Christianity
& Liberalism
by
J. Gresham Machen (1881-1937)
Originally
published in 1923
(NY: Macmillan), this book is now in the public domain (original
pagination and footnotes have been kept intact for purposes of
reference). The electronic edition of this book was scanned and
edited by Shane Rosenthal for Reformation Ink. It may be
copied and distributed without restriction. In a few cases the
spelling has been modernized.
Table
of Contents Chapter One: Introduction Chapter Two: Doctrine Chapter Three: God and Man Chapter Four: The Bible Chapter Five: Christ Chapter Six: Salvation Chapter Seven: The Church |
What This Book Is About (in Machen's own words). "In my little book, Christianity and Liberalism, 1923, I tried to show that the issue in the Church of the present day is not between two varieties of the same religion, but, at bottom, between two essentially different types of thought and life. There is much interlocking of the branches, but the two tendencies, Modernism and supernaturalism, or (otherwise designated) non-doctrinal religion and historic Christianity, spring from different roots. In particular, I tried to show that Christianity is not a "life," as distinguished from a doctrine, and not a life that has doctrine as its changing symbolic expression, but thatexactly the other way aroundit is a life founded on a doctrine." (From "Christianity in Conflict," an autobiographical essay on Machen's life and works). To order a hard copy of this book for yourself or a friend, click here. |
CHRISTIANITY
& LIBERALISM, page 1
The purpose of this book is not to decide the religious issue of the present day, but merely to present the issue as sharply and clearly as possible, in order that the reader may be aided in deciding it for himself. Presenting an issue sharply is indeed by no means a popular business at the present time; there are many who prefer to fight their intellectual battles in what Dr. Francis L. Patton has aptly called a "condition of low visibility."1 Clear-cut definition of terms in religious matters, bold facing of the logical implications of religious views, is by many persons regarded as an impious proceeding. May it not discourage contribution to mission boards? May it not hinder the progress of consolidation, and produce a poor showing in columns of Church statistics? But with such persons we cannot possibly bring ourselves to agree. Light may seem at times to be an impertinent intruder, but it is always beneficial in the end. The type of religion which rejoices in the pious sound of traditional phrases, regardless of their meanings, or shrinks from "controversial" matters, will never stand amid the shocks of life. In the sphere of religion, as in other spheres, the things
1. Francis L. Patton,
in the introduction to William Hallock Johnson The Christian Faith
Under Modern Searchlight, [1916], p. 7.
CHRISTIANITY
& LIBERALISM, page 2
about which men are agreed are apt to be the things that are least worth holding; the really important things are the things about which men will fight.
In the sphere of religion, in particular, the present time is a time of conflict; the great redemptive religion which has always been known as Christianity is battling against a totally diverse type of religious belief, which is only the more destructive of the Christian faith because it makes use of traditional Christian terminology. This modern non-redemptive religion is called "modernism" or "liberalism." Both names are unsatisfactory; the latter, in particular, is question-begging. The movement designated as "liberalism" is regarded as "liberal" only by its friends; to its opponents it seems to involve a narrow ignoring of many relevant facts. And indeed the movement is so various in its manifestations that one may almost despair of finding any common name which will apply to all its forms. But manifold as are the forms in which the movement appears, the root of the movement is one; the many varieties of modern liberal religion are rooted in naturalismthat is, in the denial of any entrance of the creative power of God (as distinguished from the ordinary course of nature) in connection with the origin of Christianity. The word "naturalism" is here used in a sense somewhat different from its philosophical meaning. In this non-philosophical sense it describes with fair accuracy the real root of what is called, by what may turn out to be a degradation of an originally noble word, "liberal" religion.
The rise of this modern
naturalistic liberalism has not come by chance, but has been occasioned
by important changes which have recently taken place in the conditions
of life. The past one hundred years have witnessed the beginning
of a new era in human history, which may
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conceivably be regretted, but certainly cannot be ignored, by the most obstinate conservatism. The change is not something that lies beneath the surface and might be visible only to the discerning eye; on the contrary it forces itself upon the attention of the plain man at a hundred points. Modern inventions and the industrialism that has been built upon them have given us in many respects a new world to live in; we can no more remove ourselves from that world than we can escape from the atmosphere that we breathe.
