In an article, in the Tatwa Bodhini Patríka
"The Essential Religion Babu Rajnarain Bose, the well known Brahmo,
prefacing it with a quotation from Ramohun Roy's Trust Deed of the Adi Brahmo
Somaj, "which is an injunction, with regard to Strengthening the
bonds of union between men of all religious persuasions, and creeds" makes
the following wise remarks.
We should regulate our conduct by keeping a constant eye upon the essentials
of religion. We are apt to lose sight of them in the mists of sectarian
prejudice, partiality and passion. We are apt to forget them in the heat
of religious discussion, in the distraction of philosophical speculation,
in the excitement of religious delight and in the engrossment of ceremonial
observances. . . . We are so bent upon thrusting our own particular opinions
on non-essential points of religion on others that we consider them to
be essentially necessary for salvation. We are apt to forget that we ourselves
are not infallible, that our own opinions on all subjects of human interest
were not exactly the same twenty years ago as they are now, nor will they
be exactly the same twenty years afterwards as they are now. We are apt
to forget that all the members of our own sect or party, if they frankly
reveal their whole minds, de not hold exactly the same opinions on all
subjects concerning religion as we do. We are apt to forget that the religious
opinions of man are subject to progress and they will not be the same a
century afterwards as they are now. We, Theists, have as much right to
say that men of other religions, less advanced in religious knowledge than
we are, will not be saved, as Theists who will live centuries hence will
have of saying that we, the present Theists, will not have been saved on
account of our errors. Fallible man cannot with good grace be a dogmatist.
We should be more mindful of performing our religious and moral duties
and drawing men's attention to those duties than dogmatically thrusting
our particular opinions on particular points of religious doctrine upon
others.
Learned dissertations on theology and controversies on the subject of
religion are useful in their own way, but true religion before the Lord
does not consist in them. It consists in a man's "Visiting the fatherless
and the widow in their affliction and keeping himself unspotted from the
world," that is, from vice. . . . Some people consider processions,
festivals and religious music as the be-all and end-all of religion. They
are no doubt useful in their own way, but they are not the be-all and end-all
of religion. Life is the be-all and end-all of religion. . . .
We should not only regulate our own conduct by an eye to the essentials
of religion, but, while propagating the religion we profess, we should
draw men's attention more to love of God and love of man than doctrinal
points. We are morally culpable before God if we lay greater stress on
the husk instead of the kernel of religion.
The Essential Religion does not admit of church organization. There
can be no such sect as the Essential Religionists. The Essential Religion
is not the exclusive property of any particular sect or church. It is the
common property of all sects and churches. The members of all sects and
churches should regulate their conduct according to its dictates. . . .
Besides, a number of men, banded together and calling themselves Essential
Religionists, must have particular conception of the Deity and future state
and follow a particular mode of worship. This particular conception and
particular mode of worship would at once determine them as a sect. These
particular conceptions of God and future state and modes of worship give
rise to religious sects among mankind. Every individual
man cannot avoid joining a sect according to his own particular convictions.
Differences of religion must always exist in the world.1 To quote Parker. . . . "As many men so many theologies."
As it is impossible to obliterate differences of face and make all faces
exactly resemble each other, so it is difficult to obliterate distinctions
of religion. Differences of religion have always existed in the world and
will exist as long as it lasts. It is impossible to bring over men to one
and the same religion. A certain king remarked: "It is impossible
to make all watches go exactly alike. How is it possible to bring over
all men to my own opinion?" Various flowers would always exist in
the garden of religion, each having a peculiar fragrance of its own, Theism
being the most fragrant of them all. Bearing this in mind, we should tolerate
all religions, though at the same time propagating the religion which we
consider to be truth by means of argument and gentle persuasion. We should
tolerate even such agnostical religions as Vedantism and Buddhism as they
inculcate the doctrine of the existence of God, though the followers of
those religions believe Him to be impersonal, the doctrine of Yoga or
communion with Him to which men must be impelled by love of God, and the
doctrine of love of man or morality. Some people speak of Buddhism as an
atheistical religion. Even if it were true that Buddhism is a system
of pure atheism, which it is not, the phrase "atheistical
religion" is a contradiction in terms. There can be no religion if
divorced from God. Later researches have proved that Buddhism is not without
the idea of a God as was formerly supposed.2
We should tolerate all religions. We should look upon all religions, every
one of which contains greater or less truth, as God himself looks upon
them, rejoicing in the truth which each contains and attributing its errors
to human imperfection. . . .
These are as noble and as conciliating words as were ever pronounced
among the Brahmos of India. They would be calculated to do a world of good,
but for the common doom of words of wisdom to become the "voice crying
in the desert." Yet even in these kindly uttered sentences, so full
of benevolence and good; will to all men, we cannot help discerning (we
fervently hope, that Babu Rajnarain Bose will pardon our honest sincerity)
a ring of a certain sectarian, hence selfish feeling, one against which
our Society is forced to fight so desperately.
"We should tolerate all religions, though at the same time, propagating
the religion which we consider to be true" we are,
told. It is our painful duty to analyze these words, and we begin by asking
why should we? Where is the necessity for imposing our own personal
views, our beliefs pro tem, if we may use the expression, upon
other persons who, each and all must be allowed to possess until the contrary
is shown as good a faculty of discrimination and judgment as we believe
ourselves to be endowed with? We say belief pro tem basing the expression
upon the writer's own confession. "We are apt to forget," he tells
his readers "that we ourselves are not infallible, that our
opinions . . . were not exactly the same twenty years ago as they are
now, nor will they be exactly the same twenty years hence," and
"that an the members of our own sect or party. . . . do not
hold exactly the same opinions on all subjects concerning religion as we
do." Precisely. Then why not leave the mind of our brothers of
other religions and creeds to pursue its own natural course instead of forcibly
diverting it however gentle the persuasion into a groove we may ourselves
abandon twenty years hence? But, we may be perhaps reminded by the esteemed
writer that in penning those sentences which we have underlined, he referred
but to the "non-essential points" or sectarian dogmas, and not
to what he is pleased to call the "essential" points of religion,
viz., belief in God or theism. We answer by enquiring again, whether the
latter tenet a tenet being something which has to rest upon its own intrinsic
value and undeniable evidence whether notwithstanding, until very lately
its quasi-universal acceptation, this tenet is any better proven,
or rests upon any firmer foundation than any of the existing dogmas which
are admitted by none but those who accept the authority they proceed from?
Are not in this case, both tenet and dogmas, the "essentials"
as the "non-essentials," simply the respective conclusions and
outcome of "fallible minds"? And can it be maintained that theism
itself with its present crude ideas about an intelligent personal deity
a little better than a superhumanly conscious big man will not 20 years
hence have reached not only a broader and more noble aspect, but even a
decided turning point which will lead humanity to a far higher ideal in
consequence of the scientific truths it acquires daily and almost hourly?
It is from a strictly agnostic platform that we are now arguing, basing
what we say merely upon the writer's own words. And we maintain that the
major premiss of his general proposition which may be thus formulated "a
personal God is, while dogmas may or may not be true" being
simply admitted, never proven, since the existence of God in general
was, is, and ever will remain an unprovable proposition, his conclusions
however correctly derived from the minor or second premiss do not cover
the whole ground. The syllogism is regular and the reasoning valid only
in the opinion of the theists. The atheist as the agnostic will protest,
having logic as well as reason on his side. He will say: Why not accord
to others that which you claim for yourselves? However weighty our arguments
and gentle our persuasion, no theist would fail to feel hurt were
we to try our hand in persuading him to throw away his theism and accept
the religion or philosophy "which we consider to be true" namely,
"godless" Buddhism, or highly philosophical and
logical agnosticism. As our esteemed contemporary puts it, "it is
impossible to obliterate differences of face and make all faces exactly
resemble each other." Has the idea ever struck him that it is as difficult
to entirely obliterate innate differences of mental perceptions and faculties,
let alone to reconcile by bringing them under one standard the endless varieties
of human nature and thought? The latter may be forced from its natural into
an artificial channel. But like a mask however securely stuck on one's face,
and which is liable to be torn off by the first strong gush of wind that
blows under, the convictions thus artificially inoculated are liable at
any day to resume their natural course the new cloth put upon the old garment
torn out, and "the rent made worse." We are with those who think
that as nature has never intended the process known in horticulture as engrafting,
so she has never meant that the ideas of one man should be inoculated
with those of any other man, since were it so she would have if really
guided by intelligence created all the faculties of human mind, as all
plants, homogeneous, which is not the case. Hence, as no kind of plant can
be induced to grow and thrive artificially upon another plant which does
not belong to the same natural order, so no attempt toward engrafting our
views and beliefs on individuals whose mental and intellectual capacities
differ from ours as one variety or species of plants differs from another
variety will ever be successful. The missionary efforts directed for several
hundred years toward christianizing the natives of India, is a good instance
in hand and illustrates the inevitable failure following every such fallacious
attempt. Very few among those natives upon whom the process of engrafting
succeeded, have any real merit; while the tendency of the great majority
is to return to its original specific type, that of a true-born pantheistic
Hindu, clinging to his forefather's caste and gods as a plant clings to
its original genera. "Love of God and love of man is the essence of
religion," says Babu Rajnarain Bose elsewhere, inviting men to withdraw
their attention from the husk of religion "the non-essentials"
and concentrate it upon the kernel its essentials. We doubt whether we
will ever prove our love to man by depriving him of a fundamental and essential
prerogative, that of an untrammelled and entire liberty of his thoughts
and conscience. Moreover in saying, as the author does further on
Nothing has done so much mischief to the world as religious bigotry
and dogmatism on non-essential points of religion; nothing has led so much
to bloody wars and fiery persecutions as the same. . . .
