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                  <text>A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM:
BEING

A LECTURE
DELIVERED IN

MERCANTILE HALL, BOSTON,

APRIL 10, 1861,

BY MRS. ERNESTINE L. ROSE.

BOSTON: •
PUBLISHED BY J. P. MENDUM, INVESTIGATOR OFFICE.

1881.

��A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

My Friends :—In undertaking the inquiry of
the existence of a God, I am fully conscious of
the difficulties 1 have to encounter. I am well
aware that the very question produces in most
minds a feeling of awe, as if stepping on forbid­
den ground, too holy and sacred for mortals to
approach. The very question strikes them with
horror, and it is owing to this prejudice so deeply
implanted by education, and also strengthened by
public sentiment, that so few are willing to give it
a fair and impartial investigation,—knowing but
too well that it casts a stigma and reproach upon
any person bold enough to undertake the task,
unless his previously known opinions are a guar­
antee that his conclusions would be in accordance
and harmony with the popular demand. But be­
lieving, as I do, that Truth only is beneficial, and
Error, from whatever source, and under whatever
name, is pernicious to man, I consider no place
too holy, no subject too sacred, for man’s earnest
investigation; for by so doing only can we arrive
at Truth, learn to discriminate it from Error, and
be able to accept the one and reject the other.
Nor is this the only impediment in the way of
this inquiry. The question arises, Where shall
we begin ? We have been told, that “ by search­
ing none can find out God,” which has so far

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

proved true ; for, as yet, no one has ever been
able to find him. The most strenuous believer
has to acknowledge that it is only a belief, but he
knows nothing on the subject. Where, then, shall
we search for his existence? Enter the material
world ; ask the Sciences whether they can disclose
the mystery ? Geology speaks of the structure of
the Earth, the formation of the different strata, of
coal, of granite, of the whole mineral kingdom.—
It reveals the remains and traces of animals long
extinct, but gives us no clue whereby we may
prove the existence of a God.
Natural history gives us a knowledge of the
animal kingdom in general; the different organ­
isms, structures, and powers of the various species.
Physiology teaches the nature of man, the laws
that govern his being, the functions of the vital
organs, and the conditions upon which alone health
and life depend. Phrenology treats of the laws
of mind, the different portions of the brain, the
temperaments, the organs, how to develop some
and repress others to produce a well balanced and
healthy condition. But in the whole animal econ­
omy—though the brain is considered to be a “ mi­
crocosm,” in which may be traced a resemblance
or relationship with everything in Nature—not a
spot can be found to indicate the existence of a
God.
Mathematics lays the foundation of all the ex­
act sciences. It teaches the art of combining num­
bers, of calculating and measuring distances, bow
to solve problems, to weigh mountains, to fathom
the depths of the ocean; but gives no directions
how to ascertain the existence of a God.
Enter Nature's great laboratory—Chemistry.—
She will speak to you of the various elements,
their combinations and uses, of the gasses con­

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

5

stantly evolving and combining in different pro­
portions, producing all the varied objects, the in­
teresting and important phenomena we behold.
She proves the indestructibility of matter, and its
inherent property—motion; but in all her opera­
tions, no demonstrable fact can be obtained to in­
dicate the existence of a God.
Astronomy tells us of the wonders of the Solar
System—the eternally revolving planets, the ra­
pidity and certainty of their motions, the distance
from* planet to planet, from star to star. It pre­
dicts with astonishing and marvellous precision
the phenomena of eclipses, the visibility upon our
Earth of comets, and proves the immutable law
of gravitation, but is entirely silent on the exist­
ence of a God.
In fine, descend into the bowels of the Earth,
and you will learn what it contains; into the
depths of the ocean, and you will find the inhab­
itants of the great deep; but neither in the Earth
above, nor the waters below, can you obtain any
knowledge of his existence. Ascend into the
heavens, and enter the “ milky way.” go from
planet to planet to the remotest star, and ask the
eternally revolving systems, Where is God ? and
Echo answers, Where ?
The Universe of Matter gives us no record of
his existence. Where next shall we search ? En­
ter the Universe of Mind, read the millions of
volumes written on the subject, and in all the
speculations, the assertions, the assumptions, the
theories, and the creeds, you can only find Man
stamped in an indelible impress his own mind on
every page. In describing his God, he delineated
his own character: the picture he drew represents
in living and ineffaceable -colors the epoch of his
existence—the period he lived in.