But such changes in the material conditions of life do not stand alone; they have been produced by mighty changes in the human mind, as in their turn they themselves give rise to further spiritual changes. The industrial world of today has been produced not by blind forces of nature but by the conscious activity of the human spirit; it has been produced by the achievements of science. The outstanding feature of recent history is an enormous widening of human knowledge, which has gone hand in hand with such perfecting of the instrument of investigation that scarcely any limits can be assigned to future progress in the material realm.
The application of modern
scientific methods is almost as broad as the universe in which
we live. Though the most palpable achievements are in the sphere
of physics and chemistry, the sphere of human life cannot be isolated
from the rest, and with the other sciences there has appeared,
for example, a modern science of history, which, with psychology
and sociology and the like, claims, even if it does not deserve,
full equality with its sister sciences. No department of knowledge
can maintain its isolation from the modern lust of scientific
conquest; treaties of inviolability, though hallowed by all the
sanctions of age-long tradition, are being flung ruthlessly to
the winds.
CHRISTIANITY & LIBERALISM,
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In such an age, it is obvious that every inheritance from the past must be subject to searching criticism; and as a matter of fact some convictions of the human race have crumbled to pieces in the test. Indeed, dependence of any institution upon the past is now sometimes even regarded as furnishing a presumption, not in favor of it, but against it. So many convictions have had to be abandoned that men have sometimes come to believe that all convictions must go.
If such an attitude be justifiable, then no institution is faced by a stronger hostile presumption than the institution of the Christian religion, for no institution has based itself more squarely upon the authority of a by-gone age. We are not now inquiring whether such policy is wise or historically justifiable; in any case the fact itself is plain, that Christianity during many centuries has consistently appealed for the truth of its claims, not merely and not even primarily to current experience, but to certain ancient books the most recent of which was written some nineteen hundred years ago. It is no wonder that that appeal is being criticized today; for the writers of the books in question were no doubt men of their own age, whose outlook upon the material world, judged by modern standards, must have been of the crudest and most elementary kind. Inevitably the question arises whether the opinions of such men can ever be normative for men of the present day; in other words, whether first-century religion can ever stand in company with twentieth-century science.
However the question
may be answered, it presents a serious problem to the modern Church.
Attempts are indeed sometimes made to make the answer easier than
at first sight it appears to be. Religion, it is said, is so entirely
separate from science, that the two, rightly defined,
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cannot possibly come
into conflict. This attempt at separation, as it is hoped the
following pages may show, is open to objections of the most serious
kind. But what must now be observed is that even if the separation
is justifiable it cannot be effected without effort; the removal
of the problem of religion and science itself constitutes a problem.
For, rightly or wrongly, religion during the centuries has as
a matter of fact connected itself with a host of convictions,
especially in the sphere of history, which may form the subject
of scientific investigation; just as scientific investigators,
on the other hand, have sometimes attached themselves, again rightly
or wrongly, to conclusions which impinge upon the innermost domain
of philosophy and of religion. For example, if any simple Christian
of one hundred years ago, or even of today, were asked what would
become of his religion if history should prove indubitably that
no man called Jesus ever lived and died in the first century of
our era, he would undoubtedly answer that his religion would fall
away. Yet the investigation of events in the first century in
Judea, just as much as in Italy or in Greece, belongs to the sphere
of scientific history. In other words, our simple Christian, whether
rightly or wrongly, whether wisely or unwisely, has as a matter
of fact connected his religion, in a way that to him seems indissoluble,
with convictions about which science also has a right to speak.
If, then, those convictions, ostensibly religious, which belong
to the sphere of science, are not really religious at all, the
demonstration of that fact is itself no trifling task. Even if
the problem of science and religion reduces itself to the problem
of disentangling religion from pseudo-scientific accretions, the
seriousness of the problem is not thereby diminished. From every
point of view, therefore, the problem in question is the most
serious concern
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of the Church. What is the relation between Christianity and modern culture; may Christianity be maintained in a scientific age?
