The historic case against miracles is also rather simple. It consists of
calling miracles impossible, then saying that no one but a fool
believes impossibilities: then declaring that there is no wise evidence
on behalf of the miraculous. The whole trick is done by means of leaning
alternately on the philosophical and historical objection. If we say
miracles are theoretically possible, they say, “Yes, but there is no
evidence for them.” When we take all the records of the human race and
say, “Here is your evidence,” they say, “But these people were
superstitious, they believed in impossible things.”
The real
question is whether our little Oxford Street civilisation is certain to
be right and the rest of the world certain to be wrong. Mr. Blatchford
thinks that the materialism of the nineteenth century Westerns is one of
their noble discoveries. I think it is as dull as their coats, as dirty
as their streets, as ugly as their trousers, and as stupid as their
industrial system.
Mr. Blatchford himself, however, has summed
up perfectly his pathetic faith in modern civilisation. He has written a
very amusing description of how difficult it would be to persuade an
English judge in a modern law court of the truth of the Resurrection. Of
course he is quite right; it would be impossible. But it does not seem
to occur to him that we Christians may not have such an extravagant
reverence for English judges as is felt by Mr. Blatchford himself.
The
experiences of the Founder of Christianity have perhaps left us in a
vague doubt of the infallibility of courts of law. I know quite well
that nothing would induce a British judge to believe that a man had
risen from the dead. But then I know quite as well that a very little
while ago nothing would have induced a British judge to believe that a
Socialist could be a good man. A judge would refuse to believe in new
spiritual wonders. But this would not be because he was a judge, but
because he was, besides being a judge, an English gentleman, a modern
Rationalist, and something of an old fool.
-The Blatchford Controversies (1904)
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