Bertrand Russell - 1930
My own view on religion is that of
Lucretius. I regard it as a disease born of fear and as a source
of untold misery to the human race. I cannot, however, deny that
it has made some contributions to civilization. It helped in
early days to fix the calendar, and it caused Egyptian priests to
chronicle eclipses with such care that in time they became able
to predict them. These two services I am prepared to acknowledge,
but I do not know of any others.
The word religion is used nowadays in a very loose
sense. Some people, under the influence of extreme Protestantism,
employ the word to denote any serious personal convictions as to
morals or the nature of the universe. This use of the word is
quite unhistorical. Religion is primarily a social phenomenon.
Churches may owe their origin to teachers with strong individual
convictions, but these teachers have seldom had much influence
upon the churches that they have founded, whereas churches have
had enormous influence upon the communities in which they
flourished. To take the case that is of most interest to members
of Western civilization: the teaching of Christ, as it appears in
the Gospels, has had extraordinarily little to do with the ethics
of Christians. The most important thing about Christianity, from
a social and historical point of view, is not Christ but the
church, and if we are to judge of Christianity as a social force
we must not go to the Gospels for our material. Christ taught
that you should give your goods to the poor, that you should not
fight, that you should not go to church, and that you should not
punish adultery. Neither Catholics nor Protestants have shown any
strong desire to follow His teaching in any of these respects.
Some of the Franciscans, it is true, attempted to teach the
doctrine of apostolic poverty, but the Pope condemned them, and
their doctrine was declared heretical. Or, again, consider such a
text as "Judge not, that ye be not judged," and ask yourself what
influence such a text has had upon the Inquisition and the Ku
Klux Klan.
What is true of Christianity is equally true of
Buddhism. The Buddha was amiable and enlightened; on his deathbed
he laughed at his disciples for supposing that he was immortal.
But the Buddhist priesthood—as it exists, for example, in
Tibet—has been obscurantist, tyrannous, and cruel in the highest
degree.
There is nothing accidental about this difference
between a church and its founder. As soon as absolute truth is
supposed to be contained in the sayings of a certain man, there
is a body of experts to interpret his sayings, and these experts
infallibly acquire power, since they hold the key to truth. Like
any other privileged caste, they use their power for their own
advantage. They are, however, in one respect worse than any other
privileged caste, since it is their business to expound an
unchanging truth, revealed once for all in utter perfection, so
that they become necessarily opponents of all intellectual and
moral progress. The church opposed Galileo and Darwin; in our own
day it opposes Freud. In the days of its greatest power it went
further in its opposition to the intellectual life. Pope Gregory
the Great wrote to a certain bishop a letter beginning: "A report
has reached us which we cannot mention without a blush, that thou
expoundest grammar to certain friends." The bishop was compelled
by pontifical authority to desist from this wicked labor, and
Latinity did not recover until the Renaissance. It is not only
intellectually but also morally that religion is pernicious. I
mean by this that it teaches ethical codes which are not
conducive to human happiness. When, a few years ago, a plebiscite
was taken in Germany as to whether the deposed royal houses
should still be allowed to enjoy their private property, the
churches in Germany officially stated that it would be contrary
to the teaching of Christianity to deprive them of it. The
churches, as everyone knows, opposed the abolition of slavery as
long as they dared, and with a few well-advertised exceptions
they oppose at the present day every movement toward economic
justice. The Pope has officially condemned Socialism.
Christianity and Sex
The worst feature of the Christian
religion, however, is its attitude toward sex—an attitude so
morbid and so unnatural that it can be understood only when taken
in relation to the sickness of the civilized world at the time
the Roman Empire was decaying. We sometimes hear talk to the
effect that Christianity improved the status of women. This is
one of the grossest perversions of history that it is possible to
make. Women cannot enjoy a tolerable position in society where it
is considered of the utmost importance that they should not
infringe a very rigid moral code. Monks have always regarded
Woman primarily as the temptress; they have thought of her mainly
as the inspirer of impure lusts. The teaching of the church has
been, and still is, that virginity is best, but that for those
who find this impossible marriage is permissible. "It is better
to marry than to burn," as St. Paul puts it. By making marriage
indissoluble, and by stamping out all knowledge of the ars
amandi, the church did what it could to secure that the only form
of sex which it permitted should involve very little pleasure and
a great deal of pain. The opposition to birth control has, in
fact, the same motive: if a woman has a child a year until she
dies worn out, it is not to be supposed that she will derive much
pleasure from her married life; therefore birth control must be
discouraged.
