<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FORGIVE AND FORGET. * </h2>
<p>* March 19, 1893. Written after a debate at the Hall of<br/>
Science, London, between the writer and the Rev. C. Fleming<br/>
Williams, on "Christian Ideas of Man and Methods of<br/>
Progress." Mr. Branch, of the London County Council,<br/>
presided, and there was a very large attendance.<br/></p>
<p>My recent friendly discussion with the Rev. C. Fleming Williams was most
enjoyable. It is so-pleasant to debate points of difference with an
opponent whom you fully respect, towards whom you have not an atom of ill
feeling, and to whom you disclose your own views in exchange for the
confidence of his. The chairman said that he had visited the Hall of
Science many years ago, and frequently heard discussions, but they were
generally acrimonious, and seldom profitable. No doubt he spoke what he
felt to be the truth; at the same time, however, he probably left out of
sight a very important factor, namely, the tone and temper which Christian
critics are apt to display on a Secular platform; the assumed superiority,
which is not justified by any apparent gifts of intelligence; the
implication in most of their remarks that the Freethinker is on a lower
moral level than they are, though it would never be suspected by an
indifferent observer; the arrogance which is often the undercurrent of
their speech, and sometimes bursts forth into sheer, undisguised
insolence. Christian critics of this species have, perhaps, stung
Freethought lecturers into hot resentment, when it would have been far
preferable to keep cool, and continue using the rapier instead of seizing
the bludgeon. It is always a mistake to lose one's temper, but it becomes
excusable (although not justifiable) under intense provocation. On the
whole, it is safe to say that Christians have received more courtesy than
they have shown in their controversies with Freethinkers.</p>
<p>So much for the debate itself. What I want to deal with in this article is
the plea of the chairman, and also of Mr. Williams, for a more charitable
understanding. Christians have abused, ill-treated, and even butchered
Freethinkers in the past, but the best Christians are ashamed of it now.
Let us then, it is urged, bury the past; let us forgive and forget.</p>
<p>So far as it concerns <i>men</i> only I am not insensible to the appeal.
Far be it from me to blame Mr. Williams for the follies and malignancies
of his Christian predecessors. On a question of character, of merit or
demerit, every man stands or falls alone. Imputed wickedness is just as
irrational as imputed righteousness. I no more wish to make Mr. Williams
responsible for the butcheries of a Torquemada or an Alva than I wish to
be saved by the sufferings of Jesus Christ. So far as Mr. Williams is
concerned, I have no past to bury. I am not aware that he has ever desired
anything but absolute justice for all forms of opinion; and I know that he
denounced my imprisonment for the artificial crime of "blasphemy."
Evidently, then, Mr. Williams' plea is more than personal. It is really a
request that I should judge Christianity, as a great, ancient, historic
system, not by what it has in the main taught and done, but by what a
select body of its professors say and do in the present generation.</p>
<p>Now this is a plea which I must reject. In the first place, while I admit
it is unfair to judge Christianity by its <i>worst</i> specimens, I regard
it as no less unfair to judge it by its <i>best</i>. This is not justice
and impartiality. The Chief Constable of Hull* is probably as sincere a
Christian as Mr. Williams. I have to meet them both, and I must take them
as I find them. The one pays me a compliment, and the other threatens me
with a prosecution; one shakes me cordially by the hand, the other tries
to prevent me from lecturing. The difference between them is flagrant. But
how am I to put Mr. Williams to the credit of Christianity, and Captain
Gurney to the credit of something else? What <i>is</i> the something else?
They both speak to me as Christians; is it for me to say that the one is a
Christian and the other is not? Is not that a domestic question for the
Christians to settle among themselves? And am I not just and reasonable in
declining to take the decision out of their hands?</p>
<p>* This gentleman was trying to prevent me from delivering<br/>
Sunday lectures at Hull under the usual condition of a<br/>
charge for admission.<br/></p>
<p>In the next place, since Christianity is, as I have said, not only a
great, but an ancient and historic system, its past <i>cannot</i> be
buried, and should not be if it could. History is philosophy teaching us
by example. Without it the present is meaningless, and the future an
obscurity. Now history shows us that Christianity has been steady and
relentless in the persecution of heresy. We have therefore to inquire the
reason. It will not do to say that persecution is natural to human pride
in face of opposition; for Buddhism, which is older than Christianity, has
not been guilty of a single act of persecution in the course of
twenty-four centuries. Another explanation is necessary. And what is it?
When we look into the matter we find that persecution has always been
justified, nay inculcated, by appealing to Christian doctrines and the
very language of Scripture. Unbelief was treason against God, and the
rejection of Christ was rebellion. They were more than operations of the
intellect; they were movements of the will—not mistaken, but
satanic. And as faith was essential to salvation, and heresy led straight
to hell, the elimination of the heretic was in the interest of the people
he might divert from the road to paradise. It was simply an act of social
sanitation.</p>
<p>I am aware that this conception is not paraded by "advanced" Christians,
though they seldom renounce it in decisive language. But these "advanced"
Christians are the children of a later age, full of intellectual and moral
influences which are foreign to, or at least independent of, Christianity.
Their attitude is the resultant of several forces. But suppose a time of
reaction came, and the influences I have referred to should diminish for a
season; is it not probable, nay certain, that the old forces of Christian
exclusiveness and infallibility, based upon a divine revelation, would
once more produce the effects-which cursed and degraded Europe for over a
thousand years? Such, at any rate, is my belief; it is also, I think, the
belief of most Freethinkers; and this is the reason why we cannot forgive
and forget. The serpent is scotched, not slain; and we must beware of its
fangs.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />