登陆注册
38634800000163

第163章 SOUTHEY'S COLLOQUIES(13)

How far Mr.Southey would have the Government carry its measures for training the people in the doctrines of the Church, we are unable to discover.In one passage Sir Thomas More asks with great vehemence,"Is it possible that your laws should suffer the unbelievers to exist as a party? Vetitum est adeo sceleris nihil?"Montesinos answers: "They avow themselves in defiance of the laws.The fashionable doctrine which the press at this time maintains is, that this is a matter in which the laws ought not to interfere, every man having a right, both to form what opinion he pleases upon religious subjects, and to promulgate that opinion."It is clear, therefore, that Mr.Southey would not give full and perfect toleration to infidelity.In another passage, however, he observes with some truth, though too sweepingly, that "any degree of intolerance short of that full extent which the Papal Church exercises where it has the power, acts upon the opinions which it is intended to suppress, like pruning upon vigorous plants; they grow the stronger for it." These two passages, put together, would lead us to the conclusion that, in Mr.Southey's opinion, the utmost severity ever employed by the Roman Catholic Church in the days of its greatest power ought to be employed against unbelievers in England; in plain words, that Carlile and his shopmen ought to be burned in Smithfield, and that every person who, when called upon, should decline to make a solemn profession of Christianity ought to suffer the same fate.We do not, however, believe that Mr.Southey would recommend such a course, though his language would, according to all the rules of logic, justify us in supposing this to be his meaning.His opinions form no system at all.He never sees, at one glance, more of a question than will furnish matter for one flowing and well-turned sentence; so that it would be the height of unfairness to charge him personally with holding a doctrine merely because that doctrine is deducible, though by the closest and most accurate reasoning, from the premises which he has laid down.We are, therefore, left completely in the dark as to Mr.Southey's opinions about toleration.Immediately after censuring the Government for not punishing infidels, he proceeds to discuss the question of the Catholic disabilities, now, thank God, removed, and defends them on the ground that the Catholic doctrines tend to persecution, and that the Catholics persecuted when they had power.

"They must persecute," says he, "if they believe their own creed, for conscience-sake; and if they do not believe it, they must persecute for policy; because it is only by intolerance that so corrupt and injurious a system can be upheld."That unbelievers should not be persecuted is an instance of national depravity at which the glorified spirits stand aghast.

Yet a sect of Christians is to be excluded from power, because those who formerly held the same opinions were guilty of persecution.We have said that we do not very well know what Mr.

Southey's opinion about toleration is.But, on the whole, we take it to be this, that everybody is to tolerate him, and that he is to tolerate nobody.

We will not be deterred by any fear of misrepresentation from expressing our hearty approbation of the mild, wise, and eminently Christian manner in which the Church and the Government have lately acted with respect to blasphemous publications.We praise them for not having thought it necessary to encircle a religion pure, merciful, and philosophical, a religion to the evidence of which the highest intellects have yielded, with the defences of a false and bloody superstition.The ark of God was never taken till it was surrounded by the arms of earthly defenders.In captivity, its sanctity was sufficient to vindicate it from insult, and to lay the hostile fiend prostrate on the threshold of his own temple.The real security of Christianity is to be found in its benevolent morality, in its exquisite adaptation to the human heart, in the facility with which its scheme accommodates itself to the capacity of every human intellect, in the consolation which it bears to the house of mourning, in the light with which it brightens the great mystery of the grave.To such a system it can bring no addition of dignity or of strength, that it is part and parcel of the common law.It is not now for the first time left to rely on the force of its own evidences and the attractions of its own beauty.Its sublime theology confounded the Grecian schools in the fair conflict of reason with reason.The bravest and wisest of the Caesars found their arms and their policy unavailing, when opposed to the weapons that were not carnal and the kingdom that was not of this world.The victory which Porphyry and Diocletian failed to gain is not, to all appearance, reserved for any of those who have in this age, directed their attacks against the last restraint of the powerful and the last hope of the wretched.

The whole history of Christianity shows, that she is in far greater danger of being corrupted by the alliance of power, than of being crushed by its opposition.Those who thrust temporal sovereignty upon her treat her as their prototypes treated her author.They bow the knee, and spit upon her; they cry "Hail!"and smite her on the cheek; they put a sceptre in her hand, but it is a fragile reed; they crown her, but it is with thorns; they cover with purple the wounds which their own hands have inflicted on her; and inscribe magnificent titles over the cross on which they have fixed her to perish in ignominy and pain.

同类推荐
  • The Cost

    The Cost

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 广动植类之四

    广动植类之四

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说须真天子经

    佛说须真天子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 西塘集耆旧续闻

    西塘集耆旧续闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 敬斋古今黈

    敬斋古今黈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 上善若水善行天下——陈逢干的慈善人生

    上善若水善行天下——陈逢干的慈善人生

    本书以写实的手法记录了陈逢干先生成长的经历和慈善事迹,介绍了他童年的苦难,青年的勤劳,中年的坎坷,以及成功的经验,慈善的事迹和心得。
  • 帝少的婚令:甜妻,求抱抱!

    帝少的婚令:甜妻,求抱抱!

