A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE DEVIL
by Charles Bradlaugh
written 1861, revised 1881, 1890.
To have written under this head in the reign of James Rex, of
pious memory, would have, probably, procured for me, without even
the perusal of my pamphlet, the reputation of Dr. Faustus, and a
too intimate acquaintance with some of the pleasant plans of
torturing to death practiced by the clever witch-finders of that
day. I profess, however, no knowledge of the black art, and am
entirely unskilled in "diablerie", and feel quite convinced that
the few words I shall say about his Satanic Majesty will not be
cause of any unholy compacts in which bodies or souls are signed
away in ink suspiciously red.
In many countries, dealing with the Devil has been a perilous
experiment. In 1790, an unfortunate named Andre Dubuisson was
confined in the Bastile, charged with raising the Devil. To
prevent even the slightest apprehension on the part of my reader
that I have any desire or intent toward placing him unpleasantly
near a black-visaged, sulphureous-constitutioned individual,
horned like an old goat, with satyr-like legs, a tail of
unpleasant length, and a disposition to buy a body from any
unfortunate wight ready to dispose of it, I have only to assert
my intention of treating the subject entirely from a biblical
point of view. Doubtless I ought to do this; the Christian Devil
is a bible institution. I say, advisedly, the Christian Devil,
because other religions have boasted their Devil, and it is well
to prevent confusion. But I frankly admit that none of these
religions have the honor of a Devil so devilish as our own.
Indeed our Devil ought to be the best: it costs the most. No
other religion besides our own can boast the array of Popes,
Bishops, Conferences, Rectors, Incumbents, and paid preachers of
various titles. And all these to preach against the Devil!
It is necessary, before entering upon my subject, that I should
confess my little ability to do it justice. I am unable to say,
certainly, whether I am writing about a singular Devil or a
plurality of Devils. In one text "Devils" are mentioned (Lev
17:7), recognizing a plurality; in another, "the Devil," as if
there was but one (Luke 4:2). We may, however, fairly assume
that either there is one Devil, more than one, or less than one;
and, having thus cleared our path from mere numerical
difficulties we will proceed to give the Devil his due. Satan
appears either to have been a child of God, or, at any rate, a
most intimate acquaintance of the family; for we find that on "a
day when the children of God came to present themselves before
the Lord, that Satan came also among them (Job 1:6);" and no
surprise or disapprobation is manifested at his presence. The
conversation narrated in the Book of Job as occurring between God
and the Devil has, for us, a value proportioned to the rarity of
the scene, and to the high character of the personages concerned.
We are, therefore, despite the infidel criticism of Martin
Luther, who condemns the Book of Job as "a sheer argumentum
fabulae," determined to examine carefully the whole particulars
for ourselves; and, in so doing, we are naturally surprised to
find God, the omniscient, putting to Satan the query, Whence
comest thou? We can not suppose God, the all-wise, ignorant upon
the subject, and we can not avoid a feeling of astonishment that
such an interrogatory should have been made. Satan's reply,
assuming its correctness--and this the text leaves us no reason
to doubt--increases our surprise and augments our astonishment.
The answer given is, "From going to and fro in the earth, and
from going up and down it." In remarking on this answer, I do
not address myself to those wretched persons who, relying on
their reason and common sense, ignore the divine truth. I
address myself to the true believer, and I ask, is he not
astonished to find, from his bible, that Satan could have gone to
and fro in the earth, and walked up and down, and yet not have
met God, the omnipresent, occasionally during his journeying?
The Lord makes no comment on Satan's reply, but says, "Hast thou
not considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the
earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God and
escheweth evil?" It is rather extraordinary that God should wish
to have the Devil's opinion on the only good man recorded as then
living in the world: the more extraordinary when we know that
God is all-wise, and knew Satan's opinion without asking it, and
that God is immutable, and, therefore, would not be influenced by
the expression of the Devil's opinion when uttered. Satan's
answer is, "Doth Job fear God for naught? Hast thou not made an
hedge about him, and about all that he hath on every side? Thou
hast blest the work of his hand, and his substance is increased
in the land; but put forth thine hand now and touch all that he
hath, and he will curse thee to thy face." What is God's reply
to this audacious assertion? Does he express his determination
to protect the righteous Job? Does he use his power to rebuke
the evil tempter? No. "The Lord said unto Satan, Behold all
that he hath is in thy power; only upon himself put forth not
thine hand." And this was Job's reward for being a perfect and
upright man, one that feared God and eschewed evil. He was not
sent to the Devil, but the Devil was sent to all that he had.
