The Australian Catholic Truth Society 1959 (No, 1324)
THE BEGINNING
and
END OF MAN
By Mgr. Ronald Knox
Nihil Obstat: PERCY JONES, Censor Diocesan. 7 -7 -1959.
Imprimatur: + DANIEL MANNIX, Archiepiscopus Melbournensis.
I
MAN'S PLACE IN CREATION
The Theory of Evolution has its own evolution through more than a
century of scientific controversy; its own variations, now elicited by
the need of adaptation to a changing environment in philosophical
thought, in religious and even political history, now consisting of
imperceptible modifications immanent in the process; and through it all
runs, like a principle of natural selection, the iron law of inductive
experiment, testing and winnowing the theories of yesterday, and
relegating what it has discarded to the fossil-museum of the past. The
whole theory is only a theory still. But so far as concerns the general
issue between the rival views of creative evolution and of special
creation, of types fixed for all time and types merging into fresh
types, it is enough to say that, whatever corroboration it may receive,
the evolution-theory neither detracts in any way from the sense of
grandeur with which God's creative work must affect all thoughtful
minds, nor promises to give any answer to the age-long "Why" that
underlies all our modern cries of "How".
But when we come to the position of Man in this baffling system of
Creation, should we not expect that biological science, in proportion
as its guesses arrive nearer at the truth of things, would illustrate
in fresh lights the profound distinction there is between Man and
beast, the inherent fitness of Man to lord it over the Universe that
has been made, it would seem, for his pleasure? We all know that
biological science does nothing of the sort. On the contrary, it has
given us an undignified race of animals, not indeed as our ancestors -
that is a misstatement - but as a sort of poor relations with a common
ancestry in the background.
And, while it admits that Man is the nobler, because from the
biological point of view the more complicated, type, and that the
specific differences between the lowest type of humanity and the
highest beast are significantly large, it is not prepared on that
account to spare our feelings. There may have been a series of animal
types representing a slow gradation between ape and man, which have
perished, according to the Darwinian law, only because their mixed
characteristics did not qualify them to survive - types, you may
suppose, that had just not enough tail to clamber up a tree when
attacked, just not enough brain to dig themselves in behind it. Man's
title to live would thus, after all, be little better than an accident.
Or, on the Lamarckian view, this noble and complex structure, the human
body, may have only been called into existence, through generations of
struggle, by an automatic response to the exigencies of our
environment. And, whatever more modern reconciliation or rehandling of
these views be the dominant hypothesis, it is at least clear that on
the evolution theory Man's physical structure is not the sudden miracle
of intrusion upon Nature that our ancestors have deemed it; the human
race has made good only on the same terms as the other dominating
species, and by weapons analogous to theirs; and, if Man has become
Lord of Creation, it would seem that he has won his position as the
optimists say Britain won her Empire - only in a fit of
absent-mindedness. We cannot even say that it was the human intellect,
as such, which secured the triumph. Rather, it may have been an
instinctive movement which called forth the first complications of our
psychology, even the first elements of our civilization - a movement as
instinctive as that which turned the beaver into an architect and the
hunted stag into a strategist.
If it can be proved, so far as such matters are capable of proof, that
Man's early development is thus parallel with that of the brute beasts,
is there anything left to us in virtue of which we can call Man the
master - not merely the highest product, not merely de facto the tyrant, but by
God-given right the true Lord and Master of Creation?
There is. Run "instinct" for all it is worth; show how Man's delicate
sensibility in a thousand directions is but the hyper-trophy of such
instinct; collect whatever instances you will of inherited tendencies,
of herd-psychology, and the rest of it - you will come up against a
specific difference between man and brute which eludes all materialist
explanation: I mean the reflective reason. When your attention, instead
of being directed towards some object outside yourself is directed
towards yourself as thinking or towards your own thinking process, that
is the work of the intellect, that is Man's special prerogative. When
Adam awoke in the garden, we dare not guess what monstrous forms of
animal life, what wealth of vegetation our world has forgotten, his eye
may have lighted upon. But we do know what was his strangest adventure,
because it was an adventure he shared with none of his fellow-tenants
in Paradise. His strangest adventure was when he met himself.
Here at least, wherever else you trace continuity, discontinuity
begins. The difference between dead matter and living, the difference
between unconscious life and life that is sensitive, are not more
absolute than the difference between the living thing that can feel and
the living thing that can reflect upon its feelings. The phenomenon of
the intellect, considered in itself, is not subject to any material
laws or susceptible of any material explanation. As a mere matter of
psychological analysis this phenomenon, whatever we make of it, is an
intrusion upon the brute creation, a sudden epiphany of the immaterial
world within the material horizon. Man is the object of his own
thought, and in the direction of that act he borrows nothing whatever
from his material surroundings. There you have the casket in which the
secret of Man's identity is locked up, beyond the reach of all
biological speculation.
