, the worst enemy of priestcraft, and the best
friend of man, is (to parody Danton's famous formula) Common Sense, and
again Common Sense, and for ever Common Sense.</p>
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