The Faith Of An Unrepentant Liberal A sermon by A. Powell Davies, 1946 Never was the need for faith as desperate as now; and never was it more essential that belief be genuine. We cannot face the future empty-hearted; we cannot face it with an untrue creed. Yet it is one of the perversities of the modern world's most crucial hour that many who could find and share the faith we need devote themselves to its obstruction. In the age of opportunity and peril that confronts us, only disaster can be harvested from false beliefs. The religions of the creeds are obsolescent; they have no will to face reality; the basis of their claims expired with yesterday; to what is now required they are irrelevant; the authority of myth and miracle is over. Surely it should be clear at last that all the compromises of religion must be ended. The world is much too dangerous for anything but truth. Only this can now avail us; that we leave the childhood of the race behind and come to spiritual maturity. Yet there are those so frightened by the future, and at the same time so fettered by the past, that even today, while we race with catastrophe, they call upon their hearers to repudiate the only faith and purpose that could save them, and be dedicated to a dying system of belief. "Come Back!" they cry. "Back to the ancient worship and the ancient ways! Back to the supernatural! Back to a helpless and imploring piety! Back to dependency!" Back to everything, in fact, which proved too weak and false to hinder or prevent two deadly, world-engulfing wars. "But hear us!" they plead. "See what has happened! Modern man has overreached himself. Doom is at hand. Freedom at last is faced with retribution... Ah! if only the ancient faith had never been forsaken! If only men had gone on being obedient to the jealous God who brooks no trespass on his own authority! If only they had left the secrets of the universe in the keeping of Divine Providence, the mastery of nature in the hands of the Almighty One! But no, mankind has wickedly persisted in its great apostasy. It has followed after the devices and desires of its own heart; it has quenched its thirst for knowledge at the bitter cisterns of its own contriving; it has surrendered to a sacrilegious urge for infinite discovery and multifold invention; and now, the Sodom of science and the Gomorrah of rational belief are calling down fire from heaven to consume them! God has decreed destruction! Only a prompt return to the traditional faith, a contrite and abject submission to authoritarian doctrines can possibly avail us." Thus runs the claim of the defeated, the challenge of the voice of yesterday. And with this conclusion: that we must now give up, renounce and utterly abhor the mortal sin of liberalism, especially in religion, for it is liberalism which has thus deluded and misled us. It caused us to put our trust in the free exertions of our own minds instead of in the dogmas of the long- established churches; it encouraged us to look for progress rather than salvation from unchangeable depravity, to place reliance in the growth of goodness instead of praying for separation from the evil of a hopeless and desponding world. Yes, it was liberalism which forswore the supernatural and forsook the ancient revelation; it was liberalism which fostered science, liberalism which placed the stamp of its approval on the quest for never-ending new discovery, liberalism which brought us to our present impasse and liberalism which will bring us to our final ruin and complete disaster, if we let it. Now, before we consider this rather strenuous accusation -- and of course, only the emphasis is new: the charge itself is almost venerable -- it may be well to seek some definitions. People who do not like liberalism call everything liberal which they do not like. Until they are found out, this naturally gives them a tactical advantage, for they can simply add up all the evils of the modern age, and all the unsolved problems, and lay them at the door of liberalism. Until we had liberalism, they say, we did not have these evils; nor did we have these problems; and so, quite clearly, the liberals are to blame. It is amazing how seldom this _non sequitur_ is noticed and exposed. Even liberals, for some strange reason, are at times inveigled by it. They do not see that their accusers are adroitly covering up their own deficiencies, their own confusion. Not only covering them up, but infecting liberals with them. That is why I say we had better seek some definitions. What, let us ask, is liberalism? Let us admit at once that it is not an easy thing to define. This is not because it is vague but because it is comprehensive. Definition always limits a word -- it is essential that it should -- but some words, by their nature, are difficult to limit. Especially is this true of the word _liberal_. For there is a sense in which liberalism is and always has been the very contradiction of limitation. Yet I think we can define it fairly closely, and much more accurately than our opponents wish. The common denominator of all liberalism is devotion to liberty. The two words, of course, come from the same root. _Liberalism is that which liberates_. Its object is to loosen bondage, whether of the mind or of the person, whether of individuals or societies, and its motivation is the faith that human life can only reach its fullest stature through continuous liberation -- through the struggle to be free. It is from this that every kind of liberal purpose has been born. _Political_ liberals have sought to emancipate themselves and all others from servitude to ancient and oppressive systems, from inferior citizenship, from subjugation to the will of overlords, believing that that society is best where all are most free to participate in ruling it, in making its laws, in deciding the directions it shall take. This kind of liberalism is called democracy and it is far from easy to maintain. Yet, we who have seen its alternatives in action are very sure that liberal democracy is a political achievement that we are far from ready to lose. _Educational_ liberals have believed that access to human knowledge and the privilege of participating in increasing it are natural human rights and should be universal. They have thought that the wisdom of the past, while it should be respected and discerningly transmitted, should never be a bondage, a fetter to the mind. They have resisted all attempts to mold opinion through dogmatic teachings. And certainly, we who have seen