And it is because the impressions Man receives through his senses are
not simply isolated impressions that die and pass, are not simply
stored up by a pigeon-hole system of unconscious association, but
related and digested in his thought by the work of the independent,
organizing intellect, that Man is master of Creation still. He alone is
the spectator of all time; him alone the music of the spheres has for
audience. The buffets of experience from without are no longer mere
chisel-blows that blindly fashion the evolution of the type; they are
transmuted into terms of spiritual experience, and become part of the
individual history, with its loves and hates, its hopes and despairs,
its outlook upon eternity. The same intellectual quality which is
philosophic proof that man's spirit is immaterial, is at the same time
the index of man's place in the scale of being. He alone, of things
visible, is related to the Universe as self-conscious subject to
object; but for him, the panorama of Creation would, for its own
tenants, be like a cinema played at St. Dunstan's Home for the Blind.
Is Man a development of the beast? Why, certainly. Did you not know
that you were a brute once? That when your bodily frame first came into
existence, you had no right to be thought higher in the scale of
creation, more precious in the sight of God, than the unborn young of
an animal ? We did not need Weismann to tell us that one acquired
characteristic cannot be inherited, the characteristic of being a
rational creature. We knew that God first formed Man of the slime of
the earth - of one kindred with the beasts that perish - and only
afterwards, only when God breathed into his face the breath of life,
did he become a living soul. And if it should prove that our bodies,
this slime we were formed from, is part of a coherent system of gradual
biological evolution, we are still, as intellectual creatures, the enfant terrible of Natural History,
a cuckoo's egg in the nest of bewildered Creation.
Man is the pivotal creature; the spiritual and the material have their liaison in him. No discovery of
science can abase Man's dignity, so long as his mind rests in that
truth, and his will in that high ambition.
II
THE WILL
It must be obvious to anybody that a man's actions are in great part
determined for him by conditions for which he is not then and there to
blame; sometimes, for which he is not to blame at all. Suppose a man
who is born of an unhealthy stock, so that he has a morbid strain in
his very blood; suppose him brought up in a home and among companions
whose influence over him is all evil; suppose that by a long course of
vicious living he has fallen into fixed habits of self-indulgence. When
that man tosses off, with already trembling fingers, the last glass of
drink that nerves him to go out and commit a murder, can we really call
his action free? Does it really differ in kind from the instinctive
fury with which the madman turns against his captors, or the lion fails
upon its prey ?
The answer to that is a blinding, over-powering conviction of the human
conscience. We believe the actions of the lower animals to be
determined for them, wholly and completely, by instinct and by training
and by circumstance, even when they seem most faithfully to parody the
deliberate decisions of Man.
I do not say that whenever a man acts freely he is conscious at the
moment of free action. On the contrary, it generally feels at the
moment as if the motive which induces us to act as we do, rightly or
wrongly, were a tyrannous influence from which we cannot escape. But
when the action is complete, whether it is our own or that of another,
we do get the sense that, if the agent had wished, he could have acted
differently - "I oughtn't to have said that," "He had no right to
behave as he did."
That means that the action was not determined but free, and we testify
to our belief in the responsibility of the human agent whenever we
think of reward, or of punishment. It is fatal to be misled into
explaining away the concepts you find in your experience. "After all,"
people say, "what do we mean by a reward ? Isn't it simply a bribe to
make people do the same again, just what we do when we give a dog a
biscuit to make it do a trick? And a punishment," they say, "isn't it
simply a threat to prevent people doing the same thing again. Just as
when we nail a fresh moleskin on a barn door, to teach the other moles
not to come rooting about our property?" That isn't true. We bribe
animals, we threaten animals, but it is only men that we punish, and
only men that we reward.
I am a schoolmaster. Supposing there are three boys in my form who
don't know their lesson. One of them says he really worked his hardest,
but couldn't make head nor tail of it; and I'm inclined to believe him.
The second forgot, simply forgot, that any lesson had been set. The
third, it is clear, has simply been slacking. Well, it may be that in
the interests of discipline I make them all write out the English
lesson three times. But in the case of the first I am simply doing it
for his education, so as to impress on his memory what he has failed to
impress on it for himself; in the case of the second, I am simply
correcting him; I don't blame him for his forgetfulness, but I'm going
to give him a lesson which will make him less forgetful in future. It
is with the third, and only with the third - the boy who could have
done better than he did - that my action can be properly described as
punishment.