The conception of Sin which is bound up with
Christian ethics is one that does an extraordinary amount of
harm, since it affords people an outlet for their sadism which
they believe to be legitimate, and even noble. Take, for example,
the question of the prevention of syphilis. It is known that, by
precautions taken in advance, the danger of contracting this
disease can be made negligible. Christians, however, object to
the dissemination of knowledge of this fact, since they hold it
good that sinners should be punished. They hold this so good that
they are even willing that punishment should extend to the wives
and children of sinners. There are in the world at the present
moment many thousands of children suffering from congenital
syphilis who would never have been born but for the desire of
Christians to see sinners punished. I cannot understand how
doctrines leading us to this fiendish cruelty can be considered
to have any good effects upon morals.
It is not only in regard to sexual behaviour but
also in regard to knowledge on sex subjects that the attitude of
Christians is dangerous to human welfare. Every person who has
taken the trouble to study the question in an unbiased spirit
knows that the artificial ignorance on sex subjects which
orthodox Christians attempt to enforce upon the young is
extremely dangerous to mental and physical health, and causes in
those who pick up their knowledge by the way of "improper" talk,
as most children do, an attitude that sex is in itself indecent
and ridiculous. I do not think there can be any defense for the
view that knowledge is ever undesirable. I should not put
barriers in the way of the acquisition of knowledge by anybody at
any age. But in the particular case of sex knowledge there are
much weightier arguments in its favor than in the case of most
other knowledge. A person is much less likely to act wisely when
he is ignorant than when he is instructed, and it is ridiculous
to give young people a sense of sin because they have a natural
curiosity about an important matter.
Every boy is interested in trains. Suppose we told
him that an interest in trains is wicked; suppose we kept his
eyes bandaged whenever he was in a train or on a railway station;
suppose we never allowed the word "train" to be mentioned in his
presence and preserved an impenetrable mystery as to the means by
which he is transported from one place to another. The result
would not be that he would cease to be interested in trains; on
the contrary, he would become more interested than ever but would
have a morbid sense of sin, because this interest had been
represented to him as improper. Every boy of active intelligence
could by this means be rendered in a greater or less degree
neurasthenic. This is precisely what is done in the matter of
sex; but, as sex is more interesting than trains, the results are
worse. Almost every adult in a Christian community is more or
less diseased nervously as a result of the taboo on sex knowledge
when he or she was young. And the sense of sin which is thus
artificially implanted is one of the causes of cruelty, timidity,
and stupidity in later life. There is no rational ground of any
sort or kind in keeping a child ignorant of anything that he may
wish to know, whether on sex or on any other matter. And we shall
never get a sane population until this fact is recognized in
early education, which is impossible so long as the churches are
able to control educational politics.
Leaving these comparatively detailed objections on
one side, it is clear that the fundamental doctrines of
Christianity demand a great deal of ethical perversion before
they can be accepted. The world, we are told, was created by a
God who is both good and omnipotent. Before He created the world
He foresaw all the pain and misery that it would contain; He is
therefore responsible for all of it. It is useless to argue that
the pain in the world is due to sin. In the first place, this is
not true; it is not sin that causes rivers to overflow their
banks or volcanoes to erupt. But even if it were true, it would
make no difference. If I were going to beget a child knowing that
the child was going to be a homicidal maniac, I should be
responsible for his crimes. If God knew in advance the sins of
which man would be guilty, He was clearly responsible for all the
consequences of those sins when He decided to create man. The
usual Christian argument is that the suffering in the world is a
purification for sin and is therefore a good thing. This argument
is, of course, only a rationalization of sadism; but in any case
it is a very poor argument. I would invite any Christian to
accompany me to the children's ward of a hospital, to watch the
suffering that is there being endured, and then to persist in the
assertion that those children are so morally abandoned as to
deserve what they are suffering. In order to bring himself to say
this, a man must destroy in himself all feelings of mercy and
compassion. He must, in short, make himself as cruel as the God
in whom he believes. No man who believes that all is for the best
in this suffering world can keep his ethical values unimpaired,
since he is always having to find excuses for pain and
misery.