this attitude scorned and forsaken and whole nations propagandized in the name of unity and mass efficiency -- we who have seen the minds of peoples maimed and crippled, and the truth that could have saved them perverted and distorted -- can have no wish to see an end to liberal principles of education. In _religion_, the liberal stood for the unhindered use of the free mind in arriving at conviction. Truth he declared to be more holy than any creed, more sacred than even the most sanctified of dogmas. He refused to accept authoritarian "revelations" which contradicted the revelation he found in his own experience. He was prepared to be submissive to doctrines and respectful to theologies only if they could justify themselves in the forum of unsheltered truth. He searched the Scriptures to determine their actual range of application, their intrinsic authority and their dependability; he demanded of churches and hierarchies that they demonstrate their usefulness and prove their worth; he called every religious belief which could not be justified by evidence or reason a speculation, and every tenet which was contradicted by the force of fact a superstition. And he proposed to proclaim abroad all new discoveries, no matter what the consequence to vested interests and established institutions. Not only mind but conscience must be free. Otherwise, it was less a conscience than it should be. Freedom, therefore -- increasing freedom throughout the entire scope of human life -- has been the watchword of liberalism. No matter what the ancient systems of authority attempted to dictate, the liberal has claimed the freedom to explore anew; to accept what evidence and reason justify; to strike out into the unknown -- carrying the torch of truth anywhere and everywhere that truth might go. This has meant, just as the accusers say, that liberals have always accepted the scientific attitude and have labored to extend it. They have wanted a full development of the whole field of human knowledge, and the conquest of ignorance and superstition everywhere. To achieve this, they have preached the open mind and, so far as they were faithful to their precepts, have practiced it. They have also preached the possibility of endless progress, the power of man to share the shaping of his destiny; and they have instituted and encouraged all such changes and reforms as might be likely to contribute to a saner, happier, better world. It is of this, today, that liberals stand accused. They emphasized the virtue and the promise in the life of man instead of focusing their thought upon his helplessness beneath the rule of evil; and they tried to _make_ a better world in place of leaving it to false, fallacious hopes of Providential intervention. They did not pray that God would save them from themselves through some impossible, miraculous "salvation." They prayed that God would save them _in and through_ themselves while working out their own salvation. As one such liberal, I glory in the accusation. I am a liberal without apology, a liberal without misgivings, a liberal without regret. I am an unrepentant liberal. So far as I am sorry for anything, it is not because I am a liberal, but that I am not more liberal than I am. Of this I am certain: that no return to false beliefs or authoritarian folklore can avail us in the world tomorrow -- any more than in the recent past. Their day is over. Only the free mind can possess the future. Lives in bondage to the supernatural fantasies will never find the courage or the strength. And now, having defined liberalism and declared my own allegiance to it, let me proceed to deal with the confusion in the accusation made against it. For what traditionalists always love to do is to try to make liberals accountable not only for the outlook and the purposes which are truly theirs, but for the degree to which that outlook has not prevailed and the extent to which those purposes are not accomplished. They also try to blame the liberals for the actual emergence of the problems which the modern age must face. In neither case is the imputation justified or the indictment really scrupulous or honest. From the beginning, liberals have found themselves in opposition to the guardians of established institutions and beliefs. It is natural that these custodians of depleted symbols and vacated sepulchers should feel alarmed. They saw what freedom might entail. their fright, of course, was genuine. So was their bondage to the past. They were afraid of new, uncharted areas of experience; the world was growing much too wide. In agoraphobic panic, they crowded closer to their ancient prisons, shouting their warnings to the world to join them and be sheltered from a universe that grew too big. "Come back," they cried, "and wear the old familiar fetters. The liberals mislead you. You are not able to be free." It is not to be expected, therefore, that liberalism would have the benefit of fair appraisal from those who have feared and distrusted it, or that cause and consequence could have an honest exposition from those whose only refuge is their own retreat. To maintain their standpoint, they had to distort what challenged it -- distort it and confuse it. Confusion was indeed essential; and to feed their illusion of security they had to spread confusion; and then present their obsolescent doctrines as the only antidote. Small wonder that the modern age despairs of finding what it might believe! What are the facts? The first fact is that the problems of the modern age are no more caused by liberalism than by anything else. They emerge _with_ liberalism through the growth of man towards a further measure of fulfillment. They are brought about because in history no particular cycle can be permanent: each age, in reaching its completion, is superseded by a new one. They are caused by innovating factors entering into human life, produced by all the people in the world; and from the impulse dwelling in the heart of life itself which urges living creatures onward. What it was, ultimately, which brought about a revolution in our methods for obtaining knowledge, followed by an outflow of applied discovery and technical invention -- what, in short, is finally responsible for modern science and technology -- no historian really knows. Events can be described -- I know that - - step by step and stage by stage, but nobody can say just why they first began to happen when they did, or what at last controlled them. Nobody can say it, that is, except in terms of a