But of course your modern psychologist will think that all this is a
very superficial analysis. "Are you quite sure," he says, "that you've
diagnosed your feelings rightly? In the last few years we've come to
know much more about the curious little kinks and twists which are to
be found in the make-up even of a sane, ordinary mind. Sometimes we can
explain these things: a shock, for example, experienced in boyhood, may
make a man nervous about fire or afraid of the dark or something of
that kind; the impression left by the experience has lingered on in his
sub-consciousness long after, it may be, the actual memory of the
incident has passed from him. Since our minds are so curiously
constructed, may it not be that the conscience you tell us of is, after
all, one of these illusions ? That the scoldings and the whackings and
the standings in the corner which have been inflicted on us when we
were young have produced in us the illusion that we are responsible for
our faults, when really our actions were all determined by heredity, by
environment, by instinctive movements ? After all, your priests (they
tell us) come across plenty of scrupulous people who think some action
of theirs was voluntary when in reality it's quite plain that it
wasn't. If we can make such mistakes once, why not always? If we are
sometimes wrong in thinking that we acted freely, isn't it possible
that we are always wrong?"
The answer to that is, No.
The human mind cannot simply invent; cannot think without having the
material for its thought supplied to it by experience. And if the
doctrine of determinism is true, and there has been no such thing in
all human history as a free act, then the very idea of free action is
one the human mind could not have conceived for itself. I quite admit
that, knowing in your experience what it is to sin, you may sometimes
through scrupulousness give a wrong label to this or that action, and
suppose it to be a sin when it was really only a mistake. But you
couldn't even wrongly suppose it to be a sin if there weren't such an
experience as sin, or if that experience had not been felt by the human
race. I can mistake Mrs. Brown, whom I know, for Mrs. Smith, whom I
know, but I can't mistake her for Mrs. Jones, whom I don't know - even
a wrong judgement must somewhere have a basis in reality. If you break
your hostess's best sugar-basin by some quite unavoidable accident, you
have a feeling at the time that is very much like the remorse you feel
after committing a guilty action. That's a mistake. But you couldn't mistake your feeling for remorse
unless you had learned, somehow, to attach a meaning to the word
"remorse."
I don't mean to say that, when you have thus vindicated the freedom of
the will, the problem of free will is an easy one, even in psychology.
We say, "What motive induced you to be so cruel?" - do we then imply
that our motives, our estimates as to the good and the harm, apparent
or real, that will result from our action, are tyrants that force us
into doing what we do? Why, then, we are determinists once more:
motives have swayed our action from first to last, and there is no room
left to put anything of ourselves into it. Or do we mean that, having
weighed up the motives for and against the suggested action, we then
proceed to choose our course quite independently of them - that our
actual choice is determined
by nothing whatsoever? Why, then, the freedom of our actions is
meaningless; it is at the last moment a mere whim, a mere caprice, that
is the explanation of our action. Neither of those two positions will
do. Just as there is no explaining of the way in which subject and
object interact upon one another in our knowledge, so there is no
explaining of the way in which our will and the motives which inspire
it interact upon one another when we choose between two courses of
action. It is a mystery, and we must bow to it.
But this we can say, that any philosophical theory which tries to
persuade us that what heredity, and environment, and education, and
habit have made of us, that
we are and always will be; that there is no room left for the free
action of the human soul, no chance of retrieving the past and making
good once more; that, consequently, men cannot, just as animals cannot,
be in the true sense rewarded or punished for their actions, but only
bribed into repeating their good actions, or deterred from repeating
their bad actions - such a philosophical theory, I say, is false to the
whole of our moral experience, and inconsistent with the first
principles of Christianity. It may be easy enough to accommodate it to
the dark, fatalistic religions of the East, or to Western imitations of
them; but the religion which Jesus Christ founded appeals to Man as a
free agent, responsible for the use he makes of his opportunities and
for the choice of his eternal destiny. Even the lost souls in hell have
this dignity, that they are where they are of their own choice.
III
THE FALL
The Book of Genesis gives us a picture of Man at his first beginnings
as a prince exiled from his heritage; Science, dealing with the same
period, gives us a picture of Man as a baby, first groping his way,
then beginning to find himself, then growing and developing by gradual
upward stages into the self-appointed dictator of a world that has
bowed to his cunning. Let us understand that the issue here is not
concerned with a mere question of historical fact. We do not expect
science to deal with questions of historical fact. When the biologists
started out to give us an account of our origins, we did not expect
them to discover for us the remains of rudimentary legs in the serpent.
