ÖS* F T T M I I Catholicism and Reason Being an €$say BY HON. HENRY C. DILLON LOS ANGELES, CAL. St t tenta i in t ta l (Eatboür ®nr t l j 4 0 7 BERGEN STREET BROOKLYN, N E W YORK. 5 cents each ; $3.00 per hundred TIMELY AND VALUABLE PUBLICATIONS. THE MASS—Mother Loyola Sc. ea.; $3 per 100 SIMPLE COMMUNION—Mother Loyola. .Sc. ea.; $3 per 100 CHURCH OR REPUBLIC— ' Cardinal Gibbons Sc. ea.; $3 per 100 THE MASS—Rev. J. M. Lucey Sc. ea.; $3 per 100 RELIGIOUS UNREST: THE WAY OUT— James P. Lafferty, of Philadelphia Bar, 10c. ea.; $5 per 100 JESUS OF NAZARETH—Mother Loyola—cloth. HOLY NAME MANUAL (stiff black cover) 25c. ORDER FROM INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY, 407 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, New York. Descfdffied Catholicism and Reason BEING AN ESSAY BY HON. HENRY C. DILLON LOS ANGELES, CAL. L T H E CHURCH AS T H E SOLE WITNESS T O AND DEFENDER OF T H E CHRISTIAN RELIGION. I am a Catholic because I believe the Holy Catholic Church wai founded by God, in the person of His Son, our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, upon the Rock, in the person of St. Peter, Chief of Apostles, and its first visible head. Faith leads me to Her, and reason approves th« choice. Man is a religious animal. He believes in himself as a moral being. He clings to this belief as tenaciously as he clings to life. He believes that in some mysterious way he came forth from God, and the best thoughts and efforts of his life are employed in the effort to bring himself into harmony with the Author of his being. His faith has had its periods of exaltation and depression. At the threshold of the twentieth century the signs point to another re- vival of his faith. Rationalistic as well as theistic philosophers see this, and tell us that man's rising faith will culminate in a na- 2 CATHOLICISM AND REASON. tural religion—that is to say, in a code of morals based upon our natnral relations, upon the rewards and punishments of this life, and from which all creeds and revelations will be expunged. Man .is still the proper study of mankind. Whether he was fashioned in the sea or on land, whether the first cell from which he began to differentiate was protoplasm or dust, still The hand that made him was Divine. The moment we admit the Divine origin of man, we admit a Divine purpose in his creation, and the necessity of ascertaining and obeying the Divine Will. Religious man will not be satisfied that this Will has not in some special and authoritative way been re- vealed to mankind, in manner and form to be intellectually grasped and understood, and in such abundance as to satisfy the cravings of the human heart. Natural religion does not satisfy this craving. It does not call forth the soul's affirmation, which is Emerson's definition of truth. Knowledge of our relationship to all created things and of the benefits which arise from understanding nature's laws, aids us in the battle of life and maintains the survival of the fittest, but it does not make the survivor happy, nor even satisfied with himself, when he reflects upon the human wrecks which line the shores of time. And what shall we say of the victims of this cruel law, who fall and are trampled under the feet of the victorious survivor. Is any mercy or pity found for them in natural law or natural re- ligion. Faith, hope and charity are out of place in such a system. To lend a helping, hand is contrary to the doctrine of survival of the fittest, and to love thy neighbor as thyself is to backslide into Christianity. The teachers of this natural religion tell us, indeed, that all vice is to be avoided, but in the same breath they tell us that evil (vice), if any there is, is a schoolmaster bringing us to God. Under such a schoolmaster vice loses its " frightful mien," and young and old are lured to destruction before they discover the awful falsehood of this modern serpent. By refusing to see anything but the outside, the material, natural religionists deny the inside, the spiritual nature of man, a more stupendous fact than the outside, and thus deny that there is any law m the spiritual world, in the face of all its manifestations. In its final analysis natural religion is atheism. Its advocates say in effect: " W e are the only gods there are," and generally end by extolling and worshipping themselves. In politics we find its adherents generally advocating the doctrines of state socialism and anarchy. In ethics their name is legion. There is no heresy that ever attained sufficient importance to merit the condemnation of the Church that is not taught by one sect or an- 3 CATHOLICISM AND REASON. other of these natural religionists. Strangely enough most of them claim to be theists, but, when driven to a definition of their god, we find they not only deny the Three Persons of the God-head, but deny to their deity any personality whatever. Their theism, there- fore, consists in name only. Indeed, such a thing as natural theisn? is both an impossibility and a contradiction of terms. In his work entitled: " I s Life Worth Living?" Mr. Mallock says: " A purely natural theism, with no organs of human speech, and no machinery for making its spirit articulate, never has ruled man, and, so far as we can see, never possibly can rule him." But the experiment is going on. Protestantism has yielded the citadel to the assaulting scientists. Unable to agree upon any in- terpretation of the Bible among themselves, their learned theologian* have at length basely admitted that the Holy Book is not the inspired Word of God, and that, consequently, there exists no- authoritative exponent of the Christian religion. The most promi- nent among Protestant divines are found to contradict one another about the very rudiments of the faith. To such a state of impo- tence and intellectual bankruptcy has Protestantism come at last that Professor Schurman, president of the Philippine Commission, tell* them plainly that it will be useless for Protestant Churches to- send missionaries to the natives of these islands, unless they will agree in advance upon some one branch of Protestantism, and pre- sent that and that only. The learned professor knows that such an agreement is impossible. It may have been only a clever and unanswerable way of advising them to stay at home, and let the Catholics work out what they have so well begun. It may have been the expression of a belief, only too common now among great men of the earth, that all religions are equally bad, and only useful to the politicians as a means for controlling the people. There is a belief also quite common now, that secular thought has in our day gained a decisive victory over Christian theology, and that the sacred writings have been forced to a level with fairy tales. This, however, is but a superficial view. What has really happened is this: Secular thought has annihilated Protestanism, not Christi- anity. The fundamental principle of the sixteenth century reformers was, that the Bible contains in itself a clear indication of what the Christian religion is,v and contains in itself inherent proofs of its verity. Its second principle was that the beliefs and practices of Christ's earliest followers proved the correctness of the new creed. As Protestant sects, however, differentiated from the parent stem and split into a thousand fragments, each with a new creed, it destroyed the second principle and reduced it to an absurdity. 4 CATHOLICISM A N D REASON. Scientific study and criticism have destroyed the other, until at last Protestant dogma has been rendered as Mr. Mallock well says: