Publication information |
Source: Truth Seeker Source type: magazine Document type: letter to the editor Document title: “Anarchy and God” Author(s): Crine, L. D. Date of publication: 28 September 1901 Volume number: 28 Issue number: 39 Pagination: 617 |
Citation |
Crine, L. D. “Anarchy and God.” Truth Seeker 28 Sept. 1901 v28n39: p. 617. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (religious response: criticism); government; Leon Czolgosz; McKinley assassination (personal response). |
Named persons |
L. D. Crine; Leon Czolgosz; Horace Greeley; Thomas Jefferson; Jesus Christ; E. M. Macdonald. |
Document |
Anarchy and God
L. D . C
.——————————
To the Editor of the New York Tribune: In your
leading editorial of September 16, commenting on “Anarchy and the Law,” you
close:
“‘The mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind
exceeding small.’ And exceeding small, too, will the law at last grind those
who defy and deny it, for God himself is law.”
Some say God is love.
You say God is law.
Still others say God is the earth and all that
is.
You leave it to be inferred that had Czolgosz
been a believer in God (I do not know whether he was or not), he would not have
committed the murder.
My position, which seems to me rational, is this:
I do not believe in murder by those who do not believe in God nor by those who
do. Only a few evenings ago I was reading that one hundred million human beings,
constituted as you and I are, have perished on this planet at the hands of those
who believe in God. We must not forget, also, that the Mohammedans hold belief
in God, and that among us Mohammedans stand for murder and rapine.
The best suggestion I can make is to discontinue
the use of the word God. That word is vague of meaning, and to avoid misunderstanding
it is better to drop it out of our vocabulary as much as possible. If to you
God is law, then, instead of using the word “God,” you should use the word “law.”
My preference is to call the earth and the forces
of nature God. By calling the earth God, then, when the dying President murmured,
“Nearer, my God, to thee,” there was some rational meaning to what he said.
He was certainly nearer to God by that meaning. If God is the earth, and the
body of man must return to the earth, then when laid in the grave it is nearer
to God.
The words recited at the burial services, “Earth
to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust,” are perfectly appropriate and scientific.
They mean that we are made out of the earth, and return to earth. The material
of the earth can also be called ashes or dust. Earth, ashes, dust. Anybody with
a little thought can gather from these words the routine of matter as related
to human life. We are made out of the earth, and the earth in turn, to a very
small extent, is made out of us. “Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust,”
are true and properly used, but are not in conformity with other teachings of
the Christian religion, as, for instance, the doctrine of the resurrection of
the body.
We should believe in government and abhor anarchy
in so far as it practices murder. Without government we would go by leaps and
bounds back into barbarism. We are in barbarism now, but not total barbarism.
There has been some evolutionary progress in human society. We do not want too
much government; a small amount will do. Was it not Thomas Jefferson, one of
the founders of the Republic, who said, “That people the least governed is the
best governed?”
It is well to stop and think what a hero Czolgosz
is from his point of view. He believed that he was doing the greatest possible
good to the country by assassinating the President. He expected that upon the
firing of that shot his liberties, his happiness and life itself would speedily
come to an end. How many are there who would be willing to sacrifice their lives
to do the human race the greatest possible good of which they know? What is
written in the New Testament about the crucifixion of Jesus Christ sums up into
the same kind of heroism.
Those who appear eager to link theology with government
should recall some of the evils of the union of church and state in the Old
World, and the very great step that was taken by the founders of this government
in providing for the separation of church and state. Theology does not necessarily
have anything to do with good morals.
As the Tribune was founded by Horace Greeley,
a Freethinker, it is hoped this communication will be found suitable for its
columns. It was not intended at the outset to make a sermon of this. However,
it would please me if clergymen and priests all over the United States could
read this comment and give the ideas some thought.
L. D. C
.September 17, E. M. 301 (1901).