When we sent the archaeologists exploring, we did not expect them to
return in triumph with a fossil apple, bearing unmistakable marks of a
bite on each side.
If there were any contemporary records by which to assess the value of
the story of Genesis, it would be to the historian, not to the
sciences, that we should look for guidance. Nor are we likely to
quarrel with the man of science if he discovers, or if he conjectures,
that the earliest human creatures of whom he is able to find any traces
were degraded bushmen instead of half-heroic beings. It was Rousseau
who believed in the "noble savage", the unspoilt child of nature from
whom our civilization has degenerated. Christianity did not expect Man,
after the Fall, to be such a character as that. Whatever gifts Adam
possessed in the time of his innocence that were superior to yours and
mine, were forfeited, absolutely and finally, by the Fall; and it is no
news to us that our civilization, where it is true to itself, has left
Cain and Lamech behind.
In fact, our position is not that of people who suppose that the story
of our race involves an early degeneration from a high to a low
standard of morals or of culture. The failure of Christian doctrine to
fall into line with the theories of the evolutionist lies deeper than
that. This is where the quarrel lies. If the story of the Fall is true,
then the human conscience - and since we are all sinners, the human
consciousness of sin - must be present in Man from his very first
beginnings. However much our moral standards may have changed in their
particular application - as, for instance, in the setting of a higher
value on human life - Man has always had the power to realize that he
is sinning when he sins, and the knowledge that such conduct is
contrary to the law of his Creator and the terms of his creation. But
if human history is to be brought into line with the whole history of
animal life on our planet, then we should expect that the knowledge of
God and the consciousness of sin developed gradually in Man's soul,
just as certain capacities - the capacity, for instance, to stand
upright on two legs - would be supposed to have developed gradually in
his body. And, further, those keener moral perceptions ought somehow to
have been developed by him in the course of his struggle for existence,
in answer to the needs of his surroundings, or as the title by which
the race continues to persist in a world where the weakest goes to the
wall.
Now, supposing that Divine revelation had told us nothing at all about
the dawn of human experience, and that we were left entirely to the
guesses of the biologist for information about our earliest past, what
sort of theory should we construct for ourselves ?
Something, I suppose, like this - that Man when he first won his right
to survive knew no restriction upon his actions except such as mere
instinct provided: he had no theory of controlling his desires, no
sense of cruelty or of injustice; that he lived as beasts live, the
blameless child of unrestrained instinct. Gradually he found that his
opportunities for gratifying his desires had outrun the limit within
which he might safely indulge them. Disease followed, or if not
disease, at least an enervated constitution; or mere worldly caution
taught him the first elements of orderly conduct:
"Philosophers deduce you chastity
Or shame, from just the fact that at the first
Whoso embrace a woman in the field
Threw club down, and forewent his brains beside,
So, stood a ready victim in the reach
Of any brother savage, club in hand;
Hence, saw the use of going out of sight
In wood or cave to prosecute his loves."
-so Bishop Blougram read in his French book. Further, when instinct or
common sense warned our forefathers that it was more conductive to the
general happiness if they lived in tribes and in village settlements
than if they lived isolated on the one-man-one-cave principle, it began
to be seen that life in a community involved some give-and-take in
matters of gentleness and of honesty. A rude compact that if you
stopped stealing your neighbour's eggs he would stop clubbing you over
the head would have in it the germs of what we call law and order. And
gradually, as these advantages came to be more clearly seen, and even
drawn up in some code of law: gradually, as the younger generation
became accustomed to the idea of self-control and of observing your
neighbour's rights - when all is said and done, you can do a great deal
by beating a boy - there would grow up in some dim region of the human
consciousness the sense that what medicine discouraged and what law
forbade was not only insanitary, not only illegal, but positively wrong.
That is a very pretty picture: the chief disadvantages attaching to it
are that it isn't true, it
doesn't explain what it set out to explain, and it is quite out of
harmony with the whole of Christian morals.
It isn't true - that is to
say, there is not a shred of evidence for it; and our friends, the
anthropologists, who make it their business to throw what light they
can upon the principles of primitive human society, have lately given
up this attempt to explain away morals as taking their origin from mere
worldly convenience. They will tell you on the contrary that some sort
of religion or "magic" comes earlier in human society than the making
of laws for purposes of practical convenience. The social contract is
out of date.