The Objections to Religion
The objections to religion are of
two sorts—intellectual and moral. The intellectual objection is
that there is no reason to suppose any religion true; the moral
objection is that religious precepts date from a time when men
were more cruel than they are and therefore tend to perpetuate
inhumanities which the moral conscience of the age would
otherwise outgrow.
To take the intellectual objection first: there is
a certain tendency in our practical age to consider that it does
not much matter whether religious teaching is true or not, since
the important question is whether it is useful. One question
cannot, however, well be decided without the other. If we believe
the Christian religion, our notions of what is good will be
different from what they will be if we do not believe it.
Therefore, to Christians, the effects of Christianity may seem
good, while to unbelievers they may seem bad. Moreover, the
attitude that one ought to believe such and such a proposition,
independently of the question whether there is evidence in its
favor, is an attitude which produces hostility to evidence and
causes us to close our minds to every fact that does not suit our
prejudices.
A certain kind of scientific candor is a very
important quality, and it is one which can hardly exist in a man
who imagines that there are things which it is his duty to
believe. We cannot, therefore, really decide whether religion
does good without investigating the question whether religion is
true. To Christians, Mohammedans, and Jews the most fundamental
question involved in the truth of religion is the existence of
God. In the days when religion was still triumphant the word
"God" had a perfectly definite meaning; but as a result of the
onslaughts of the Rationalists the word has become paler and
paler, until it is difficult to see what people mean when they
assert that they believe in God. Let us take, for purposes of
argument, Matthew Arnold's definition: "A power not ourselves
that makes for righteousness." Perhaps we might make this even
more vague and ask ourselves whether we have any evidence of
purpose in this universe apart from the purposes of living beings
on the surface of this planet.
The usual argument of religious people on this
subject is roughly as follows: "I and my friends are persons of
amazing intelligence and virtue. It is hardly conceivable that so
much intelligence and virtue could have come about by chance.
There must, therefore, be someone at least as intelligent and
virtuous as we are who set the cosmic machinery in motion with a
view to producing Us." I am sorry to say that I do not find this
argument so impressive as it is found by those who use it. The
universe is large; yet, if we are to believe Eddington, there are
probably nowhere else in the universe beings as intelligent as
men. If you consider the total amount of matter in the world and
compare it with the amount forming the bodies of intelligent
beings, you will see that the latter bears an almost
infinitesimal proportion to the former. Consequently, even if it
is enormously improbable that the laws of chance will produce an
organism capable of intelligence out of a casual selection of
atoms, it is nevertheless probable that there will be in the
universe that very small number of such organisms that we do in
fact find.
Then again, considered as the climax to such a vast
process, we do not really seem to me sufficiently marvelous. Of
course, I am aware that many divines are far more marvelous than
I am, and that I cannot wholly appreciate merits so far
transcending my own. Nevertheless, even after making allowances
under this head, I cannot but think that Omnipotence operating
through all eternity might have produced something better. And
then we have to reflect that even this result is only a flash in
the pan. The earth will not always remain habitable; the human
race will die out, and if the cosmic process is to justify itself
hereafter it will have to do so elsewhere than on the surface of
our planet.. And even if this should occur, it must stop sooner
or later. The second law of thermodynamics makes it scarcely
possible to doubt that the universe is running down, and that
ultimately nothing of the slightest interest will be possible
anywhere. Of course, it is open to us to say that when that time
comes God will wind up the machinery again; but if we do not say
this, we can base our assertion only upon faith, not upon one
shred of scientific evidence. So far as scientific evidence goes,
the universe has crawled by slow stages to a somewhat pitiful
result on this earth and is going to crawl by still more pitiful
stages to a condition of universal death. If this is to be taken
as evidence of a purpose, I can only say that the purpose is one
that does not appeal to me. I see no reason, therefore, to
believe in any sort of God, however vague and however attenuated.
I leave on one side the old metaphysical arguments, since
religious apologists themselves have thrown them over.