he turns the weapon of logic and fact against his own argument. What
religion, for instance, ever claimed more than Christianity "love of
God and love of man" aye, "love of all men as our brothers";
and yet where is that creed that has ever surpassed it in blood-thirstiness
and cruelty, in intolerance to the damnation of all other religions! "What
crimes has it (Religion in general) not committed?" exclaims Prof.
Huxley quoting from Lucretius, and "what cruelties," he adds,
referring to Christianity "have been perpetrated in the name of Him
who said 'Love your enemies; blessed are the peacemakers,' and so many other
noble things." Truly this religion of Love and Charity is now built
upon the most gigantic holocaust of victims, the fruits of the unlawful,
sinful desire to bring over all men to one mode of thinking, at any rate
to one "essential" point in their religion belief in Christ.
We admit and recognize fully that it is the duty of every honest man to
try to bring round by "argument and gentle persuasion" every man
who errs with respect to the "essentials" of Universal ethics,
and the usually recognized standard of morality. But the latter is the common
property of all religions, as of all the honest men, irrespective
of their beliefs. The principles of the true moral code, tried by the standard
of right and justice, are recognized as fully, and followed just as much
by the honest atheist as by the honest theist, religion and piety having,
as can be proved by statistics, very little to do with the repression of
vice and crime. A broad line has to be drawn between the external practice
of one's moral and social duties, and that of the real intrinsic virtue
practised but for its own sake. Genuine morality does not rest with the
profession of any particular creed or faith, least of all with belief in
gods or a God; but it rather depends upon the degree of our own individual
perceptions of its direct bearing upon human happiness in general, hence upon
our own personal weal. But even this is surely not all. "So long as
man is taught and allowed to believe that he must be just, that the strong
hand of law may not punish him, or his neighbour taking his revenge";
that he must be enduring because complaint is useless and weakness can only
bring contempt; that he must be temperate, that his health may keep
good and all his appetites retain their acuteness; and, he is told that,
if he serves his friends, his friends may serve him, if he defends
his country, he defends himself, and that by serving his God he prepares
for himself an eternal life of happiness hereafter so long, we say, as
he acts on such principles, virtue is no virtue, but verily
the culmination of SELFISHNESS. However sincere and
ardent the faith of a theist, unless, while conforming his life to what
he pleases to term divine laws, he gives precedence in his thoughts
first to the benefit that accrues from such a moral course of actions
to his brother, and then only thinks of himself he will remain at best a
pious egotist; and we do claim that belief in, and fear of God in man, is
chiefly based upon, develops and grows in exact proportion to his selfishness,
his fear of punishment ant bad results only for himself, without the least
concern for his brother. We see daily that the theist, although defining
morality as the conformity of human actions to divine laws, is not
a tittle more moral than the average atheist or infidel who regards a moral
life simply the duty of every honest right-thinking man without giving a
thought to any reward for it in afterlife. The apparently discrepant fact
that one who disbelieves in his survival after death should, nevertheless,
frame in most cases his life in accordance with the highest rules of morality,
is not as abnormal as it seems at first. The atheist, knowing of but one
existence, is anxious to leave the memory of his life as unsullied as possible
in the after-remembrances of his family and posterity, and in honour
even with those yet unborn. In the words of the Greek Stoic "though
all our fellow-men were swept away, and not a mortal nor immortal eye
were left to approve or condemn, should we not here, within our breast,
have a judge to dread, and a friend to conciliate?" No more than theism
is atheism congenite with man. Both grow and develope in him together with
his reasoning powers, and become either fortified or weakened by reflection
and deduction of evidence from facts. In short, both are entirely due to
the degree of his emotional nature, and man is no more responsible for being
an atheist than he is for becoming a theist. Both terms are entirely misunderstood.