And it doesn't explain what it set out to explain. The sense of
distinction between good and evil, between right and wrong, is
something totally different from the sense that such and such a thing
is harmful, or that such and such a thing is contrary to the welfare of
the community. Once again, I quite agree that if you have got the idea
of right and wrong in your head, it is possible to have a false
conscience, to mistake what is really indifferent for something wrong,
and vice versa. But if you
don't start with some general idea of right and wrong in your head it
is impossible to see how it is ever going to get there. There may be
precious little difference between the degraded savage who's got very
little conscience and the beast that has got none at all. But the
difference, such as it is, is definite and absolute.
And it's quite out of harmony with the whole of Christian morals. For
it means that virtue - the observance of the distinction between right
and wrong - is simply one of the weapons which have enabled the human
race to survive: justice is simply a means to prevent the human race
exterminating itself by quarrels, continence simply an expedient to
save it from physical degeneration. If that were all virtue is, then we
should have to say that the death of Our Lord on Calvary had taken that
code of morals and written across it in letters of blood, "Cancelled." The law of biology is
that he who loves his life shall lose it. It is the deliberate doctrine
of our Lord and Master that there is no survival of the fittest in the
heavenly economy: that the unfittest to survive in this world is the
fittest to survive through all eternity with God. There is no room for
arguing over it: if natural morality is simply a sort of protective
shell which the human race has formed round itself for its own
preservation, then Christian morality, the morality of the Sermon on
the Mount, is a diseased and pernicious growth, and ought to be cut
away.
But after all, why should we expect the history of human morals to
follow the lines laid down for it by the fancy of a few dogmatic
evolutionists ? We have seen that the human intellect is not and cannot
be an incident in the course of natural evolution, but is a sudden
intrusion upon the natural order of things. We have seen that mankind
has again wandered aside from its proper evolutionary orbit by being
found in possession of a will that is free to choose and responsible
for its choice. If this be so, surely it is clear that the history of
the human conscience will be altogether outside the course of ordinary
biological happenings: that the human conscience, too, is not a gradual
growth in us, but a sudden intrusion, part of a different order of
Creation. True, we couldn't know that Man was created innocent and has
fallen from his innocence. Philosophy wouldn't determine the point for
us, though our whole experience of the moral struggle in ourselves, the
conflict between the law of sin in our members and the law of grace, is
such as befits the condition of beings that have fallen from what they
once were. But philosophy does say to biological science, "Stand aside
here." And while it stands aside, Divine Revelation steps in and shows
us what we once were - were for an infinitesimal moment of history and
shall never be again. God made Man right, and he has entangled himself
in an infinity of questions. What wonder that Man is a come-by-chance
in the system of Creation, if the very earliest incident in his career
is indeed the story of an arrested tendency, a Divine purpose thwarted?
IV
SIN
Sin is voluntary violation of the law of God. What do we understand by
a law? Law, says St. Thomas, is a certain ordinance of reason for the
common good, promulgated by one who has charge of the commonwealth.
That is the old and the literal sense of the word "law"; and it's easy
to transfer that definition of ordinary human laws so as to apply to
the eternal law of God. But remember, since we all took to talking
science, law has another meaning for us as well. Commonly, we
understand law to involve a command imposed on somebody by somebody
else; but in matters of science we use it as meaning simply a statement
- a statement of some principle which is always operative and which
infallibly produces, in our experience, uniform results - Newton's laws
of physics, Grimm's law in philology, Gresham's law in political
economy, and so forth. A law, in this sense, is not what tells you to
do something, but simply what assures you that something will happen.
It does not need to be asserted by rewards and penalties; automatically
it asserts itself.
Now, in speaking of human morals, it's very easy to get mixed up
between these two senses of the word "law." If I say, for example, that
the sinner is false to the law of his being, what do I mean? Do I mean
that he is disobeying a law, in the sense of a command, imposed upon
him by the author of his being? Or do I merely mean that, in behaving
as he does, he is neglecting the scientific principles which will make
for his health and happiness, and calling into play the scientific
principles which will involve him in unhappiness, or in disease ?