The Soul and Immortality
The Christian emphasis on the
individual soul has had a profound influence upon the ethics of
Christian communities. It is a doctrine fundamentally akin to
that of the Stoics, arising as theirs did in communities that
could no longer cherish political hopes. The natural impulse of
the vigorous person of decent character is to attempt to do good,
but if he is deprived of all political power and of all
opportunity to influence events, he will be deflected from his
natural course and will decide that the important thing is to be
good. This is what happened to the early Christians; it led to a
conception of personal holiness as something quite independent of
beneficient action, since holiness had to be something that could
be achieved by people who were impotent in action. Social virtue
came therefore to be excluded from Christian ethics.
To this day conventional Christians think an
adulterer more wicked than a politician who takes bribes,
although the latter probably does a thousand times as much harm.
The medieval conception of virtue, as one sees in their pictures,
was of something wishy-washy, feeble, and sentimental. The most
virtuous man was the man who retired from the world; the only men
of action who were regarded as saints were those who wasted the
lives and substance of their subjects in fighting the Turks, like
St. Louis. The church would never regard a man as a saint because
he reformed the finances, or the criminal law, or the judiciary.
Such mere contributions to human welfare would be regarded as of
no importance. I do not believe there is a single saint in the
whole calendar whose saintship is due to work of public utility.
With this separation between the social and the moral person
there went an increasing separation between soul and body, which
has survived in Christian metaphysics and in the systems derived
from Descartes.
One may say, broadly speaking, that the body
represents the social and public part of a man, whereas the soul
represents the private part. In emphasizing the soul, Christian
ethics has made itself completely individualistic. I think it is
clear that the net result of all the centuries of Christianity
has been to make men more egotistic, more shut up in themselves,
than nature made them; for the impulses that naturally take a man
outside the walls of his ego are those of sex, parenthood, and
patriotism or herd instinct. Sex the church did everything it
could to decry and degrade; family affection was decried by
Christ himself and the bulk of his followers; and patriotism
could find no place among the subject populations of the Roman
Empire. The polemic against the family in the Gospels is a matter
that has not received the attention it deserves. The church
treats the Mother of Christ with reverence, but He Himself showed
little of this attitude. "Woman, what have I to do with thee?"
(John ii, 4) is His way of speaking to her. He says also that He
has come to set a man at variance against his father, the
daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her
mother-in-law, and that he that loveth father and mother more
than Him is not worthy of Him (Matt. x, 35-37). All this means
the breakup of the biological family tie for the sake of creed—
an attitude which had a great deal to do with the intolerance
that came into the world with the spread of Christianity.
This individualism culminated in the doctrine of
the immortality of the individual soul, which was to enjoy
hereafter endless bliss or endless woe according to
circumstances. The circumstances upon which this momentous
difference depended were somewhat curious. For example, if you
died immediately after a priest had sprinkled water upon you
while pronouncing certain words, you inherited eternal bliss;
whereas, if after a long and virtuous life you happened to be
struck by lightning at a moment when you were using bad language
because you had broken a bootlace, you would inherit eternal
torment. I do not say that the modern Protestant Christian
believes this, nor even perhaps the modern Catholic Christian who
has not been adequately instructed in theology; but I do say that
this is the orthodox doctrine and was firmly believed until
recent times. The Spaniards in Mexico and Peru used to baptize
Indian infants and then immediately dash their brains out: by
this means they secured that these infants went to Heaven. No
orthodox Christian can find any logical reason for condemning
their action, although all nowadays do so. In countless ways the
doctrine of personal immortality in its Christian form has had
disastrous effects upon morals, and the metaphysical separation
of soul and body has had disastrous effects upon philosophy.
Sources of Intolerance
The intolerance that spread over the
world with the advent of Christianity is one of the most curious
features, due, I think, to the Jewish belief in righteousness and
in the exclusive reality of the Jewish God. Why the Jews should
have had these peculiarities I do not know. They seem to have
developed the belief during the captivity as a reaction against
the attempt to absorb the Jews into alien populations. However
that may be, the Jews, and more especially the prophets, invented
emphasis upon personal righteousness and the idea that it is
wicked to tolerate any religion except one. These two ideas have
had an extraordinarily disastrous effect upon Occidental
history.