Many are called impious not for having a worse but a different religion,
from their neighbours, says Epicurus. Mahomedans are stronger theists than
the Christians, yet they are called "infidels" by the latter,
and many are the theosophists regarded as atheists, not for the denying
of the Deity but for thinking somewhat peculiarly concerning this ever-to-be
unknown Principle. As a living contrast to the atheist, stands the theist
believing in other lives or a life to come. Taught by his creed that prayer,
repentance and offerings are capable of obliterating sin in the sight of
the "all-forgiving, loving and merciful Father in Heaven," he
is given every hope the strength of which grows in proportion to the sincerity
of his faith that his sins will be remitted to him. Thus, the moral obstacle
between the believer and sin is very weak, if we view it from the standpoint
of human nature. The more a child feels sure of his parents' love for him,
the easier he feels it to break his father's commands. Who will dare to
deny that the chief, if not the only cause of half the misery 'with which
Christendom is afflicted especially in Europe, the stronghold of sin and
crime lies not so much with human depravity as with its belief in the goodness
and infinite mercy of "our Father in Heaven," and especially in
the vicarious atonement? Why should not men imagine that they can drink
of the cup of vice with impunity at any rate, in its results in the hereafter
when one half of the population is offered to purchase absolution for its
sins for a certain paltry sum of money, and the other has but to have faith
in, and place reliance upon, Christ to secure a place in paradise though
he be a murderer, starting for it right from the gallows! The public sale
of indulgences for the perpetration of crime on the one hand, and the assurance
made by the ministers of God that the consequences of the worst of sins
may be obliterated by God at his will and pleasure, on the other, are quite
sufficient, we believe, to keep crime and sin at the highest figure. He,
who loves not virtue and good for their own sake and shuns not vice as vice,
is sure to court the latter as a direct result of his pernicious belief.
One ought to despise that virtue which prudence and fear alone direct.
We firmly believe in the actuality and the philosophical necessity of
"Karma," i.e., in that law of unavoidable retribution,
the not-to-be diverted effect of every cause produced by us, reward as punishment
in strict conformity with our actions; and we maintain that since no one
can be made responsible for another man's religious beliefs with whom, and
with which, he is not in the least concerned that perpetual craving for
the conversion of all men we meet to our own modes of thinking and respective
creeds becomes a highly reprehensible action. With the exception of those
above-mentioned cases of the universally recognized code of morality, the
furtherance or neglect of which has a direct bearing upon human weal or
woe, we have no right to be influencing our neighbours' opinions upon purely
transcendental and unprovable questions, the speculations of our emotional
nature. Not because any of these respective beliefs are in any way injurious
or bad per se; on the contrary, for every ideal that serves
us as a point of departure and a guiding star in the path of goodness and
purity, is to be eagerly sought for, and as unswervingly followed; but precisely
on account of those differences and endless variety of human temperaments,
so ably pointed out to us by the respected Brahmo gentleman in the lines
as above quoted. For if, as he; truly points out none of us is infallible,
and that "the religious opinions of men are subject to progress"
(and change, as he adds), that progress being endless and quite likely to
upset on any day our strongest convictions of the day previous; and that
as historically and daily proved "nothing has done so much mischief"
as the great variety of conflicting creeds and sects which have led but
to bloody wars and persecutions, and the slaughter of one portion of mankind
by the other, it becomes an evident and an undeniable fact that, by adding
converts to those sects, we add but so many antagonists to fight and tear
themselves to pieces, if not now, then at no distant future. And in this
case we do become responsible for their actions. Propagandism and conversion
are the fruitful seeds sown for the perpetration of future crimes, the odium
theologicum stirring up religious hatreds which relate as much to the
"Essentials" as to the non-essentials of any religion being the
most fruitful as the most dangerous for the peace of mankind. In Christendom,
where at each street-corner starvation cries for help: where pauperism,
and its direct result, vice and crime, fill the land with desolation millions
upon millions are annually spent upon this unprofitable and sinful work
of proselytism. With that charming inconsistency which was ever the characteristic
of the Christian churches, the same Bishops who have opposed but a few decades
back the building of railways, on the ground that it was an act of rebellion
against God who willed that man should not go quite as quick as the wind;
and had opposed the introduction of the telegraphy, saying that it was a
tempting of Providence; and even the application of anaesthetics in obstetrical
cases, "under the pretence," Prof. Draper tells us, "that
it was an impious attempt to escape from the curse denounced against all
women in Genesis iii, 16," those same Bishops do not hesitate to meddle
a with the work of Providence when the "heathen" are concerned.