And he lost all without repining--sons, daughters, oxen, asses,
camels and sheep, all destroyed, and yet Job sinned not. Some
divines have urged that we here get a beautiful picture of
patience and contentment under wrong and misfortune. But I reply
that it is not good to submit patiently to wrong, or to rest
contented under misfortune. I urge that it is manlier far to
resist wrong, nobler far to wage war against wrong, better far to
carefully investigate the causes of wrong and misfortune, with a
view to their removal. Contentment under wrong is a crime,
voluntary submission under oppression is not the virtue some
would have it to be.
"Again there was a day when the sons of God came to present
themselves before the Lord [as if God's children could ever be
absent from him], and Satan came also among them to present
himself before the Lord. And the Lord said unto Satan, From
whence comest thou? And Satan answered the Lord and said, From
going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in
it. And the Lord said unto Satan, Hast thou considered my
servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth? a perfect
and an upright man, one that feareth God and escheweth evil? and
still he holdeth fast his integrity, ALTHOUGH THOU MOVEDST ME
AGAINST HIM TO DESTROY HIM WITHOUT CAUSE."
Can God be moved against a man to destroy him without a cause?
If so, God is neither immutable nor all-wise. Yet the bible puts
into God's mouth the terrible admission that the Devil had moved
God against Job to destroy him without cause. If true, it
destroys God's goodness; if false, then the bible is no
revelation.
But Satan answered the Lord and said, "Skin for skin, yea, all
that a man hath will he give for his life; put forth thine hand
now and touch his bone and his flesh, and he will curse thee to
thy face."
Does the Lord now drive the Devil from his presence? Is there
any expression of wrath or indignation against his tempter? Not
so. "The Lord said unto Satan, Behold, he is in thine hand, but
save his life." And Job, being better than everybody else, finds
himself smitten in consequence with sore boils from the sole of
his foot unto his crown. The ways of the Lord are not as our
ways, or this would seem the reverse of an encouragement to
virtue.
We turn over the pages of our bibles for further information on
this diabolic theme.
After reading the account of the numbering by David attentively,
one is puzzled by the apparent contradiction, that in one place
"God" and in another "Satan" occurs (1Chr 21:1; 2Sam 24:1). But
it may be that there is more harmony between God and the Devil
than ordinary men are aware. Unfortunately, we have not the
advantage of great scholarship, but one erudite commentator on
the bible tells us, in speaking of the Hebrew word Azazel: "This
terrible and venerable name of God, through the pens of biblical
glossers, has been a Devil, a mountain, a wilderness, and a
he-goat (G.R. Gliddon's extract from "Lanci's Sagra Scritura,"
chap. 3, sec. 1). Well may incomprehensibility be an attribute
of Deity, when, even to holy and reverend fathers, God has been
sometimes undistinguishable from a he-goat or a Devil. Goats and
Devils are alike represented with horns and tails. We trust that
profanity will not enlarge on this sad confusion of ideas. Not
possessing great lingual acquirements, we adhere to the English
bible, believing that religion can never be improved by mere
common sense, or human effort. We admire, without understanding,
the skill of the Missionary, who makes the word
"Mooigniazimoongo" an equivalent for God in the Sooahelee
dialect, and who represents "original sin" to the Ottomi Indian
by the word "Teacatzintiliztlatlacolli," and who recommends the
Delaware to repentance as "Schiwelendamowitchewagan." We do not
wonder that in these translating thaumaturgic exploits God and
Devil get mistaken for each other.
God is a spirit. Jesus was led up of the Spirit to be tempted of
the Devil; and it is also true that spirits are very likely to
lead men to the Devil. Too intimate acquaintance with whisky
toddy overnight is often followed by the delirium tremens and
blue-devils on the morrow. We advise our readers to eschew alike
spirituous and spiritual mixtures. They interfere sadly with
sober thinking, and play the Devil with your brains.