The church made much of the persecution of
Christians by the Roman State before the time of Constantine.
This persecution, however, was slight and intermittent and wholly
political. At all times, from the age of Constantine to the end
of the seventeenth century, Christians were far more fiercely
persecuted by other Christians than they ever were by the Roman
emperors. Before the rise of Christianity this persecuting
attitude was unknown to the ancient world except among the Jews.
If you read, for example, Herodotus, you find a bland and
tolerant account of the habits of the foreign nations he visited.
Sometimes, it is true, a peculiarly barbarous custom may shock
him, but in general he is hospitable to foreign gods and foreign
customs. He is not anxious to prove that people who call Zeus by
some other name will suffer eternal punishment and ought to be
put to death in order that their punishment may begin as soon as
possible. This attitude has been reserved for Christians.
It is true that the modern Christian is less
robust, but that is not thanks to Christianity; it is thanks to
the generations of freethinkers, who from the Renaissance to the
present day, have made Christians ashamed of many of their
traditional beliefs. It is amusing to hear the modern Christian
telling you how mild and rationalistic Christianity really is and
ignoring the fact that all its mildness and rationalism is due to
the teaching of men who in their own day were persecuted by all
orthodox Christians. Nobody nowadays believes that the world was
created in 4004 b.c.; but not so very long ago skepticism on this
point was thought an abominable crime. My
great-great-grandfather, after observing the depth of the lava on
the slopes of Etna, came to the conclusion that the world must be
older than the orthodox supposed and published this opinion in a
book. For this offense he was cut by the county and ostracized
from society. Had he been a man in humbler circumstances, his
punishment would doubtless have been more severe. It is no credit
to the orthodox that they do not now believe all the absurdities
that were believed 150 years ago. The gradual emasculation of the
Christian doctrine has been effected in spite of the most
vigorous resistance, and solely as the result of the onslaughts
of freethinkers.
The Doctrine of Free Will
The attitude of the Christians on
the subject of natural law has been curiously vacillating and
uncertain. There was, on the one hand, the doctrine of free will,
in which the great majority of Christians believed; and this
doctrine required that the acts of human beings at least should
not be subject to natural law. There was, on the other hand,
especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a belief
in God as the Lawgiver and in natural law as one of the main
evidences of the existence of a Creator. In recent times the
objection to the reign of law in the interests of free will has
begun to be felt more strongly than the belief in natural law as
affording evidence for a Lawgiver. Materialists used the laws of
physics to show, or attempt to show, that the movements of human
bodies are mechanically determined, and that consequently
everything that we say and every change of position that we
effect fall outside the sphere of any possible free will. If this
be so, whatever may be left for our unfettered volitions is of
little value. If, when a man writes a poem or commits a murder,
the bodily movements involved in his act result solely from
physical causes, it would seem absurd to put up a statue to him
in the one case and to hang him in the other. There might in
certain metaphysical systems remain a region of pure thought in
which the will would be free; but, since that can be communicated
to others only by means of bodily movement, the realm of freedom
would be one that could never be the subject of communication and
could never have any social importance.
Then, again, evolution has had a considerable
influence upon those Christians who have accepted it. They have
seen that it will not do to make claims on behalf of man which
are totally different from those which are made on behalf of
other forms of life. Therefore, in order to safeguard free will
in man, they have objected to every attempt at explaining the
behaviour of living matter in terms of physical and chemical
laws. The position of Descartes, to the effect that all lower
animals are automata, no longer finds favor with liberal
theologians. The doctrine of continuity makes them inclined to go
a step further still and maintain that even what is called dead
matter is not rigidly governed in its behaviour by unalterable
laws. They seem to have overlooked the fact that, if you abolish
the reign of law, you also abolish the possibility of miracles,
since miracles are acts of God which contravene the laws
governing ordinary phenomena. I can, however, imagine the modern
liberal theologian maintaining with an air of profundity that all
creation is miraculous, so that he no longer needs to fasten upon
certain occurrences as special evidence of Divine
intervention.