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A DEFENCE OF /THEISM.

It was a great mistake to say that God made
man in his image. Man, in all ages, made his
God in his own image; and we find that just in
accordance with his civilization, his knowledge,
his experience, his taste, his refinement, his sense
of right, of justice, of freedom, and humanity,—so
has he made his God. But whether coarse or re­
fined ; cruel and vindictive, or kind and generous;
an implacable tyrant, or a gentle and loving fa­
ther ;—it still was the emanation of his own mind
—the picture of himself.
But, you ask, how came it that man thought or
wrote about God at all? The answer is very sim­
ple. Ignorance is the mother of Superstition. In
proportion to man’s ignorance is he superstitious—
does he believe in the mysterious. The very name
has a charm for him. Being unacquainted with
the nature and laws of things around him, with
the true causes of the effects he witnessed, he as­
cribed them to false ones—to supernatural agen­
cies. The savage, ignorant of the mechanism of
a watch, attributes the ticking to a spirit. The
so-called civilized man, equally ignorant of the
mechanism of the Universe, and the laws which
govern it, ascribes it to the same erroneous cause.
Before electricity was discovered, a thunder-storm
was said to come from the wrath of an offended
Deity. To this fiction of man’s uncultivated mind,
has been attributed all of good and of evil, of wis­
dom and of folly. Man has talked about him,
written about-him, disputed about him, fought
about him,—sacrificed himself, and extirpated his
fellow man. Rivers of blood and oceans of tears
have been shed to please him, yet no one has ever
been able to demonstrate his existence.
But the Bible, we are told, reveals this great
mystery. Where Nature is dumb, and Man igno­

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

7

rant, Revelation speaks in the authoritative voice
of prophecy. Then let us see whether that Reve­
lation can stand the test of reason and of truth.—
God, we are told, is omnipotent, omniscient, om­
nipresent,—all wise, all just, and all good; that
he is perfect. So far, so well; for less than per­
fection were unworthy of a God. The first act
recorded of him is, that he created the world out
of nothing; but unfortunately the revelation of
Science—Chemistry—which is based not on writ­
ten words, but demonstrable facts, says that Noth­
ing has no existence, and therefore out of Nothing,
Nothing could be made. Revelation tells us that
the world was created in six days. Here Geolo­
gy steps in and says, that it requires thousands of
ages to form the various strata of the earth. The
Bible tells us that the earth was flat and station­
ary, and the sun moves around the earth. Co­
pernicus and Galileo flatly deny this 7^ assertion,
and demonstrate by Astronomy that the earth is
spherical, and revolves around the sun. Revela­
tion tells us that on the fourth day God created
the sun, moon, and stars. This, Astronomy calls
a moo» story, and says that the first three days,
before the great torchlight was manufactured and
suspended in the great lantern above, must have
been rather dark.
The division of the waters above trom the wa­
ters below, and the creation of the minor objects,
I pass by, and come at once to the sixth day.
Having finished, in five days, this stupendous
production, with its mighty mountains, its vast
seas, its fields and woods; supplied the waters
with fishes—from the whale that Jonah swal­
lowed to the little Dutch herring; peopled the
woods with inhabitants—from the tiger, the lion,
the bear, tire elephant with his trunk, the drome­