It is this problem which modern liberalism attempts to solve. Admitting that scientific objections may arise against the particularities of the Christian religionagainst the Christian doctrines of the person of Christ, and of redemption through His death and resurrectionthe liberal theologian seeks to rescue certain of the general principles of religion, of which these particularities are thought to be mere temporary symbols, and these general principles he regards as constituting "the essence of Christianity."
It may well be questioned, however, whether this method of defense will really prove to be efficacious; for after the apologist has abandoned his outer defenses to the enemy and withdrawn into some inner citadel, he will probably discover that the enemy pursues him even there. Modern materialism, especially in the realm of psychology, is not content with occupying the lower quarters of the Christian city, but pushes its way into all the higher reaches of life; it is just as much opposed to the philosophical idealism of the liberal preacher as to the Biblical doctrines that the liberal preacher has abandoned in the interests of peace. Mere concessiveness, therefore, will never succeed in avoiding the intellectual conflict. In the intellectual battle of the present day there can be no "peace without victory"; one side or the other must win.
As a matter of fact,
however, it may appear that the figure which has just been used
is altogether misleading; it may appear that what the liberal
theologian has retained after abandoning to the enemy one Christian
doctrine after another is not Christianity at all, but a religion
which is so entirely different from Christianity as to be
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long in a distinct category. It may appear further that the fears of the modern man as to Christianity were entirely ungrounded, and that in abandoning the embattled walls of the city of God he has fled in needless panic into the open plains of a vague natural religion only to fall an easy victim to the enemy who ever lies in ambush there.
Two lines of criticism,
then, are possible with respect to the liberal attempt at reconciling
science and Christianity. Modern liberalism may be criticized
(1) on the ground that it is un-Christian and (2) on the ground
that it is unscientific. We shall concern ourselves here chiefly
with the former line of criticism; we shall be interested in showing
that despite the liberal use of traditional phraseology modern
liberalism not only is a different religion from Christianity
but belongs in a totally different class of religions. But in
showing that the liberal attempt at rescuing Christianity is false
we are not showing that there is no way of rescuing Christianity
at all; on the contrary, it may appear incidentally, even in the
present little book, that it is not the Christianity of the New
Testament which is in conflict with science, but the supposed
Christianity of the modern liberal Church, and that the real city
of God, and that city alone, has defenses which are capable of
warding of the assaults of modern unbelief. However, our immediate
concern is with the other side of the problem; our principal concern
just now is to show that the liberal attempt at reconciling Christianity
with modern science has really relinquished everything distinctive
of Christianity, so that what remains is in essentials only that
same indefinite type of religious aspiration which was in the
world before Christianity came upon the scene. In trying to remove
from Christianity everything that could possibly be objected to
CHRISTIANITY & LIBERALISM,
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in the name of science, in trying to bribe off the enemy by those concessions which the enemy most desires, the apologist has really abandoned what he started out to defend. Here as in many other departments of life it appears that the things that are sometimes thought to be hardest to defend are also the things that are most worth defending.
In maintaining that liberalism in the modern Church represents a return to an un-Christian and sub-Christian form of the religious life, we are particularly anxious not to be misunderstood. "Un-Christian" in such a connection is sometimes taken as a term of opprobrium. We do not mean it at all as such. Socrates was not a Christian, neither was Goethe; yet we share to the full the respect with which their names are regarded. They tower immeasurably above the common run of men; if he that is least in the Kingdom of Heaven is greater than they, he is certainly greater not by any inherent superiority, but by virtue of an undeserved privilege which ought to make him humble rather than contemptuous.