Under the influence of this reaction against
natural law, some Christian apologists have seized upon the
latest doctrines of the atom, which tend to show that the
physical laws in which we have hitherto believed have only an
approximate and average truth as applied to large numbers of
atoms, while the individual electron behaves pretty much as it
likes. My own belief is that this is a temporary phase, and that
the physicists will in time discover laws governing minute
phenomena, although these laws may differ considerably from those
of traditional physics. However that may be, it is worth while to
observe that the modern doctrines as to minute phenomena have no
bearing upon anything that is of practical importance. Visible
motions, and indeed all motions that make any difference to
anybody, involve such large numbers of atoms that they come well
within the scope of the old laws. To write a poem or commit a
murder (reverting to our previous illustration), it is necessary
to move an appreciable mass of ink or lead. The electrons
composing the ink may be dancing freely around their little
ballroom, but the ballroom as a whole is moving according to the
old laws of physics, and this alone is what concerns the poet and
his publisher. The modern doctrines, therefore, have no
appreciable bearing upon any of those problems of human interest
with which the theologian is concerned.
The free-will question consequently remains just
where it was. Whatever may be thought about it as a matter of
ultimate metaphysics, it is quite clear that nobody believes it
in practice. Everyone has always believed that it is possible to
train character; everyone has always known that alcohol or opium
will have a certain effect on behaviour. The apostle of free will
maintains that a man can by will power avoid getting drunk, but
he does not maintain that when drunk a man can say "British
Constitution" as clearly as if he were sober. And everybody who
has ever had to do with children knows that a suitable diet does
more to make them virtuous than the most eloquent preaching in
the world. The one effect that the free-will doctrine has in
practice is to prevent people from following out such
common-sense knowledge to its rational conclusion. When a man
acts in ways that annoy us we wish to think him wicked, and we
refuse to face the fact that his annoying behaviour is a result
of antecedent causes which, if you follow them long enough, will
take you beyond the moment of his birth and therefore to events
for which he cannot be held responsible by any stretch of
imagination.
No man treats a motorcar as foolishly as he treats
another human being. When the car will not go, he does not
attribute its annoying behaviour to sin; he does not say, "You
are a wicked motorcar, and I shall not give you any more petrol
until you go." He attempts to find out what is wrong and to set
it right. An analogous way of treating human beings is, however,
considered to be contrary to the truths of our holy religion. And
this applies even in the treatment of little children. Many
children have bad habits which are perpetuated by punishment but
will probably pass away of themselves if left unnoticed.
Nevertheless, nurses, with very few exceptions, consider it right
to inflict punishment, although by so doing they run the risk of
causing insanity. When insanity has been caused it is cited in
courts of law as a proof of the harmfulness of the habit, not of
the punishment. (I am alluding to a recent prosecution for
obscenity in the State of New York.)
Reforms in education have come very largely through
the study of the insane and feeble-minded, because they have not
been held morally responsible for their failures and have
therefore been treated more scientifically than normal children.
Until very recently it was held that, if a boy could not learn
his lesson, the proper cure was caning or flogging. This view is
nearly extinct in the treatment of children, but it survives in
the criminal law. It is evident that a man with a propensity to
crime must be stopped, but so must a man who has hydrophobia and
wants to bite people, although nobody considers him morally
responsible. A man who is suffering from plague has to be
imprisoned until he is cured, although nobody thinks him wicked.
The same thing should be done with a man who suffers from a
propensity to commit forgery; but there should be no more idea of
guilt in the one case than in the other. And this is only common
sense, though it is a form of common sense to which Christian
ethics and metaphysics are opposed.
To judge of the moral influence of any institution
upon a community, we have to consider the kind of impulse which
is embodied in the institution and the degree to which the
institution increases the efficacy of the impulse in that
community. Sometimes the impulse concerned is quite obvious,
sometimes it is more hidden. An Alpine club, for example,
obviously embodies the impulse to adventure, and a learned
society embodies the impulse toward knowledge. The family as an
institution embodies jealousy and parental feeling; a football
club or a political party embodies the impulse toward competitive
play; but the two greatest social institutions—namely, the
church and the state—are more complex in their psychological
motivation. The primary purpose of the state is clearly security
against both internal criminals and external enemies. It is
rooted in the tendency of children to huddle together when they
are frightened and to look for a grown-up person who will give
them a sense of security. The church has more complex origins.