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

dary with his hump, the deer with his antlers
the nightingale with her melodies, down to the
serpent which tempted mother Eve ; covered the
fields with vegetation, decorated the gardens with
flowers, hung the trees with fruits; and survey­
ing this glorious world as it lay spread out like a
map before him, the question naturally suggested
itself. What is it all for, unless there were beings
capable of admiring, of appreciating, and of en­
joying the delights this beautiful world could af­
ford ? And suiting the action to the impulse, he
said,
Let us make man.” “ So God created
man in his own image; in the image of God cre­
ated he him, male and female created he them.”
I presume by the Term “image,” we are not to
understand a near resemblance of face or form,
but in the image or likeness of his knowledge, his
power, his wisdom, and perfection. Having thus
made man, he placed him (them) in the garden
of Eden the loveliest and most enchanting spot
at the very head of creation, and bade them (with
the single restriction not to eat of the tree of
knowledge,) to live, to love, and to be happy.
What a delightful picture, could we only rest
here ! But did these beings, fresh from the hand
of omnipotent wisdom, in whose image they were
made, answer the great object of their creation?
Alas ! no. No sooner were they installed in their
Paradisean home, than they violated the first, the
only injunction given them, and fell from their
high estate; and not only they, but by a singular
justice of that very merciful Creator, their inno­
cent posterity to all coming generations, fell with
them ! Does that bespeak wisdom and perfec­
tion in the Creator, or in the creature ? But what
was the cause of this tremendous fall, which frus­
trated the whole design of the creation ? The

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

9

serpent tempted mother Eve, and she, like a good
wife, tempted her husband. But did God not
know when he created the serpent, that it would
tempt the woman, and that she was made out of
such frail materials, (the rib of Adam,) as not to
be able to resist the temptation? If he did not
know, then his knowledge was at fault; if he
did, but could not prevent that calamity, then his
power was at fault; if he knew and could, but
would not, then his goodness was at fault. Choose
which you please, and it remains alike fatal to the
rest.
Revelation tells us that God made man perfect,
and found him imperfect; then he pronounced all
things good, and found them most desperately
bad. “ And God saw that the wickedness of man
was great in the earth, and that every imagina­
tion of the thought of his heart was evil continu­
ally. And it repented the Lord that he had made
man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart.”
ct And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom
I have created, from the face of the earth ; both
man and beasts, and the creeping things, and the
fowls of the air, for it repenteth me that I have
made them.” So he destroyed everything, except
Noah with his family, and a few household pets.
Why he saved them is hard to say, unless it was
to reserve materials as stock in hand to commence
a new world with; but really, judging of the
character of those he saved, by their descendants,
it strikes me it would have been much better, and
given him far less trouble, to have let them slip
also, and with his improved experience made a
new world out of fresh and superior materials.
As it was, this wholesale destruction even, was
a failure. The world was not. one jot better after
the flood than before. His chosen children were

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

just as bad as ever, and he had to send his proph­
ets, again and again, to threaten, to frighten, to
coax, to cajole, and to flatter them into good be­
haviour. But all to no effect. They grew worse
and worse: and having made a covenant with
Noah after he had sacrificed of “ every clean
beast and of every clean fowl,”—“ The Lord
smelt the sweet savour; ai\d the Lord said in his
heart, I will not again curse the ground any more
for man’s sake; for the imagination of man’s
heart is evil from his youth ; neither will I again
smite any more everything living, as I have done.”
And so he was forced to resort to the last sad al­
ternative of sending “his only begotten son,” his
second self, to save them. But alas! “ his own
received him not,” and so he was obliged to
adopt the Gentiles, and die to save the world.
Did he succeed, even then ? Is the world saved ?
Saved I From what? From ignorance ? It is all
around us. From poverty, vice, crime, sin, mis­
ery, and shame ? It abounds everywhere. Look
into your poor-houses, your prisons, your lunatic
asylums; contemplate the whip, the instruments
of torture, and of death ; ask the murderer, or his
victim ; listen to the ravings of the maniac, the
sirieks of distress, the groans of despair; mark
the cruel deeds of the tyrant, the crimes of slave­
ry, and the suffering of the oppressed; count the
millions of lives lost by fire, by water, and by the
sword; measure the blood spilled, the tears shed,
the sighs of agony'- drawn from the expiring vic­
tims on the altar of fanaticism;—and tell me from
what the world was saved? And why was it not
saved? Why does God still permit these horrors
to afflict the race? Does omniscience not know
it? Could omnipotence not do it? Would infi­
nite wisdom, power, and goodness allow his chil­