To us Christians, law is of two kinds, the natural and the positive. To
us the laws of Nature, in so far as they affect human conduct at all,
are part of the law of God, and have His sanction behind them. If the
effect of drinking whisky all day long is to turn a man into a
helpless, degenerate, degraded being, that is enough for us as proof
that his excesses, since they entail such a consequence, are contrary
to God's will. We do not need any express command given us by an angel
to warn us against imitating such an example. The scientific "law" that
excessive drinking has such and such effects on the system is evidence
of a Divine law which forbids drunkenness. But we have also to reckon
with the positive law of God - commands issued to us in the pages of
Holy Scripture, or, in matters of detail, by the regulations of the
Church. We know, for example, that it is wrong to receive Communion
when not fasting. But Nature never told us that. The scalpel and the
microscope could never have brought to our notice such an obligation as
that. Yet, because we believe that God's natural law and his positive
law proceed from the same source - that is, from His infinite wisdom -
we hold ourselves bound as much by the one as by the other.
For the malice of sin consists precisely in the aversion of the soul
from God. You may commit a sin which primarily regards yourself; as,
for example, if you ruin your health by a career of intemperance, or
take your own life in a fit of despair. You may commit a sin which
primarily regards your fellow-men; by robbing them, by defrauding them,
by oppressing the widow and the stranger. Or you may commit a sin which
concerns God alone, by blaspheming, for example, His holy Name or His
Blessed Mother's. But in the first and second cases, just as much as in
the third, the malice of your sin consists in your aversion from God -
"To You only have I sinned." In the first case, you have neglected the
plain warnings of experience, you have defied nature, run counter to
the principles of your constitution; but that is not the point, the point is that you have broken the
law of God. In the second case, you have brought undeserved misery on
others, you have dissolved, as far as in you lay, the bonds of justice
and of equity which hold human society together, you have forfeited
your right to enjoy the protection of human laws; but that is not the
point, the point is that you have broken the law of God. Turn which way
you will, there is but one voice of command which is peremptory, which
admits of no excuses. And whether that voice breathes from the happy
soil of Paradise, or comes down in thunder from Sinai, or goes forth to
Christendom from the City of the Seven Hills, it is the same voice, the
voice of God.
I don't think you will be disposed to disagree with me if I say that
modern public opinion - and by that I mean the atmosphere of our time
in political, in literary, above all in journalistic circles - does not
come anywhere near that point of view. It does not deny that point of
view; I doubt if it has ever considered it seriously enough to give it
a denial, but it does proceed on the silent assumption that sin is, in
the first instance, not sin against God, but sin against the law of
your own nature or against your fellow-men. It is a threadbare subject,
but it seems inevitable to refer for an illustration to that set of
problems which is being so much aired nowadays, I mean the problems of
sex and of married life. In the ordinary divorce-court case, modern
opinion will be prepared to agree that the co-respondent sinned: since
he infringed another man's rights: it will, perhaps, be prepared to
agree that the respondent sinned if she left her children as well as
her husband - that was unnatural, they say, in a mother; that was sin.
But if the petitioner secures a divorce and goes through the form of a
second marriage in flat defiance of the positive law of God - "Oh, I
don't know, why shouldn't he? You see, he was not to blame; you can
hardly expect a contract to be kept so one-sidedly."
That is the root of all the trouble: God's law comes in only as an
afterthought, and when God's law has no considerations of public
interest or of natural decency to reinforce it, God's law is forgotten.
Let a man drink himself into delirium tremens, and we shall all agree
he is a bad man. Let a man commit murder, and we shall all admit he is
a bad citizen. and the priests whose undue influence has been
criticized for a century past will suddenly be asked why they didn't
stop him. But if a man cares, without doing himself or others an
injury, to indulge himself as he pleases, the doctor shrugs his
shoulders, and the politician strokes his chin, and the journalist
winks and passes by.
In all that, modern opinion is suffering from a threefold
forgetfulness. And the three things it forgets are - Man's place in
creation, Man's free will, Man's fall.
It forgets (I will not say it denies) that however much our bodies are
part of the natural order around us, our souls are, from the very
beginning of our history, and in the life of every individual human
being a special creation, the breaking in of another world upon ours:
that, consequently, Man is in a special position as a rational
creature, and must not expect to have his sailing orders given him by
mere instinct or by mere habit, as the dumb brutes do: being rational,
he is capable of receiving, is privileged to receive, is responsible
for receiving attentively, a positive law enjoined on him by the
expressed will of a personal Creator. God spoke to Moses as a man
speaks face to face with his friend - that is the charter of humanity.
They forget, in the second place (for I will not say that they deny)
that Man is a free agent. Their heads are so buzzing with statistics
about how men in general will behave on an average in a given set of
circumstances as to be unable to realize that this individual man is
here and now about to make himself responsible for an act freely chosen
by his own will. In God's eyes, we are so many men; in the
statistician's eyes, we are so many guinea-pigs: that's half the
trouble of all our modern talk about morals.
