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Title: For Good or Ill?
Author: Charlotte Wilson
Date: October 1887
Language: en
Topics: religion, anti-religion, anti-christian
Source: https://www.revoltlib.com/anarchism/for-good-or-ill/view.php

Charlotte Wilson

For Good or Ill?

We have been speaking of the spontaneous action of human energy as a

great fact, which it is foolish and dangerous to overlook or ignore. But

there are two ways of accepting the existence of a fact. We may rejoice

in it and welcome it as a good, or find it distasteful and repel it as

an evil. We may use our conscious exercise of will to give it free play,

or we may set ourselves to counteract or evade its action.

How do we look upon the spontaneous upleaping of energy in man whether

it take shape in thought, feeling, or action, The common answer now-a

days is, It is good or evil according to the circumstances like the

manifestation of energy in fire, which we say is a good servant but a

bad master. Au answer characteristic of our epoch of transition, in

which all vital questions are wrapped in a haze of doubt and

contradiction, and the search for truth too frequently issues in the

vague acceptance of a compromise.

In sturdier ages men had no such doubts to bewilder them. During those

dark times when the principle of authority was strong and full of life,

and reigned supreme in society, moralists and priests had no hesitation

in condemning the spontaneous motions of human nature as necessarily,

essentially, and entirely evil. According to the teaching of the

Christian Church the heart of man was deceitful and desperately wicked.

Out of it proceeded naught but cruelty and lies. All its acts were evil

continually. Man of his own motion could do no good thing. "I am full of

decay," moans Thomas a' Kempis one of the moat gifted and tender

exponents of Catholicism during the ages of faith. "Fight thou strongly

for me," he prays,, "and vanquish the evil besets, I mean the alluring

desires of the flesh." When one turns over the pages of 'The Imitation

of Christ ' to discover the character of these evil beasts, from whom

the poor monk implores so piteously to be delivered, we find they are

the healthy and natural desires of man's heart for knowledge, for human

love and companionship, for personal freedom, for the esteem of his

fellows,, for the enjoyments of the sense,, and for a share of the good

things of this life. These natural impulses all war against the dreamy

state of mental abstraction in an imaginary world which the monk calls

the spiritual life, where, if a man desire to walk, " it is necessary

that he mortify all his corrupt and inordinate affections, and that he

should not earnestly cleave to any creature with particular love." The

"natural man" or the "flesh," i.e., full and complete human nature, must

be crushed, subdued, suppressed to make room for "grace," the good with

which it may be inspired by the action of God, either directly or

through the priests and lawgivers whom he has inspired to rule the lives

of their fellows.. " Go where thou wilt," writes A' Kempis, " thou shalt

find no rest but in humble subjection under the government of a

superior."

The great movement towards freedom of thought, which resulted in the

revolt against authority, galled the Reformation, by no means put an end

to the fixed belief in the essential depravity of human nature and the

need to crush out human desires and affections.

The articles of the Reformed Church of England assert of every man that

he " is of his own nature inclined to evil, so that the flesh lusteth

always contrary to the spirit, and therefore in every person born into

this world it deserveth God's wrath and damnation. And l this infection

of nature cloth remain, yea in them that are regenerated whereby the

lust of the flesh,, which some do expound the wisdom some sensuality,

some the affection, some the desire of the flesh, is not subject to the

law of God."

Decidedly in the opinion of Christian churchmen and theologians the

spontaneous manifestations of human energy were the workings of original

sin, and the promptings of the devil.

The first practical outcome of this belief among the masses of the

people was the loss of self-respect The proud Englishman, who in his

heathen days had scorned to kneel before gods or men, learned to grovel

in morbid self-disgust before the ascetic,, who by moral suicide had

killed or perverted the healthy impulses of his own nature. Men grew to

be ashamed of their true selves. Conscientious persons lived under a

continual sense of guilt and humiliation, or else of self-delusion and

hypocrisy, induced by a continual effort to appear what they were not.

Careless and unconscious natures tended to become utterly reckless in

the selfishness of their self-indulgence. Fortunately, men are

continually better than their beliefs, or the Christian world would have

become an actual realization of its own inhuman heaven and hell.

Another result of this strange idea of a bad nature to be destroyed that

goodness might be, as it were, pumped into man's heart from the outside,

was the acceptance of coercion as a necessity. The people were taught by

their masters that the evil dispositions of men must be restrained by

laws made and enforced by divinely inspired priests and rulers, and by

degrees this teaching took wide and deep hold of the popular mind. It

lies hidden there to this day.

I do not, of course, mean that this general belief in human depravity

was the cause of the authority exercised during these many ages by

churchmen, aristocrats, kings, and parliament, or that it was the origin

of law. It is important to recognize that it was neither. But it was the

reason which was put forward, and is sometimes put forward to this day,

to cloak the perverted instinct of domination run mad. It was the reason

that men, who usurped authority over their fellows, gave to themselves

for their unnatural conduct; the excuse they made to their own

consciences, and by means of which they appealed to the moral sense of

the masses whom they controlled.

Next month we will notice how this belief began to die, and its active

effects to fade out of social life.