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

11

dren thus to live, to suffer, and to die? No!
Humanity revolts against such a supposition.
Ah ! not now, not here, says the believer. Here­
after will he save them. Save them hereafter!
From what? From the apple eaten by our mo­
ther Eve? What a mockery! If a rich parent
were to let his children live in ignorance, poverty,
and wretchedness, all their lives, and hold out to
them the promise of a fortune at some time here­
after, he would justly be considered a criminal, or
a madman. The parent is responsible to his off­
spring—the Creator to the creature.
The testimony of Revelation has failed. Its
account of the creation of the material world is
disproved by science. Its account of the creation
of man in the image of perfection is disproved by
its own internal evidence. To test the Bible God
by justice and benevolence, he could not be good ;
to test him by reason and knowledge, he could
not be wise; to test him by the light of truth, the
rule of consistency, we must come to the inevita­
ble conclusion that, like the Universe of matter­
and of mind, this pretended Revelation has also
failed to demonstrate the existence of a God.
Methinks I hear the believer say, you are un­
reasonable ; you demand an impossibility; we
are finite, and therefore cannot understand, much
less define and demonstrate the infinite. Just so !
But if I am unreasonable in asking you to demon­
strate the existence of the being you wish me to
believe in, are you not infinitely more unreason­
able to expect me to believe—blame, persecute,
and punish me for not believing—in what you
have to acknowledge you cannot understand ?
But, says the Christian, the world exists, and
therefore there must have been a God to create it.
That does not follow. The mere fact of its exist­

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

ence does not prove a Creator. Then how came
the Universe into existence? We do not know ;
but the ignorance of man is certainly no proof of
the existence of a God. Yet upon that very igno­
rance has it been predicated, and is maintained.
From the little knowledge we have, we are justi­
fied in the assertion that the Universe never was
created, from the simple fact that not one atom of
it can ever be annihilated. To suppose a Uni­
verse created, is to suppose a time when it did not
exist, and that is a self-evident absurdity. Be­
sides, where was the Creator before it was creat­
ed ? Nay, where is he now? Outside of that
Universe, which means the all in all, above, be­
low, and around? That is another absurdity. Is
he contained within? Then he can be only a
part, for the whole includes all the parts. If only
a part., then he could not be its Creator, for a part
cannot create the whole. But the world could not
have made itself. True; nor could God have
made himself; and if you must have a God to
make the world, you will be under the same ne­
cessity to have another to make him, and others
still to make them, and so on until reason and
common sense are at a stand-still.
The same argument applies to a First Cause.
We can no more admit of a first than a last cause.
What is a first cause ? The one immediately pre­
ceding the last effect, which was an effect to a
cause in its turn—an effect to causes, themselves
effects. All we know is an eternal chain of cause
and effect, without beginning as without end.
But is there no evidence of intelligence, of de­
sign, and consequently of a designer? I see no
evidence of either. What is intelligence? It is
not a thing, a substance, an existence in itself, but
simply a property of matter, manifesting itself

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

13

through organizations. We have no knowledge
of, nor can we conceive of, intelligence apart from
organized matter: and we find that from the small­
est and simplest insect, through all the links and
gradations in Nature’s great chain, up to Man—
just in accordance with the organism, the amount,
and quality of brain, so are the capacities to re­
ceive impressions, the power to retain them, and
the abilities to manifest and impart them to others,
namely, to have its peculiar nature cultivated and
developed, so as to bear mental fruits, just as the
cultivated earth bears vegetation—physical fruits.
Not being able to recognize an independent intelli­
gence, I can perceive no design or designer except
in the works of man.
But, says Paley, does the watch not prove u
watchmaker—a design, and therefore a designer ?
How much more then does the Universe? Yes;
the watch shows design, and the watchmaker did
not leave us in the dark on the subject, but clearly
and distinctly stamped his design on the face of the
watch. Is it as clearly stamped on the Universe?
Where is the design, in the oak to grow to its ma­
jestic height ? or in the thunderbolt that rent it
asunder? In the formation of the wing of the
bird, to enable it to fly, in accordance with the
promptings of its nature ? or in the sportsman to
shoot it down while flying? In the butterfly to
dance in the sunshine? or its being crushed in the
tiny fingers of a child ? Design in man’s capacity
for the acquisition of knowledge, or in his groping
in ignorance? In the necessity to obey the laws
of health, or .in the violation of them, which pro­
duces disease ? In the desire to be happy, or in
the causes that prevent it, and make him live in
toil, misery, and suffering ?
The watchmaker not only stamped his design