Such considerations, however, should not be allowed to obscure the vital importance of the question at issue. If a condition could be conceived in which all the preaching of the Church should be controlled by the liberalism which in many quarters has already become preponderant, then, we believe, Christianity would at last have perished from the earth and the gospel would have sounded forth for the last time. If so, it follows that the inquiry with which we are now concerned is immeasurably the most important of all those with which the Church has to deal. Vastly more important than all questions with regard to methods of preaching is the root question as to what it is that shall be preached.
Many, no doubt, will
turn in impatience from the inquiryall those, namely, who
have settled the question in,
CHRISTIANITY & LIBERALISM,
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such a way that they cannot even conceive of its being reopened. Such, for example, are the pietists, of whom there are still many. "What," they say, "is the need of argument in defence of the Bible? Is it not the Word of God, and does it not carry with it an immediate certitude of its truth which could only be obscured by defense? If science comes into contradiction with the Bible so much the worse for science!" For these persons we have the highest respect, for we believe that they are right in the main point; they have arrived by a direct and easy road at a conviction which for other men is attained only through intellectual struggle. But we cannot reasonably expect them to be interested in what we have to say.
Another class of uninterested persons is much more numerous. It consists of those who have definitely settled the question in the opposite way. By them this little book, if it ever comes into their hands, will soon be flung aside as only another attempt at defence of a position already hopelessly lost. There are still individuals, they will say, who believe that the earth is flat; there are also individuals who defend the Christianity of the Church, miracles and atonement and all. In either case, it will be said, the phenomenon is interesting as a curious example of arrested development, but it is nothing more.
Such a closing of the
question, however, whether it approve itself finally or no, is
in its present form based upon a very imperfect view of the situation;
it is based upon a grossly exaggerated estimate of the achievements
of modern science. Scientific investigation, as has already been
observed, has certainly accomplished much; it has in many respects
produced a new world. But there is another aspect of the picture
which should not be ignored. The modern world represents in some
respects an enormous improvement over the world in which our ancestors
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lived; but in other respects it exhibits a lamentable decline. The improvement appears in the physical conditions of life, but in the spiritual realm there is a corresponding loss. The loss is clearest, perhaps, in the realm of art. Despite the mighty revolution which has been produced in the external conditions of life, no great poet is now living to celebrate the change; humanity has suddenly become dumb. Gone, too, are the great painters and the great musicians and the great sculptors. The art that still subsists is largely imitative, and where it is not imitative it is usually bizarre. Even the appreciation of the glories of the past is gradually being lost, under the influence of a utilitarian education that concerns itself only with the production of physical well-being. The "Outline of History" of Mr. H. G. Wells, with its contemptuous neglect of all the higher ranges of human life, is a thoroughly modern book.
This unprecedented decline
in literature and art is only one manifestation of a more far-reaching
phenomenon; it is only one instance of that narrowing of the range
of personality which has been going on in the modern world. The
whole development of modern society has tended mightily toward
the limitation of the realm of freedom for the individual man.
The tendency is most clearly seen in socialism; a socialistic
state would mean the reduction to a minimum of the sphere of individual
choice. Labor and recreation, under a socialistic government,
would both be prescribed, and individual liberty would be gone.
But the same tendency exhibits itself today even in those communities
where the name of socialism is most abhorred. When once the majority
has determined that a certain regime is beneficial, that regime
without further hesitation is forced ruthlessly upon the individual
man. It never seems to occur to modern legislatures that
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although "welfare" is good, forced welfare may be bad. In other words, utilitarianism is being carried out to its logical conclusions; in the interests of physical well-being the great principles of liberty are being thrown ruthlessly to the winds.