Undoubtedly the most important source of religion is fear; this
can be seen in the present day, since anything that causes alarm
is apt to turn people's thoughts to God. Battle, pestilence, and
shipwreck all tend to make people religious. Religion has,
however, other appeals besides that of terror; it appeals
specifically to our human self-esteem. If Christianity is true,
mankind are not such pitiful worms as they seem to be; they are
of interest to the Creator of the universe, who takes the trouble
to be pleased with them when they behave well and displeased when
they behave badly. This is a great compliment. We should not
think of studying an ants' nest to find out which of the ants
performed their formicular duty, and we should certainly not
think of picking out those individual ants who were remiss and
putting them into a bonfire. If God does this for us, it is a
compliment to our importance; and it is even a pleasanter
compliment if he awards to the good among us everlasting
happiness in heaven. Then there is the comparitively modern idea
that cosmic evolution is all designed to bring about the sort of
results which we call good—that is to say, the sort of results
that give us pleasure. Here again it is flattering to suppose
that the universe is controlled by a Being who shares our tastes
and prejudices.
The Idea of Righteousness
The third psychological impulse
which is embodied in religion is that which has led to the
conception of righteousness. I am aware that many freethinkers
treat this conception with great respect and hold that it should
be preserved in spite of the decay of dogmatic religion. I cannot
agree with them on this point. The psychological analysis of the
idea of righteousness seems to me to show that it is rooted in
undesirable passions and ought not to be strengthened by the
imprimatur of reason. Righteousness and unrighteousness must be
taken together; it is impossible to stress the one without
stressing the other also. Now, what is "unrighteousness" in
practise? It is in practise behaviour of a kind disliked by the
herd. By calling it unrighteousness, and by arranging an
elaborate system of ethics around this conception, the herd
justifies itself in wreaking punishment upon the objects of its
own dislike, while at the same time, since the herd is righteous
by definition, it enhances its own self-esteem at the very moment
when it lets loose its impulse to cruelty. This is the psychology
of lynching, and of the other ways in which criminals are
punished. The essence of the conception of righteousness,
therefore, is to afford an outlet for sadism by cloaking cruelty
as justice.
But, it will be said, the account you have been
giving of righteousness is wholly inapplicable to the Hebrew
prophets, who, after all, on your own showing, invented the idea.
There is truth in this: righteousness in the mouths of the Hebrew
prophets meant what was approved by them and Yahweh. One finds
the same attitude expressed in the Acts of the Apostles, where
the Apostles began a pronouncement with the words "For it seemed
good to the Holy Ghost, and to us" (Acts xv, 28). This kind of
individual certainty as to God's tastes and opinions cannot,
however, be made the basis of any institution. That has always
been the difficulty with which Protestantism has had to contend:
a new prophet could maintain that his revelation was more
authentic than those of his predecessors, and there was nothing
in the general outlook of Protestantism to show that this claim
was invalid. Consequently Protestantism split into innumerable
sects, which weakened one another; and there is reason to suppose
that a hundred years hence Catholicism will be the only effective
representation of the Christian faith. In the Catholic Church
inspiration such as the prophets enjoyed has its place; but it is
recognized that phenomena which look rather like genuine divine
inspiration may be inspired by the Devil, and it is the business
of the church to discriminate, just as it is the business of the
art connoisseur to know a genuine Leonardo from a forgery. In
this way revelation becomes institutionalized at the same time.
Righteousness is what the church approves, and unrighteousness is
what it disapproves. Thus the effective part of the conception of
righteousness is a justification of herd antipathy.
It would seem, therefore, that the three human
impulses embodied in religion are fear, conceit, and hatred. The
purpose of religion, one may say, is to give an air of
respectability to these passions, provided they run in certain
channels. It is because these passions make, on the whole, for
human misery that religion is a force for evil, since it permits
men to indulge these passions without restraint, where but for
its sanction they might, at least to a certain degree, control
them.