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

on the face of the watch, but he teaches how to
wind it up when run down; how to repair the
machinery when out of order; and how to put a
new spring in when the old one is broken, and
leave the watch as good as ever. Does the great
Watchmaker, as he is called, show the same in­
telligence and power in keeping, or teaching oth­
ers to keep, this contemplated mechanism—Man
-—always in good order? and when the life-spring
is broken replace it with another, and leave him
just the same? If an Infinite Intelligence designed
man to possess knowledge, he could not be igno­
rant; to be healthy, he could not be diseased; to
be virtuous, he could not be vicious ; to be wise,
he could not act so foolish as to trouble himself
about the Gods, and neglect his own best interests.
But, says the believer, here is a wonderful adapt­
ation of means to ends; the eye to see, the ear to
hear,. &amp;c. Yes, this is very wonderful; but not
one jot more so, than if the eye were made to
hear, and the ear to see. The supporters of De­
sign use sometimes very strange arguments. A
friend of mine, a very intelligent man, with quite
a scientific taste, endeavored once to convince me
of a Providential design, from the fact that a fish,
which had always lived in the Mammoth Cave of
Kentucky, was entirely blind. Here, said he, is
strong evidence; in that dark cave, where noth­
ing was to be seen, the fish needed no eyes, and
therefore it has none. He forgot the demonstrable
fact that the element of light is indispensable in
the formation of the organ of sight, without which
it could not be formed, and no Providence, or
Gods, could enable the fish to see. That fish
story reminds me of the Methodist preacher who
proved the wisdom and benevolence of Providence
in always placing the rivers near large cities, and

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

15

death at the end of life ; for Oh 1 my dear hearers,
said he, what would have become of us had he
placed it at the beginning?
Everything is wonderful, and wonderful just in
proportion as we are ignorant; but that proves no
“design” or “designer.” But did things come by
chance ? I am asked. Oh ! no. There is no such
thing as chance. It exists only in the perverted,
mind of the believer, who, while insisting that
God was the cause of everything, leaves Him
without any cause. The Atheist believes as little
in the one as in the other. He knows that no ef­
fect could exist without an adequate cause ; that
everything in the Universe is governed by laws.
The Universe is one vast chemical laboratory,
in constant operation, by her internal forces. The
laws or principles of attraction, cohesion, and re­
pulsion, produce in never-ending succession the
phenomena of composition, decomposition, and
recomposition. The how, we are too ignorant to
understand, too modest to presume, and too hon­
est to profess. Had man been a patient and im­
partial inquirer, and not with childish presump­
tion attributed everything he could not under­
stand, to supernatural causes, given names to hide
his ignorance, but observed the operations of Na­
ture, he would undoubtedly have known more,
been wiser, and happier.
As it is, Superstition has ever been the great
impediment to the acquisition of knowledge. Ev­
ery progressive step of man clashed against the
two-edged sword of Religion, to whose narrow re­
strictions he had but too often to succumb, or
march onward at the expense of interest, reputa­
tion, and even life itself.
But, we are told, that Religion is natural; the
belief in a God universal. Were it natural, then

