I have said it before, but it cannot be too often repeated, that what is
the matter with Mr. Blatchford and his school is that they are not
sceptical enough. For the really bold questions we have to go back to
the Christian Fathers.
For example, Mr. Blatchford, in God and My Neighbour,
does me the honour to quote from me as follows: “Mr. G.K. Chesterton,
in defending Christianity, said, ‘Christianity has committed crimes at
which the sun might sicken in Heaven, and no one can refute the
statement.’ ” I did say this, and I say it again, but I said something
else. I said that every great and useful institution had committed such
crimes. And no one can refute that statement.
And why
has every great institution been criminal? It is not enough to say
“Christians persecuted; down with Christianity,” any more than it is
enough to say, “A Confucian stole my hair-brush; down with
Confucianism.” We want to know whether the reason for which the
Confucian stole the hair-brush was a reason peculiar to the Confucians
or a reason common to many other men.
It is obvious that the
Christian’s reason for torturing was a reason common to hosts of other
men; it was simply the fact that he held his views strongly and tried
unscrupulously to make them prevail. Any other man might hold any other
views strongly and try unscrupulously to make them prevail. And when we
look at the facts we find, as I say, that millions of other men do, and
have done so from the beginning of the world....
If only Mr. Blatchford would ask the real question. It
is not, “Why is Christianity so bad when it claims to be so good? The
real question is, “Why are all human things so bad when they claim to be
so good?” Why is not the most noble scheme a guarantee against
corruption? If [Blatchford] will boldly pursue this question, will really
leave delusions behind and walk across the godless waste, alone, he will
come at last to a strange place. His sceptical pilgrimage will end at a
place where Christianity begins.
Chrisitanity begins with the
wickedness of the Inquisition. Only it adds the wickedness of the
English Liberals, Tories, Socialists, and county magistrates. It begins
with a strange thing running across human history. This it calls Sin, or
the Fall of Man.
If ever I wish to expound it further, Mr.
Blatchford’s list of Christian crimes will be a most valuable
compilation. In brief, however, Mr. Blatchford sees the sins of historic
Christianity rise before him like a great tower. It is a star-defying
Tower of Babel, lifting itself alone into the sky, affronting God in
Heaven. Let him climb up it for a few years. When he is near to its
tremendous top, he will find that it is one of the nine hundred and
ninety-nine columns which support the pedestal of the ancient Christian
philosophy.
-"The Eternal Heroism of the Slums" (1904), The Blatchford Controversies
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