The history of the temptation of Jesus by the Devil has been
dealt with in another essay. Yet it may be well to add the
opinion of a Church of England divine in this place: "That the
Devil should appear personally to the Son of God is certainly not
more wonderful than that he should, in a more remote age, have
appeared among the sons of God, in the presence of God himself,
to tempt and torment the righteous Job. But that Satan should
carry Jesus, bodily and literally, through the air--first to the
top of a high mountain, and then to the topmost pinnacle of the
temple--is wholly inadmissible, it is an insult to our
understanding ("Christian Records," by the Rev. Dr. Giles,
p.144)." It is pleasant to be able to find so many clergymen, in
these days, zealously repudiating their own creeds. I am not
prepared to speak strongly as to the color of the Devil; white
men paint him black, black men white; but, allowing for the
prejudices of dark-colored and fair-skinned believers, an
invisible green would not be an unreasonable tint. We presume
that he is not colorless, as otherwise the Evangelists or the
persons present would have labored under considerable
difficulties in witnessing the casting out of the Devil from the
man in the synagogue (Luke 4:35-36). This Devil is described as
an unclean Devil, and it is, therefore, a fair inference that
there are some clean Devils as well as dirty Devils. Printer's
Devils are mostly unclean Devils, but then they are only little
Devils, and we must not make too much of them. Nearly all the
Devils seem to talk, and it has therefore been conjectured by
some bachelor metaphysicians that they are of the feminine
gender, but I see no reason to agree in this, and my wife is of a
contrary opinion. The Devils are probably good Christians--one
text tells us that they believe and tremble. It is a fact with
some poor Devils that the more they believe the more they
tremble. We are told in another text that the Devil goeth about
like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. He will have
extremely bad taste, however, if he eat up the lean and bony
working-classes, while so many fit bishops and stout archdeacons
remain unconsumed. Devils should be a sort of eternal
salamander, for we are told there is everlasting fire prepared
for the Devil and his angels (Mat 25:41), and that there is a
lake of brimstone and fire, into which the Devil was cast (Rev
20:10). Perhaps instead of being salamander they will, while in
the fire, be rather of the 'otter tribe; but this is a question
which Mr. C. H. Spurgeon, who is a far better judge of brimstone
than myself, would be more competent to settle. The Devil has,
at least upon one occasion, figured as a controversialist. He
disputed with the archangel Michael, contending about the body of
Moses (Jude 9); and in these degenerate days of personality in
debate it is pleasant to know that the religious champion, unlike
the Grants, Coopers, and Brindleys of the present period, was
very civil toward his Satanic opponent. The Devil was once
imprisoned for 1,000 years in a bottomless pit (Rev 20:2). If a
pit has no bottom, it seems but little confinement to shut the
top; but with faith and prayer, even a good foundation may be
obtained for a bottomless pit.
It is urged by some that the Devil was the serpent of
Genesis--that is, that it was really Satan who, in this guise,
tempted Eve. There is this difficulty in the matter: the Devil
is a liar (John 8:44), but in the interview with Eve the serpent
seems to have confined himself to the strict truth (Gen
3:4,5,22). There is, in fact, no point of resemblance--no horns,
no hoof, nothing except the tail--which can be in any way
identified.
The Old Testament speaks a little of the Devils, sometimes of
Satan, but never of "The Devil," and it seems almost too much, in
Matthew, to usher him in, in the temptation scene, without
introduction, and as if he were an old acquaintance. I do not
remember reading, in the Old Testament, anything about the lake
of brimstone and fire; this feature of faith was reserved for the
warmth of Christian love to inspire; the Pentateuch makes no
reference to it. Zechariah, in a vision, saw "Joshua, the
High-Priest, standing before the angel of the Lord, and Satan
standing at his right hand to resist him (Zec 3:1)." Why the
Devil wanted to resist Joshua is not clear; but as Joshua's
garments were in a very filthy state, it may be that he was
preaching to the Priest the virtues of cleanliness. It is often
said that cleanliness is next to godliness; I honestly confess
that I should prefer a clean sinner to a dirty saint. Jesus said
that one of the twelve disciples was a Devil (John 6:70), but I
am not prepared to say whether he meant the unfaithful and
cowardly Peter, to whom he intrusted the keys of Heaven, or Judas
who sold him for money, just as would nearly any bishop of the
present day. The bishops preach that it is as difficult for a
rich man to get into Heaven as for a camel to go through the eye
of a needle; yet they enrich themselves, and their families, as
greedily and carelessly as if they, at any rate, never expected
to smell brimstone as a consequence. You are told to resist the
Devil, and he will flee from you (James 4:7); if this be true, he
is a cowardly Devil, and thus does not agree quite with Milton's
picture of his grand, defiant, almost heroism. But then Milton
was a poet, and true religion has but little poetry in it.
Jeroboam, one of the Jewish monarchs, ordained priests for the
Devils (2Chr 11:15), and this may be the reason why, at the
present day, all the orthodox clergy are gentlemen in black. In
the time of Jesus, Satan must, when not in the body of some mad,
deaf, dumb, blind, or paralytic person, have been in Heaven; for
Jesus, on one occasion, told his disciples that he saw Satan, as
lightning, fall from Heaven (Luke 10:18). Of course, this would
betoken a rapid descent, but although a light affair, it is no
laughing matter, and we reverently leave it to the clergy to
explain the text. Jesus told Simon Peter that Satan desired to
have him, that he might sift him as wheat (Luke 22:31); in this
text it may be urged that Jesus was chaffing his disciple. Paul,
the apostle, seems to have looked on the Devil much as the
magistrates of Guernsey, Devonport, and Yarmouth look on the
police, for Paul delivered Hymeneus and Alexander unto Satan,
that they may learn not to blaspheme (1Tim 1:20).
