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The Pamphlet Collection of Sir Robert Stout: Volume 86

Creeds and Science

Creeds and Science.

I observe, lastly, that some of the articles, and not the least opposed to reason and conscience, of these unauthorised creeds, have been undermined by recent science. The ancient tradition that man was created perfect, that the first man so created fell by his own act, and thereby introduced death for the first time into the world, and entailed hereditary guilt and moral ruin upon all his posterity appears to have taken some hold upon the Jewish mind. The alleged historical fact, and the dogma of hereditary guilt founded upon it, are not so much as mentioned once by the founder of Christianity; possibly they were included by Him amongst the traditions which had been the means, He said, of making the commandment of God of none effect. But both have found their way into the majority of the Christian churches, and have lent a distinct colour to most of the Christian creeds. Now, if there be any general conclusions to which recent geological science has forcibly drawn the human mind, and to which, although they may not be established by inductive proof, laymen cannot, if they would, refuse to accord belief, they are these: That man at the first did not fall from a higher state of existence, but that he rose from a lower; and that what we call death, or the change and dissolution of the organic form in which life temporarily resides, existed on this planet from the time that life first appeared upon it, and millions of years before the comparatively recent date when man first came into being. There is here irreconcilable variance between modern science and the doctrine of the Christian Churches. And now we are brought to the point at which we find the answer to the question What is the cause of failing influence as a teaching power of the clergy of all the Christian Churches over the minds of educated, thinking page 20 laymen? Science in its modern, enlarged, and generalising spirit, and also in some of its recent conclusions, is opposed not indeed to religion, but to the creeds of the Churches, all of which urge an unfounded claim to infallible authority. The laity are habitually and of necessity influenced, though they do not always know it, by the broad conceptions of Nature and of God which science imperceptibly but irresistibly conveys to their minds. Thinking laymen cannot reconcile those conceptions with the doctrines of the creeds; they have ceased even to make an effort to reconcile them. They yield an indolent assent, indeed, to the creeds, as they do to every part of the particular Church system with which they are connected by birth, but in fact and actual practice they utterly disregard them. The clergy of all the Churches, on the other hand, occupy a very different position. The clergyman is selected for his office while he is very young, and long before he has had time or has acquired sufficient intellectual expansion to be able to comprehend the nature and scope of the great subject to which his life is to be devoted.—(Applause.) His mind is carefully trained to believe the tenets of a particular Church, to defend and to teach them and them alone, and to carry on ceaseless war against the opposing tenets of other Churches; and the fulfilment of these narrow functions during the whole of his professional life is attempted to be enforced by sanctions highly penal in their personal, social, and professional consequences. How can a mind so trained, and harshly compelled to submit to such discipline, exercise the commanding power of a real teacher over the intellect, differently constituted, ever otherwise occupied, and constantly subject to influences so wholly diverse, of the educated, thinking layman at this day? The thoughts of the two men are not in unison; there is no intellectual interest between them in regard to a large number of the topics and arguments which the clergyman is constrained to select for his pulpit utterances.