Surely if Providence hath so decreed that women should be left to suffer
for the sin of Eve, then it must have also willed that a man born a heathen
should be left one as pre-ordained. Are the missionaries wiser, they think,
than their God, that they should try to correct his mistakes; and do they
not also rebel against Providence, and its mysterious ways? But leaving
aside things as dark to them as they are to us, and viewing "conversion"
so called, but from its practical aspect, we say that he, who under the
dubious pretext that because something is truth to him it must be
truth also for everyone else, labours at the conversion of his neighbours,
is simply engaged in the unholy work of breeding and raising future Cains.
Indeed, our "love of man" ought to be strong enough and sufficiently
intuitional to stifle in us that spark of selfishness which is the chief
motor in our desire to force upon our brother and neighbour our own religious
opinions and views which we may "consider (for the time being)
to be true." It is a grand thing to have a worthy Ideal, but a still
greater one to live up to it; and where is that wise and infallible man
who can show without fear of being mistaken to another man what or who should
be his ideal? If, as the theist assures us "God is all in all" then
must he be in every ideal whatever its nature, if it neither clashes with
recognized morality, nor can it be shown productive of bad results. Thus,
whether this Ideal be God, the pursuit of Truth, humanity collectively,
or, as John Stuart Mill has so eloquently proved, simply our own country;
and that in the name of that ideal man not only works for it, but becomes
better himself, creating thereby an example of morality and goodness for
others to follow, what matters it to his neighbour whether this ideal be
a chimerical utopia, an abstraction, or even an inanimate object in the
shape of an idol, or a piece of clay?
Let us not meddle with the natural bent of man's religious or irreligious
thought, any more than we should think of meddling with his private thoughts,
lest by so doing we should create more mischief than benefit, and deserve
thereby his curses. Were religions as harmless and as innocent as the flowers
with which the author compares them, we would not have one word to say against
them. Let every "gardener" attend but his own plants without forcing
unasked his own variety upon those of other people, and all will remain
satisfied. As popularly understood, Theism has, doubtless, its own peculiar
beauty, and may well seem "the most fragrant of flowers in the garden
of religions" to the ardent theist. To the atheist. however. it may
possibly appear no better than a prickly thistle; and the theist has no
more right to take him to task for his opinion, than the atheist has to
blame him for his horror of atheism. For all its beauty it is an ungrateful
task to seek to engraft the rose upon the thistle, since in nine cases out
of ten the rose will lose its fragrance, and both plants their shapes to
become a monstrous hybrid. In the economy of nature everything is in its
right place, has its special purpose, and the same potentiality for good
as for evil in various degrees if we will but leave it to its natural course.
The most fragrant rose has often the sharpest thorns; and it is the flowers
of the thistle when pounded and made up into an ointment that will cure
the wounds made by her cruel thorns the best.
In our humble opinion, the only "Essentials" in the Religion
of Humanity are virtue, morality, brotherly love, and kind sympathy with
every living creature, whether human or animal. This is the common platform
that our Society offers to all to stand upon; the most fundamental differences
between religions and sects sinking into insignificance before the mighty
problem of reconciling humanity, of gathering all the various races into
one family, and of bringing them all to a conviction of the utmost necessity
in this world of sorrow to cultivate feelings of brotherly sympathy and
tolerance, if not actually of love. Having taken for our motto "In
these Fundamentals unity; in non-essentials full liberty; in all things charity,"
we say to all collectively and to every one individually "keep to
your forefather's religion, whatever it may be if you feel attached to
it, Brother; think with your own brains if you have any; be by all means
yourself whatever you are, unless you are really a bad man. And
remember above all, that a wolf in his own skin is immeasurably more honest
than the same animal under a sheep's clothing."
Theosophist, June, 1883
H. P. Blavatsky
1 We beg to differ from
this opinion of our kind friend. Ed.
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2 We believe it's a great mistake due to
the one-sided inferences and precipitate conclusions of some Orientalists
like Mr. Lillie, the author of "Buddha and Early Buddhism." An
eternal, all-pervading principle is not what is vulgarly called "God."
ED. Theos.
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