Newpaper
Writings
by John Stuart Mill
December 1822 - July 1831
FREE DISCUSSION, Article III Morning Chronicle, 12 Feb., 1823, P.3
SIR, -- I shall now endeavour to prove that persecution is not necessary
for the preservation of Christianity. The Christian Religion may be contemplated
in two points of view. We may direct our attention t those peculiar characteristics
which distinguish it from all other doctrines, true or false; or we may
consider it with reference to those properties which it has in common with
all true doctrines, as contradistinguished from false ones.
Not one, but may , arguments might be adduced to prove that Christianity,
considered merely as a true doctrine, could not, under the influence of
free discussion, fail of prevailing over falsehood. This ground, however,
has already been gone over by far abler pens than mine; and a truth which
has been maintained 9not to speak of other writers) by Divines so eminent
as Tillotson, Taylor, Chillingworth, Campbell, Lardner, Lowth, Warburton,
Paley, Watson, and more recently by Hall, cannot stand in need of such
feeble support as I can afford.
In the present Letter I shall therefore confine myself to the consideration
of those qualities peculiar to Christianity, which render persecution even
less necessary for its support than for that of any other true doctrine.
And first, let me observe, that the only supposition on which persecution
can be defended-by such of its advocates, I mean , as are Christians- is
that of the utter incapacity and incorrigible imbecility of the people.
That infidels should think persecution essential to the being of Christianity,
ca be matter of no surprise; but one who believes in the truth of the doctrine
he supports, can not for a moment entertain any such opinion, unless he
believes what no man, whose judgment is not biassed by interest, can believe,
that the people are incapable of distinguishing truth from falsehood.
The fact, that the utility of persecution rests on such a basis, would
alone include every reasonable man to scout the idea of it; but, even though
we were to allow the incapacity of the people, to admit the truth of all
which their worst calumniators have ever imputed to them; it would not
be less true that Christianity can support itself without persecution,
nor, consequently, would the arguments in favour of toleration be a whit
less conclusive.
If a true proposition, and the false one which is opposed to it, are resented
at the same time to the mind of a man who is utterly incapable of distinguishing
truth from error, which of the tow is he most likely to embrace? This question
will be found to admit of an easy answer. If he was before prepossessed
in favour of either opinion, that one he wills till continue to hold. If
both were equally new to him, he will choose that which is most flattering
to his prevailing passion.
All the prepossessions of those whom it is wished to protect by persecution
from the danger of becoming infidels are uniformly and confessedly favourable
to religion. No where is education, even partially, in the hands of infidels.
There is no place where religion does not form one of the most essential
parts of education. It is not, therefore, upon this ground, that persecution
can be justified.
To counteract the effect of early impressions, it will, no doubt, be affirmed
that infidelity is peculiarly flattering to the passions, and that those
who wish to throw off the shackles of morality will be gland, in the first
instance, to emancipate themselves from the salutary restraint which religion
imposes.
It was partly with the intention of obviating this objection that my last
letter was penned. There is no use in representing the evils of infidelity
as greater than they really are; nor does a disposition to do so evince,
on the part of him who shews it, any very great anxiety to vindicate either
himself of his religion from the imputation of want of candour. That infidelity
excludes us from the blessings of a future life, would surely be a sufficient
reason to induce every reasonable man to reject it. I have endeavoured
to shew that even if (which God forbid) all sense of religion were to die
away among men, there would still remain abundant motives to ensure good
conduct in this life. The passions, therefore, are not interested in throwing
off religious belief, or all our ethical writers have been employing their
labour to very little purpose.
Nor is this all. Infidel doctrines are peculiarly ill fitted for making
converts among that portion of mankind who are most in danger of mistaking
falsehood for truth. They bear a greater analogy to general abstract propositions
in metaphysics than to any thing which can immediately affect the sensitive
faculties. Besides, they superinduce what, to all men not convinced of
necessity of it by the habit of scientific disquisitions, is the most painful
of all states of mind, a state of doubt. On the other hand, one of the
strongest feelings in every uneducated mind is the appetite for wonder,
the love of the marvellous. Witness the rapid progress of so many religions,
which we now think so unutterably absurd that we wonder how any human being
can ever have given credit to them. This passion is gratified in the most
eminent degree by the Christian religion; for what is there in Christianity
which is not in the highest degree sublime and mysterious?
Against so general and so powerful a feeling, what has skepticism to oppose?
It is not peculiarly fitted to take hold of the imagination; on the contrary,
it is eminently and almost universally repelled by it. If, then, it had
not been evident before, I trust that the considerations I have adduced
will suffice to make it so, that of all the doctrines which the invention
of man ever devised, none is so little likely to prevail over the contrary
doctrine as religious infidelity.
Doctrines which, if left to themselves, have no chance of prevailing, may
be saved from oblivion by persecution. The advocates of infidelity are
active and fearless: no persecution can daunt, no ignominy ca restrain
them. By persecution they are raised to an importance which they could
never otherwise have attained: by ignominy they are only advertised that
it is impossible for them to retreat. To prevent them for diffusing infidelity
through the whole kingdom, what has been done by our well-paid divines?
I am not aware that they have yet employed any other weapon than vague
and declamatory abuse. Books indeed there are; but alas! What avails a
mass of ponderous volumes, written in a style as little suited to the capacity,
as the price at which they are sold is to the purses, of those for whose
use they are principally required? It is true abuse is far easier, and
requires less time and application than argument. But unless my knowledge
of the duties of Christian Clergymen is very imperfect, they do not receive
one-tenth of the produce of the soil in order that they may attack infidels
by coarse and disgusting abuse, but that they may bring them back by gentle
persuasion within the pale of the Church.
Wickliff
Summary
Mill states in his opening, "I shall now endeavour to prove that
persecution (of free discussion) is not necessary for the preservation
of Christianity." The Christian religion as a whole may be thought
of in two different ways. The first is by distinguishing it separately
from all other doctrines, true or false. Secondly, we can distinguish it’s
qualities with those of other true doctrines, as compared to the false
ones.
Mill says many arguments attest that Christianity (a true doctrine), under
the influence of free discussion, could not fail or prevail over falsehood.
He justifies this position by stating that "If a true proposition,
and the false one which is opposed to it, are presented at the same time
to the mind of a man who is utterly incapable of distinguishing truth from
error, which of the two is he most likely to embrace? This question will
be found to admit of an easy answer. If he was before prepossessed in favour
of either opinion, that one he will still continue to hold. If both were
equally new to him, he will choose that which is most flattering to his
prevailing passion."
He builds his argument by saying that, infidel doctrines do not have the
power to make converts of those in danger of mistaking falsehood for truth.
Let the advocates of infidel doctrines speak. Persecuting them gives them
more power, more importance. "Doctrines which, if left to themselves,
have no chance of prevailing, may be saved from oblivion by persecution."
Mill’s last statement is to say that the Christian Clergyman’s job is not
to persecute but to save and return those who have swayed back into the
church.
Jackie
Dahl
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