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A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

it would indeed be universal; but it is not. We
have ample evidence to the contrary. According
to Dr. Livingstone, there are whole tribes or na­
tions, civilized, moral, and virtuous; yes, so hon­
est that they expose their goods for sale without
guard or value set upon them, trusting to the
honor of the purchaser to pay its proper price.—
Yet these people have not the remotest idea of a
God, and he found it impossible to impart it to
them. And in all ages of the world, some of the
most civilized, the wisest, and the best, were en­
tire unbelievers, only they dared not openly avow
it, except at the risk of their lives. Proscription,
the torture, and the stake, were found most effi­
cient means to seal the lips of heretics ; and though
the march of progress has broken the infernal ma­
chines, and extinguished the fires of\the Inquisi­
tion, the proscription, and more refined but not
less cruel and bitter persecutions of an intolerant
and bigoted public opinion, in Protestant coun­
tries, as well as in Catholic, on account of belief,
are quite enough to prevent men from honestly
avowing their true sentiments upon the subject.—
Hence there are few possessed of the moral cour­
age of a Humboldt.
If the belief in a God were natural, there would
be no need to teach it. Children would possess it
as well as adults, the layman as the priest, the
heathen as much as the missionary. We don’t
have to teach the general elements of human na­
ture,—the five senses, seeing, hearing, smelling,
tasting, and feeling. They are universal; so
would religion be were it natural, but it is not.
On the contrary, it is an interesting and demon­
strable fact, that all children are Atheists, and
were religion not inculcated into their minds they
would remain so. Even as it’is, they are great

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

17

sceptics, until made sensible of the potent weapon
by which religion has ever beyn propagated, name­
ly, fear—fear of the lash of public opinion here,
and of a jealous, vindictive God hereafter. No •
there is no religion in human nature, nor human
nature in religion. It is purely artificial, the re­
sult of education. while Atheism is natural, and,
were the human mind not perverted and bewil­
dered by the mysteries and follies of superstition,
would be universal.
But the people have been made to believe that
were it not for religion, the world would be de­
stroyed-;—man would become a monster, chaos
and confusion would reign supreme. These erro­
neous notions conceived in ignorance, propagated
by superstition, and kept alive by an interested
and corrupt priesthood who fatten on the credulity
of the public, are very difficult to be eradicated.
But sweep all the belief in the supernatural
from the face of the earth, and the world would
remain just the same. The seasons would follow
each other in their regular succession ; the stars
would shine in the firmament; the sun would
shed his benign and vivifying influence of light
and heat upon us; the clouds would discharge
their burden in gentle and refreshing showers;
the cultivated fields would bring forth vegetation ;
summer would ripen the golden grain, ready for
harvest; the trees would bear fruits; the birds
would sing in accordance with their happy in­
stinct, and all Nature would smile as joyously
around us as ever. Nor would man degenerate.
Oh ! no. His nature, too, would remain the same.
He would have to be obedient to the physical,
mental, and moral laws of his being, or suffer
the natural penalty for their violation; observe
the mandates of society, or receive the punish­

�18

A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

ment. His affections would be just as warm,
the love of self-preservation as strong, the desire
for happiness and the fear of pain as great. He
would love freedom, justice, and truth, and hate
oppression, fraud, and falsehood, as much as ever.
Sweep all belief in the supernatural from the
globe, and you would chase away the whole fra­
ternity of spectres, ghosts, and hobgoblins, which
have so befogged and bewildered the human
mind, that hardly a clear ray of the light of Rea­
son can penetrate it. You would cleanse and puri­
fy the heart of the noxious, poisonous weeds of
superstition, with its bitter, deadly fruits—hypoc­
risy, bigotry, and intolerance, and fill it with
charity and forbearance towards erring humanity.
You would give man courage to sustain him in
trials and misfortune, sweeten his temper, give
him a new zest for the duties, the virtues, and the
pleasures of life.
Morality does not depend on the belief inany
religion. History gives ample evidence that the
more belief the less virtue and goodness. Nor
need we go back to ancient times to see the crimes
and atrocities perpetrated under .its sanction. We
have enough in our own times. Look at the
present crisis—at the South with 4,000,000 of
human beings in slavery, bought and sold like
brute chattels under the sanction of religion and
of God, which the Reverends Van Dykes and the
Raphalls of the North fully endorse, and the
South complains that the reforms in the North are
owing to Infidelity. Morality depends on an accu­
rate knowledge of the nature of man, of the laws
that govern his being, the principles of right, of
justice, and humanity, and the conditions requi­
site to make him healthy, rational, virtuous, and
happy.