Our public opinion forgets, in the third place, that Man is a fallen
creature. When the beast obeys the instincts that prompt it, however
cruel, however rapacious, however incontinent its habits may seem to
us, we know that it is only obeying the law of its own nature. But if
it be true, as Christian theology asserts, that Man as he is now is not
Man as he was meant to be at the time of his Creation, then it is
obvious that he cannot plead, in defence of the morality of his
actions, the fact that he behaved as it seemed natural to him to
behave. For who shall tell us whether the instinct which prompted him
was part of the healthy instinct of the human animal, or part of the
perverted instinct which belongs to a soul Satan has tempted from its
first innocency? Only God's law can tell us that; often enough, only
God's positive law can tell us that.
V
THE END OF MAN
You will remember, perhaps, the little girl in Punch who asks,
"Mummy, what's that?"
"That, dear, is a cow," and the little girl says,
"Why?"
- a thoroughly philosophical question, and Aristotle might have
been proud of it. Our minds cannot rest content with asking How? We
must go on and ask Why? Suppose I were travelling and, on landing in
some strange country, saw a man working his arms this way and that
above his head; and suppose I ask a bystander, Why does he do that?
"Oh, well," says the bystander, "the muscle of the arm is a most
interesting anatomical affair, and illustrates very well the principles
of leverage. Suppose, for example . . .
"No, no," I interrupt, "I didn't ask how
he did it, I wanted to know why."
"The nerves," replies the bystander, "form a most fascinating subject
of discussion; their office is to telegraph, as it were, to all the
limbs the orders of the organizing brain. You would hardly believe-" .
. .
But by this time I have gone off in despair: I have been asking
questions in teleology from a scientist.
Science doesn't know why, and has no right to care. But all this
business of evolution has, since it passed into the hands of the
philosophers, inspired them with the hope of finding out more about the
meaning of the world, and the meaning of human existence in particular.
For if we are assured that Nature presents to our view not a fixed set
of types, but a set of types that differs from one age to another; and
if these types do not merely change backwards and forwards, but move
onwards with a kind of progress, so that we can say of the elephant
that it is not merely different from the mammoth but better suited than
the mammoth to survive in this queue that struggles for existence, our
minds cannot but form the idea of evolution from the lower to the
higher, evolution which is progress, not merely process. I am afraid
that so far as the little girl's question is concerned, we don't know,
and never shall know in this world, why the thing should be a cow. We
feel sure that behind all the marvellous order in which creation
develops there is somewhere, a purpose; but what it is we can't even
guess. Except in one single department; there we not only can but must
guess: so long as we are men and not vegetables we cannot stop guessing
about it.
As a great Catholic poet has told us, "the proper study of mankind is
man"; and when the question is raised, "Why is Man here; why has he
developed as he has developed; what is he developing and what ought he
to be developing into?" then the guessing competition does become fast
and furious, and we aren't going to be kept out of it. For man desires
knowledge not merely for the sake of knowledge; he desires to know how
to shape his life; his right or his wrong development is an issue which
is practical to him, for it is his business to make or to mar the
decision of it.
If you take it for granted, as most modern thinkers do, that man has
evolved, is evolving, and has got to evolve, not merely from something
into something else, but from something less perfect into something
more perfect, then there are three ways of going about your
investigation.
You may go to biological science, and ask how and by what weapons man
developed (if he did develop) from the brute. Or you may go to history,
and try (it's a very thorny process, but you can try) to read
impartially in that record the story of man's development in the last
(shall we say?) three thousand years, with a few guesses about a period
still further back; and you may then take it for granted that the way
man has gone is the way he ought to be going, and the sooner he gets on
with it the better. Or (and this is far the commonest method of the
three) you may take your own pet theory about what man ought to be
like, and you may sit down and wrestle with history until you succeed
in convincing yourself that man has, all the time, been becoming more
and more like that, whatever facts seem to point to the contrary - more
moral, or more socialistic, or more vegetarian, or whatever you will.
And then you publish that in serial form on all the railway bookstalls
and label it "History."
And what are the results of those three processes?