The result is an unparalleled
impoverishment of human life. Personality can only be developed
in the realm of individual choice. And that realm, in the modern
state, is being slowly but steadily contracted. The tendency is
making itself felt especially in the sphere of education. The
object of education, it is now assumed, is the production of the
greatest happiness for the greatest number. But the greatest happiness
for the greatest number, it is assumed further, can be defined
only by the will of the majority. Idiosyncrasies in education,
therefore, it is said, must be avoided, and the choice of schools
must be taken away from the individual parent and placed in the
hands of the state. The state then exercises its authority through
the instruments that are ready to hand, and at once, therefore,
the child is placed under the control of psychological experts,
themselves without the slightest acquaintance with the higher
realms of human life, who proceed to prevent any such acquaintance
being gained by those who come under their care. Such a result
is being slightly delayed in America by the remnants of Anglo-Saxon
individualism, but the signs of the times are all contrary to
the maintenance of this half-way position; liberty is certainly
held by but a precarious tenure when once its underlying principles
have been lost. For a time it looked as though the utilitarianism
which came into vogue in the middle of the nineteenth century
would be a purely academic matter, without influence upon daily
life. But such appearances have proved to be deceptive. The dominant
tendency, even in a country like America, which
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formerly prided itself on its freedom from bureaucratic regulation of the details of life, is toward a drab utilitarianism in which all higher aspirations are to be lost.
Manifestations of such a tendency can easily be seen. In the state of Nebraska, for example, a law is now in force according to which no instruction in any school in the state, public or private, is to be given through the medium of a language other than English, and no language other than English is to be studied even as a language until the child has passed an examination before the county superintendent of education showing that the eighth grade has been passed.1 In other words, no foreign language, apparently not even Latin or Greek, is to be studied until the child is too old to learn it well. It is in this way that modern collectivism deals with a kind of study which is absolutely essential to all genuine mental advance. The minds of the people of Nebraska, and of any other states where similar laws prevail,2 are to be kept by the power of the state in a permanent condition of arrested development.
It might seem as though with such laws obscurantism had reached its lowest possible depths. But there are depths lower still. In the state of Oregon, on Election Day, 1922, a law was passed by a referendum vote in accordance with which all children in the state are required to attend the public schools. Christian schools and private schools, at least in the all-important lower grades, are thus wiped out of existence. Such laws, which if the present temper of the people prevails will probably
1. See Laws, Resolutions
and Memorials passed by the Legislature of the State of Nebraska
at the Thirty-Seventh Session, 1919, Chapter 249, p. 1019.
2. Compare, for example, Legislative Acts of the General Assembly
of Ohio, Vol. cviii, 1919, pp. 614f.; and Act, and Joint Resolutions
of the General Assembly of Iowa, 1919, Chapter 198, p. 219.
CHRISTIANITY & LIBERALISM,
page 13
soon be extended far beyond the bounds of one state,1 [which will] mean of course the ultimate destruction of all real education. When one considers what the public schools of America in many places already aretheir materialism, their discouragement of any sustained intellectual effort, their encouragement of the dangerous pseudo-scientific fads of experimental psychologyone can only be appalled by the thought of a commonwealth in which there is no escape from such a soul-killing system. But the principle of such laws and their ultimate tendency are far worse than the immediate results.2 A public
1. In Michigan, a bill
similar to the one now passed in Oregon recently received an enormous
vote at a referendum, and an agitation looking at least in the
same general direction is said to be continuing.
2. The evil principle is seen with special clearness in the so-called
"Lusk Laws" in the state of New York. One of these refers
to teachers in the public schools. The other provides that "No
person, firm, corporation or society shall conduct, maintain or
operate any school, institute, class or course of instruction
in any subjects whatever without making application for and being
granted a license from the university of the state of New York
to so conduct, maintain or operate such institute, school, class
or course." It is further provided that "A school, institute,
class or course licensed as provided In this section shall be
subject to visitation by officers and employees of the university
of the state of New York." See Laws of the State of New York,
1921, Vol. III, Chapter 667, pp. 2049-2051. This law is so broadly
worded that it could not possibly be enforced, even by the whole
German army in its pre-war efficiency or by all the espionage
system of the Czar. The exact measure of enforcement is left to
the discretion of officials, and the citizens are placed in constant
danger of that intolerable interference with private life which
real enforcement of the provision about "courses of instruction
in any subjects whatever" would mean. One of the exemptions
is in principle particularly bad. "Nor shall such license
he required:' the law provides. "by schools now or hereafter
established and maintained by a religious denomination or sect
well recognized as such at the time this section takes effect."