Revivalists are much indebted for their evanescent successes to
Hell and the Devil, if the following extract from the experience
of a Christian preacher be reliable:
"Thomas English was one of those very noisy and active preachers
who do so much in promoting revivals." He would tell his hearers
of "dwelling with devouring fire, bearing everlasting burning,
roasting on the Devil's spit, broiling on his gridiron, being
pitched about with his fork, drinking the liquid fire, breathing
the brimstone fumes, drowning in a red-hot sea, lying on fiery
beds ("Pilgrim's Progress from Methodism to Christianity")," etc.
In the present year the vulgar tirades of Reginald Radcliffe,
Richard Weaver, and C. H. Spurgeon (some of them delivered in
Exeter Hall) will serve to evidence that the above quotation is
not the exaggeration which some might think. In London, before
crowded audiences, Mr. Weaver, without originality, and with only
the merit of copied coarseness, has called upon the Lord to
"shake the ungodly for five minutes over the mouth of Hell." Mr.
Spurgeon has drawn pictures of Hell which, if true and revealed
to him by God, are most disgustingly frightful, and which being,
as we believe, false, and but the creation of his own vulgar,
morbid fancies, induce, on our part, a feeling of contempt as
well as disgust.
The Wesleyans, some years since, made the Devil a prominent
feature in the famous "Fly-Sheet" controversy, so much so that a
Wesleyan, speaking and writing on the subject, suggested that the
authors of the "Fly-Sheets" were Devils, and another
once-Wesleyan writer says: "The first thing which made me
inquire about the Devil was that I thought him abused. I thought
him bad enough, but could not help fearing that people told lies
about him. R.S., a very zealous prayer-leader, stole some oats,
and imputed the blame to the Devil. T.C. got drunk, and
complained in the love-feast that the Devil had been very busy
with him for some time, and then took him in an unguarded moment.
B.S. was detected in lying, and complained that Satan had gained
the advantage over him. Old George White burned his fingers in
lighting his pipe, and declared that it was the Devil that caused
him to do it; and Farmer Duffy horsewhipped his wife, and said
that he did it to beat the Devil out of her. This make me
desirous to know what influence the Devil really had, and I was
stimulated to this inquiry by my friend, Mr. Trelevan, who
assured me that the Devil was as necessary as the Almighty to the
orthodox faith ("Pilgrim's Progress from Methodism to
Christianity")." The fashionable preachers in the neighborhood
of Belgravia mostly eschew the Devil, and avoid the taint of
brimstone; treacle is the commodity they dispense.
For myself, the only Devil I know is that black Devil ignorance,
fostered by knavery and tyranny; a Devil personified by the
credulous many, and kept up in the past by the learned but
treacherous few, who preferred to rule the masses by their fears,
rather than to guide them through their love. This devil has,
indeed, not been a roaring lion, but a cowardly and treacherous
boa constrictor; it has enveloped in its massive folds glorious
truths, and in the fierceness of its brute power has crushed them
in its writhings. But oh! a glorious day is coming: amid the
heretofore gloom of night the bright rays of the rising sun are
piercing, the light of truth dispels the mists of ignorance.
Bright facts drive out dark delusion; might truths triumph over
pious frauds, and no longer need men be affrighted by the notion
of an omnipotent fiend, wandering through the earth, ever seeking
their damnation.
Yes--to partially adopt the phraseology of a writer in
"Macmillan's Magazine"--I do refuse to see in God a being
omniscient as omnipotent, who puts us into this world without our
volition, leaves us to struggle through it as we can, unequally
pitted against an almost omnipotent and supersubtile Devil, and
then, if we fail, finally drops us out of this world into
Hell-fire, where a legion of inferior Devils find constant and
never-ending employment in inventing fresh tortures for us; our
crime being that we have not succeeded where success was rendered
impossible. No high, no manly, no humane thinkings are developed
in the doctrine of Devils and damnation. If a potent faith, it
degrades alike the teacher and the taught, by its abhorrent
mercilessness; and if a form, instead of a faith, then is the
Devil doctrine a misleading sham, which frightens weak minds and
never developes strong men.
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