I can imagine at this point an objection, not
likely to be urged perhaps by most orthodox believers but
nevertheless worthy to be examined. Hatred and fear, it may be
said, are essential human characteristics; mankind always has
felt them and always will. The best that you can do with them, I
may be told, is to direct them into certain channels in which
they are less harmful than they would be in certain other
channels. A Christian theologian might say that their treatment
by the church in analogous to its treatment of the sex impulse,
which it deplores. It attempts to render concupiscence innocuous
by confining it within the bounds of matrimony. So, it may be
said, if mankind must inevitably feel hatred, it is better to
direct this hatred against those who are really harmful, and this
is precisely what the church does by its conception of
righteousness.
To this contention there are two replies—one
comparatively superficial; the other going to the root of the
matter. The superficial reply is that the church's conception of
righteousness is not the best possible; the fundamental reply is
that hatred and fear can, with our present psychological
knowledge and our present industrial technique, be eliminated
altogether from human life.
To take the first point first. The church's
conception of righteousness is socially undesirable in various
ways—first and foremost in its depriciation of intelligence and
science. This defect is inherited from the Gospels. Christ tells
us to become as little children, but little children cannot
understand the differential calculus, or the principles of
currency, or the modern methods of combating disease. To acquire
such knowledge is no part of our duty, according to the church.
The church no longer contends that knowledge is in itself sinful,
though it did so in its palmy days; but the acquisition of
knowledge, even though not sinful, is dangerous, since it may
lead to a pride of intellect, and hence to a questioning of the
Christian dogma. Take, for example, two men, one of whom has
stamped out yellow fever throughout some large region in the
tropics but has in the course of his labors had occasional
relations with women to whom he was not married; while the other
has been lazy and shiftless, begetting a child a year until his
wife died of exhaustion and taking so little care of his children
that half of them died from preventable causes, but never
indulging in illicit sexual intercourse. Every good Christian
must maintain that the second of these men is more virtuous than
the first. Such an attitude is, of course, superstitious and
totally contrary to reason. Yet something of this absurdity is
inevitable so long as avoidance of sin is thought more important
than positive merit, and so long as the importance of knowledge
as a help to a useful life is not recognized.
The second and more fundamental objection to the
utilization of fear and hatred practised by the church is that
these emotions can now be almost wholly eliminated from human
nature by educational, economic, and political reforms. The
educational reforms must be the basis, since men who feel hatred
and fear will also admire these emotions and wish to perpetuate
them, although this admiration and wish will probably be
unconscious, as it is in the ordinary Christian. An education
designed to eliminate fear is by no means difficult to create. It
is only necessary to treat a child with kindness, to put him in
an environment where initiative is possible without disastrous
results, and to save him from contact with adults who have
irrational terrors, whether of the dark, of mice, or of social
revolution. A child must also not be subject to severe
punishment, or to threats, or to grave and excessive reproof. To
save a child from hatred is a somewhat more elaborate business.
Situations arousing jealousy must be very carefully avoided by
means of scrupulous and exact justice as between different
children. A child must feel himself the object of warm affection
on the part of some at least of the adults with whom he has to
do, and he must not be thwarted in his natural activities and
curiosities except when danger to life or health is concerned. In
particular, there must be no taboo on sex knowledge, or on
conversation about matters which conventional people consider
improper. If these simple precepts are observed from the start,
the child will be fearless and friendly.
On entering adult life, however, a young person so
educated will find himself or herself plunged into a world full
of injustice, full of cruelty, full of preventable misery. The
injustice, the cruelty, and the misery that exist in the modern
world are an inheritance from the past, and their ultimate source
is economic, since life-and-death competition for the means of
subsistence was in former days inevitable. It is not inevitable
in our age. With our present industrial technique we can, if we
choose, provide a tolerable subsistence for everybody. We could
also secure that the world's population should be stationary if
we were not prevented by the political influence of churches
which prefer war, pestilence, and famine to contraception. The
knowledge exists by which universal happiness can be secured; the
chief obstacle to its utilization for that purpose is the
teaching of religion. Religion prevents our children from having
a rational education; religion prevents us from removing the
fundamental causes of war; religion prevents us from teaching the
ethic of scientific co-operation in place of the old fierce
doctrines of sin and punishment. It is possible that mankind is
on the threshold of a golden age; but, if so, it will be
necessary first to slay the dragon that guards the door, and this
dragon is religion.
Also Russell's
WHAT IS AN AGNOSTIC?
WHY I'M NOT A CHRISTIAN
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