One can certainly rejoice that the existing churches are freed,
for the time being, from the menace involved in the law. But in
principle the limitation of the exemption to the existing churches
really runs counter to the fundamental idea Of religious liberty;
for it sets up a distinction between established religions and
those that are not established. There was always tolerance for
established religious bodies, even in the Roman Empire; but religious
liberty consists in equal rights for religious bodies that are
new. The other exemptions do not remove in the slightest the oppressive
character of the law. Bad as the law must be in its Immediate
effects, it is far more alarming in what it reveals about the
temper of the people. A people which tolerates such preposterous
legislation upon the statute books is a people that has wandered
far away from the principles of American liberty. True patriotism
will not conceal the menace, but will rather seek to recall the
citizens to those great principles for which our fathers, in America
and In England, were willing to bleed and die. There are some
encouraging indications that the Lusk Laws may soon be repealed.
If they are repealed, they will still serve as A warning that
only by constant watchfulness can liberty be preserved.
CHRISTIANITY & LIBERALISM,
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school system, in itself, is indeed of enormous benefit to the race. But it is of benefit only if it is kept healthy at every moment by the absolutely free possibility of the competition of private schools. A public school system, if it means the providing of free education for those who desire it, is a noteworthy and beneficent achievement of modern times; but when once it becomes monopolistic it is the most perfect instrument of tyranny which has yet been devised. Freedom of thought in the middle ages was combated by the Inquisition, but the modern method is far more effective. Place the lives of children in their formative years, despite the convictions of their parents, under the intimate control of experts appointed by the state, force them then to attend schools where the higher aspirations of humanity are crushed out, and where the mind is filled with the materialism of the day, and it is difficult to see how even the remnants of liberty can subsist. Such a tyranny, supported as it is by a perverse technique used as the instrument in destroying human souls, is certainly far more dangerous than the crude tyrannies of the past, which despite their weapons of fire and sword permitted thought at least to be free.
The truth is that the
materialistic paternalism of the present day, if allowed to go
on unchecked, will rapidly
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make of America one huge "Main Street," where spiritual adventure will be discouraged and democracy will be regarded as consisting in the reduction of all mankind to the proportions of the narrowest and least gifted of the citizens. God grant that there may come a reaction, and that the great principles of Anglo-Saxon liberty may be rediscovered before it is too late! But whatever solution be found for the educational and social problems of our own country, a lamentable condition must be detected in the world at large. It cannot be denied that great men are few or non-existent, and that there has been a general contracting of the area of personal life. Material betterment has gone hand in hand with spiritual decline.
Such a condition of the world ought to cause the choice between modernism and traditionalism, liberalism and conservatism, to be approached without any of the prejudice which is too often displayed. In view of the lamentable defects of modern life, a type of religion certainly should not be commended simply because it is modern or condemned simply because it is old. On the contrary, the condition of mankind is such that one may well ask what it is that made the men of past generations so great and the men of the present generation so small. In the midst of all the material achievements of modern life, one may well ask the question whether in gaining the whole world we have not lost our own soul. Are we forever condemned to live the sordid life of utilitarianism? Or is there some lost secret which if rediscovered will restore to mankind something of the glories of the past?
Such a secret the writer
of this little book would discover in the Christian religion.
But the Christian religion which is meant is certainly not the
religion of the modern liberal Church, but a message of divine
grace, almost forgotten
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now, as it was in the middle ages, but destined to burst forth once more in God's good time, in a new Reformation, and bring light and freedom to mankind. What that message is can be made clear, as is the case with all definition, only by way of exclusion, by way of contrast. In setting forth the current liberalism, now almost dominant in the Church, over against Christianity, we are animated, therefore, by no merely negative or polemic purpose; on the contrary, by showing what Christianity is not we hope to be able to show what Christianity is, in order that men may be led to turn from the weak and beggarly elements and have recourse again to the grace of God.
PROCEED to Chapter Two: Doctrine
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