    全海城名媛圈里人都知道北边路家有一幺女路遥,顶着一张天生的美貌皮囊,“强势压过了”娱乐圈风头鼎盛的第一美人乔桐,成为圈中公认的顶尖美人儿。而传闻,得罪乔桐的人,总是没有什么好下场。可路遥却“高调”上演了,什么是没有最嚣张,只有更嚣张,公然撬下了传闻中最神秘的帝少邢阎霄。寿宴上,大厅内觥筹交错,阁楼间,她扯了他的领带,大胆索吻:“邢阎霄,你若娶我,并不算亏。”男人低笑,半燃的烟因着他手指的动作,贴上她的脸,引得一片滚烫。“坏女孩,邢家的大门,可是只进不出。”她弯眼笑:“可我只想入你邢阎霄的家门怎么办?”重生前,路遥曾是路家最低调的路家幺女,却在韶华正茂的年纪,死于非命!重生后,路遥发誓,有仇报仇,有怨报怨,这一辈子,她总归要换个活法的。
  • 金牌经纪人

    金牌经纪人

    他手下的艺人,只要出道就不愁没有广告代言,三星,香奈儿,路易威登,无数知名品牌被他所拿下!他手下的艺人,只要出道就没有一个简单角色,金钟国,幸田来未,小贾斯汀,无数巨星被他所签约!他手下的艺人,只要出道就从不缺少经典作品,讨人喜欢,BABY,阿凡达,无数的神作被他所撰写!是他,谱写了娱乐圈历史,创造了属于他的未来。那么,他是谁?传奇经纪人,慕庸的故事,从现在开始…PS:新书上传,请大家多多点击,推荐,收藏支持!!
  • 我的产夫生活

    我的产夫生活

    现在作为刚刚升级为人父的我,遥想这几年,真是百感交集,一则对宝宝的出世感叹,希望可以勾起已做父母的一些回味;二则告诉准备生育宝宝的人,可能会像我们一样遇到各种雷同的“烦事”;三则作为天天加班IT男的我,在无尽的工作和忙碌的带宝宝生活之余,在这里给自己积攒一点可以傻笑的边角料;四则迎着二胎落地的春风,真心的希望,有条件的就要:再来一个。
  • 杀手少爷

    杀手少爷

    从小戴到大的紫玉戒指藏着什么秘密,文夜觞,一个从小爷爷要求继承事业就是杀手,带着身后燃烧的旧木屋,带着爷爷死前接的最后一个任务,离开已经生活了十年的地方。夜觞要去哪
  • 纨绔的优雅日常

    纨绔的优雅日常

    “其实我没有超能力,只有钞能力。请大家让一让,我只想优雅地败家。”穿越到异世界的宁忌身为首富之子,最大的心愿就是世界和平,做一个优雅败家的大纨绔。(无玄幻,无异界,无修仙,多女主,纯粹都市日常向。)
  • 纪元人类

    纪元人类

    华夏文明的古老典籍《云笈七签》中说,人有三魂:胎光,爽灵,幽精。而科学家在研究精神力时发现,‘魂魄’亦是宇宙物质的一种,在一些特定的条件下,这种物质会在物质世界具现化。23世纪,人类因为异兽的袭击,被迫转到地下生活,在阴暗无比的大地深处,搭建起一座座雄伟的地下城。人类在对抗异兽时发现,一些异兽在死亡后,会生成这种独特的‘异兽精魄’,人类可以吸收这种精魄,从而掌握异兽的一部分能力。于是,异术师这个职业,开始在每一座人类地下城中兴起。顾霄在二百年后苏醒,意外掌握了特殊精魄‘恶鬼’的力量,踏上了异术师的道路,且看他如何在重重迷雾中披荆斩棘,带领人类夺回曾经拥有的一切!
  • 白露将晞

    白露将晞

    他步步为营,工于心计,踩着尸山步步往前。她无忧无虑,家庭幸福,忽然噩梦降临,幸得他相救,从此换了一种人生。遇见他之后,原以为踏入一场美梦,谁料竟是无尽折磨……“成大事者,必然要牺牲一些东西。”“所以你选择牺牲我。”若是那日溺亡与冰冷的湖中,若是从未遇见他,该多好。
  • 盗者人心

    盗者人心

    解开一个关于盗墓门派内部巨大阴谋的故事,南北曾齐名。我不忘初心
  • 凡人时代之变革

    凡人时代之变革

    八十年初,一个小婴儿出生在远离家乡数千里之遥的高原小山村,一马平川平原上、连绵不绝山沟里,透过巍峨的青藏高原的圣洁的冰雪融化,两地地理互连。而新生的孩子,给人们带了新的希望!更是让生活在另一方水土的亲人有了感情牵挂,总是默默的想着,远方的亲人还好吗?在时代的大潮下发生很多可歌可泣又悲欢离合的无数故事,人们为了生存和发展总是在得到和失去见徘徊,但是历史大势不可阻挡,奔流到海不复回!凡人繁盛让中国五千年历史长河才显得如此的波澜壮阔!。凡人延续了主体人类的中华民族。凡人是炎黄子孙的最后希望。谨记!