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<h2> S'W'ELP ME GOD. </h2>
<p>Whoever has seen a Hebrew money-lender in a County Court take up a copy of
the Old Testament, present the greasy cover to his greasy lips, and, like
honest Moses in the <i>School for Scandal</i>, "take his oath on that,"
must have had a lively impression as to the value of swearing as a
religious ceremony. And this impression must have been heightened when he
has seen an ingenuous Christian, on the other side of the suit, present a
copy of the New Testament to <i>his</i> pious lips, and quietly swear to
the very opposite of all that the God-fearing Jew had solemnly declared to
be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. One's
appreciation of the oath is still further increased by watching the
various litigants and witnesses as they caress the sacred volume: Here a
gentleman wears an expression of countenance which seems to imply "I guess
they'll get a good deal of truth out of me"; and there anothers face seems
to promise as great a regard for truth as is consistent with his
understanding with the solicitor who subpoenaed him as an independent
witness in the interest of justice and a sound client. Hard swearing is
the order of the day. So conflicting is the evidence on simple matters of
fact that it is perfectly obvious that the very atmosphere is charged with
duplicity. The thing is taken as a matter of course. Judges are used to
it, and act accordingly, deciding in most cases by a keen observation of
the witnesses and an extensive knowlege of the seamy side of nature. But
sometimes the very judges are nonplussed, so brazen are the faces of the
gentlemen who "have kissed the book" Very often, no doubt, their honors
feel inclined to say, like the American judge in directing his jury,
"Well, gentlemen, if you believe what these witnesses swear, you will give
a verdict for the plaintiff; and if you believe what the other witnesses
swear, you will give a verdict for the defendant; but if, like me, you
don't believe what either side swears, I'm hanged if I know what you will
do."</p>
<p>The fact is, the oath is absolutely useless if its object is to prevent
false witness. Should there be any likelihood of a persecution for
perjury, a two-faced Testament-kisser will be on his guard, and be very
careful to tell only such lies as cannot be clearly proved against him. He
dreads the prospect of daily exercise on the treadmill, he loathes the
idea of picking oakum, and his gorge rises at the thought of brown bread
and skilly. But so long as that danger is avoided, there are hosts of
witnesses, most of them very good Christians, who have been suckled on the
Gospel in Sunday Schools, and fed afterwards on the strong meat of the
Word in churches and chapels, who will swear fast and loose after calling
God to witness to their veracity. They ask the Almighty to deal with them
according as they tell the truth, yet for all that they proceed to tell
the most unblushing lies. What is the reason of this strange
inconsistency? Simply this. Hell is a long way off, and many things may
happen before the Day of Judgment. Besides, God is merciful; he is always
ready to forgive sins; a man has only to repent in time, that is a few
minutes before death, and all his sins will be washed out in the cleansing
blood of Christ. Notwithstanding all his lies in earthly courts, the
repentant sinner will not lose his right of walking about for ever and
ever in the court of heaven, although some poor devil whose liberty or
property he swore away may be frizzling for ever and ever in hell.</p>
<p>We are strongly of opinion that if the oath were abolished altogether
there would be fewer falsehoods told in our public courts. No doubt the
law of perjury has some effect, but it is less than is generally imagined,
partly because the law is difficult to apply, and partly because there is
a wide disinclination to apply it, owing to a sort of freemasonry in false
witness, which is apt to be regarded as an essential part of the game of
litigation. Here and there, too, there may be a person of sincere piety,
who fears to tell a lie in what he considers the direct presence of God.
But for the most part the fear of punishment, in this world or in the
next, will not make men veracious. The fact is proved by universal
experience; nay, there are judges, as well as philosophers, who openly
declare that the oath has a direct tendency to create perjury. Anyone,
with a true sense of morality will understand the reason of this. Fear is
not a moral motive; and when the threatened punishment is very remote or
very uncertain, it has next to no deterrent effect. Cupidity is matched
against fear, and the odds of the game being in its favor, it wins. But if
a moral motive is appealed to, the case is different. Many a man will tell
a lie in the witness-box who would scruple to do so "on his honor"; many a
man will lie before God who would scruple to deceive a friend. Let a man
feel that he is trusted, let his self-respect be appealed to, and he is
more likely to be veracious than he would be if he were threatened with
imprisonment in this life and hell-fire in the next.</p>
<p>Why Christians should cling to this relic of barbarity it is difficult to
conceive. Their Savior plainly commanded them to "Swear not at all," and
the early Church obeyed this injunction until it rose to power under
Constantine. It is also a striking fact that the apostle Peter, when he
disobeyed his Master, and took an oath, used it to confirm a palpable lie.
When the damsel charged him in court with having been a follower of Jesus,
he "Denied it with an oath." "You were one of them," said the damsel. "I
wasn't," said Peter. "You <i>were</i> with him," she rejoined. Whereupon
Peter exclaimed "S'w'elp me God, I never knew him." Surely if
self-interest made Peter commit flat perjury in the bodily presence of his
Savior, it is idle to assert that the oath in any way promotes veracity.</p>
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