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

19

The belief in a God has failed to produce this
desirable end. On the contrary, while it could
not make man better, it has made him worse ; for
in preferring blind faith in things unseen and un­
known to virtue and morality, in directing his at­
tention from the known to the unknown, from the
real to the imaginary, from the certain here to a
fancied hereafter, from the fear of himself, of the
natural result of vice and crime, to some whimsi­
cal despot, it perverted his judgment, degraded
him in his own estimation, corrupted his feelings,
destroyed his sense of right, of justice, and of
truth, and made him a moral coward and a hypo­
crite. The lash of a hereafter is no guide for us
here. Distant fear cannot control present passion.
It is much easier to confess your sins in the dark,
than to acknowledge them in the light: to make
it up with a God you don’t see, than with a man
whom you do. Besides, religion has always left
a back door open for sinners to creep out of at the
eleventh hour. But teach man to do right, to
love justice, to revere truth, to be virtuous, not be­
cause a God would reward or punish him here­
after, but because it is right; and as every act
brings its own reward or its own punishment, it
wouid best promote his interest by promoting the
welfare of society. Let him feel the great truth
that our highest happiness consists in making all
around us happy ; and it would be an infinitely
truer and safer guide for man to a life of useful­
ness, virtue, and morality, than all the beliefs in
all the Gods ever imagined.
The more refined and transcendental religionists
have often said to me, if you do away with re­
ligion, you would destroy the most beautiful ele­
ment in human nature—the feeling of devotion
and reverence, ideality, and sublimity. This, too,

�20

A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

is an error. These sentiments would be cultivat­
ed just the same, only we would transfer the de­
votion from the unknown to the known ; from the
Gods, who, if they existed, could not need it, to
man who does. Instead of reverencing an imagi­
nary existence, man would learn to revere justice
and truth. Ideality and sublimity would reline
his feelings, and enable him to admire and enjoy
the ever-changing beauties of Nature; the vari­
ous and almost unlimited powers and capacities of
the human mind ; the exquisite and indescribable
charms of a well cultivated, highly refined, virtu­
ous, noble man.
But not only have the priests tried to make the
very term Atheism odious, as if it would destroy
all of good and beautiful in Nature, but some of
the reformers, not having the moral courage to
avow their own sentiments, wishing to be popular,
fearing lest their reforms would be considered
Infidel, (as all reforms assuredly are,) shield them­
selves from the stigma, by joining in the tirade
against Atheism, and associate it with everything
that is vile, with the crime of slavery, the corrup­
tions of the Church, and all the vices imaginable.
This is false, and they know it; Atheism protests
against this injustice. No one has a right to give
the term a false, a forced interpretation, to suit his
own purposes, (this applies also to some of the
Infidels who stretch and force the term Atheist out
of its legitimate significance.) As well might we
use the terms Episcopalian, Unitarian, Universalist, to signify vice and corruption, as the term
Atheist, which means simply a disbelief in a God,
because finding no demonstration of his existence,
man’s reason will not allow him to believe, nor his
conviction to play the hypocrite, and profess what
he does not believe. Give it its true significance,

�A DEFENCE OF ATHEISM.

*

21

and he will abide the consequence; but don’t
fasten upon it the vices belonging to yourselves.
Hypocrisy is the prolific mother of a large family !
In conclusion, the AtheistJ says to the honest,
conscientious believer, Though I cannot believe in
your God whom you have failed to demonstrate, I
believe in man ; if I have no faith in your religion,
I have faith, unbounded, unshaken faith in the
principles of right, of justice, and humanity.
Whatever good you are willing to co for the sake
of your God, I am full as willing to do for the
sake of man. But the monstrous crimes the be­
liever perpetrated in persecuting and exterminat­
ing his fellow man on account of difference of be­
lief, the Atheist, knowing that belief is not volun­
tary, but depends on evidence, and therefore there
can be no merit inathe belief of any religions, nor
demerit in a disbelief in all of them, could never
be guilty of. Whatever good you would do out
of fear of punishment, or hope of reward here­
after, the Atheist would do simply because it is
good • and being so, he would receive the far
surer and more certain reward, springing from
well-doing, which would constitute his pleasure,
and promote his happiness.

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