If you stick to the first method, and try to prove that the development
of the human races in a strict line with the principles which govern,
and the instincts which inspire, the struggle for existence in the
brute creation, the upshot of your meditations will certainly not be
encouraging to morality. You may, if you will, think of the ideal man
as a perfect physical type, strong, patient, highly endowed with all
the pagan virtues - and yet, even so, you are false to biological
theory: for cunning, not brute strength, is Man's weapon; and your
ideal man, if you think of man as an individual, will be the crafty,
unscrupulous, selfish, cringing, bullying creature that was long ago
exposed, in all his nakedness, in the first book of Plato's Republic
Or, if you prefer to think of man as essentially gregarious, hunting
not alone but by the pack, you must still admit that the strongest
nation, by however foul means it may have gained its ascendancy over
the rest of mankind, is the dominant and therefore the highest type:
and if anyone is proposing to revive that doctrine after all Europe has
bled for four years in disproof of it, he is welcome to his opinion,
but he is not likely to make converts. It is a silly mistake to talk as
if, the doctrine of the Fall once discarded, it would be easy to bring
human progress into line with biological evolution. As Huxley pointed
out long ago, you cannot bring human progress into line with strict
biological evolution unless you are prepared to throw over moral
standards and moral judgements altogether.
If, on the other hand, you take human history as far as we can trace
its records, and try to read it as an impartial document, you will find
development in it, I admit, process in it, I admit; but whether it be
in any true sense progress I see no ground for determining. You can say
with some certainty that the spread of civilization has made the human
animal into a more complicated being, with his sensibility increased in
a thousand ways (music and the arts alone will bear witness to that)
and his nerve fibre correspondingly less tough; a higher price set upon
human life, a more resolute determination to eliminate physical pain;
less importance attached to the group, more to the individual; and
there is, of course, much more to be said. But whether we approve or
disapprove of such symptoms depends entirely on our own ethical
standards, and those ethical standards we do not read in the record,
but bring them with us, ready formed, to the discussion. Civilization
has spread; so do the mumps. A civilized man is more highly developed
than a savage; so is pneumonia more highly developed than a cold on the
chest. I am not decrying civilization; I am merely saying that so far
as we admire it, we admire it not simply because it has developed on
lines which seem to us good ones - we are using a standard of our own
to judge it by.
But the moment you allow people to read history in the light of their
own prejudices, you must despair of finding any agreement of opinion as
to what is higher and what is lower in the scale of development. One
believes that our international politics are tending towards
world-peace and world-brotherhood; another sees a progressive and a
salutary growth of the sense of separate nationality going on all
around us. One holds that our psychic gifts are the latest flower of
our civilization, and through them lies the gateway to all further
human advancement; another (one of the greatest of contemporary Oxford
philosophers) will tell you that these psychic gifts are a mere
survival of the beast in us, and that the ordinary horse or dog is far
more sensitive to uncanny spiritualistic impressions than is the
ordinary man. And as to the very widespread neglect of organized
religion in our day, you will find some writers who regard it as merely
the backwash of an intellectual movement, others who hail it as the
beginning of a purer, more spiritual conception of religion; others,
again, who take it as evidence that the whole Christian superstition is
tottering to its downfall. It's odd, isn't it, that we all agree in
proclaiming that man evolves, yet no two of us can agree how, or since
when, or into what?
It's odd, and it's worse than odd, it's tragic. For the world is full
of young men who go about wanting to evolve as they ought to evolve
(though why they shouldn't let the world evolve without them, if they
think it gets better every day, is sometimes a puzzle to me) and to
them it is a life-and-death question, "Where is all this progress of
the human species leading to?" And when, wearied of debate, and baffled
by a thousand unanswered questions, they cease to worry about the
remote future, and determine to let civilization go its own way and
save itself or damn itself as it pleases, what is left to them?
There is left to them one movement still which remains untried, a
movement so purposeful that it easily mistaken for a conspiracy, yet so
sure of itself that it needs no programme and no platform, begs no
support from the presumed approval of a shadowy posterity.
Such is the Catholic Church, which has no theories as to whether
mankind is moving, and if so in what direction; nor, if it were assured
that there were any such tendency, would swerve aside for one moment
from its appointed path. For the message which the Church of God
preserves is a message not to the human race in the aggregate, but to
each solitary, individual soul. It's hero, God's hero, the character in
the world's drama which holds the Angels breathless with expectation,
is not mankind but Man - this man or that man, you and I, with out
hopes and ambitions, our difficulties and strivings, our falls and
recoveries.
"Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is all man"; the human
race exists to make heaven populous, and that end has to be achieved by
us singly, in the dreadful loneliness of our dual destiny. Whether
Christendom is marching forward to fresh world-conquests, or whether
the Son of Man, when He comes, is to find but little faith on the
earth, the end of Man will be achieved, is daily being achieved,
according to the plan of his creation. The end of Man is realized
whenever the gates of heaven open once more, and one more pardoned soul
struggles to the feet of its Creator.
* * * * *