rational belief that life itself is enterprising and its very nature innovating and adventurous. This, of course, is what the liberal faith declares. But let us continue. As they mounted up, the sum of these events, these new inventions, these new discoveries, produced enormous problems -- social problems, political problems, international problems. Liberals did not invent these problems. Liberals, in fact, being themselves in part the product of the changes brought about, but not discordant with them, pointed out the way to solve them, whereas traditionalists merely wept because the problems had emerged at all. Liberals no more than conservatives produced the need that human beings increase their mental range and moral stature if they hoped to meet the challenge of the epoch into which humanity had entered. The fact was -- and is -- that increased mental range and improved moral stature are essential, liberals or no liberals. But only the liberal way, the way of unbinding the mind and unfettering the spirit can possibly produce the mental, moral level which can meet these indispensable requirements. Nor did liberals _make_ the evil which persists in human nature. It is this evil, this reluctance, this perverseness, which has impeded progress. It is this same evil which now threatens ruin and disaster. Not the evil in the hearts of any one category amongst us, but the evil in the hearts of all of us. It is against this evil, together with the ignorance and prejudice which reinforce it, that liberalism has contended. Knowing that without enlightenment, without fidelity to actual fact and honest truth, without man's own exertions and his fullest, furthermost endeavors, this evil would never be overcome, liberalism forsook the false beliefs in supernatural interventions and salvations -- interventions which never took place and salvations which left man just as badly off as he was before -- and sought the guidance of the God who thinks through human thoughts and speaks through human consciences, the God who works through human striving and fulfills his purpose in man's own laborious toil. That all men have not yet accepted this approach is not the fault of liberals, and that all liberals have not lived up to its standards is not the fault of liberalism. To solve the problems of the modern world we need both better liberals and more widespread liberalism. Certainly such problems will never be resolved by those who in their outlook and belief remain enslaved by doctrines which are false. Realities will never yield to creeds which draw their nurture and support from ignorance and have to be protected from the naked light of truth. These are the creedal systems which accept support and shelter from reactionary tyrannies; which, at their worst, preserve their institutions by a partnership with despotism and corruption. Theirs are the patterns of belief which cloud intelligence and siphon off the moral energies for want of which humanity is insufficient to the claims upon it, being left disabled and enfeebled. While, therefore, liberalism did not produce the problems of the modern world, it is the simple truth that only liberalism, lifted to the level of the present need, can ever hope to solve them. And it is this which traditionalists have hindered and impeded. In the effort to maintain their institutions, their importance, their authority, and because they could not face reality, they have obstructed vital progress and held back the march of man to spiritual maturity. If science today has placed in human hands immense potentialities for ruin and destruction, the peril is not because we have become too scientific, but because our science is restricted. We have put too little science into sociology, too little of its method into national and international affairs, too little into politics. The fault is not in science, but in resistance to its method; and in the insufficient spread of it. Let us dispel the lies conclusively; let us require ourselves and all mankind to face the truth; the peril does not come from technological developments or scientific disciplines; it comes from ignorance and evil, from prejudice and false opinion, from delusive hopes and narrow aims; and these are the things which liberalism has sought to remedy. Let us make clear another fact. The world to which traditionalists would like us to return was never such a world as they describe. It was a world of famine and disease, a world of many cruelties and few humanities, a world of arrogant and avaricious hierarchies, of tyranny and oppression, of ignorance and fear, of toil and tears. It is the world which tyrants and authoritarians have been trying to revive, no matter what the cost in blood and agony; and the world which every decent man and woman, for several centuries, has been trying to leave behind. Nor are these modern prophets of retreat at all consistent. They do not take the consequences of their own assumptions. They want the benefits of recent progress without accepting honestly its implications. I have heard of few traditionalists who would impugn the scientific method when it comes to being cured by penicillin, or who disdain the opportunities offered by the technological advancement embodied in a broadcasting station. No, they are more than willing to let science save their lives, even though they fulminate against it in their pulpits. Science never seems to overreach itself in reaching their bedsides, but only when it undermines their creeds. If it looks as though providence is calling them to heaven, whereas penicillin would keep them a little longer on the earth, they show an instant and unswerving preference for the pagan benefits of penicillin. They do not want to die under a medieval doctor but they are willing that mankind risk its future with a medieval faith. If wicked science and ingenious invention provides the radio to take their voices to a million homes, they find that God permits it. Yet the same scientific approach, the same quest for knowledge, the same fidelity to provable, experimental fact is in the radio and penicillin as in the modern knowledge that upsets the creeds or in the power to split the atom. Indeed, the fundamentalist believer who on spectacles to read the Athanasian Creed is demonstrating scientific laws of optics, which, if he thought about them, would make the creed a waste of time to bother with. For the principles embodied in the spectacles must lead infallibly to those by which we know the composition of the elements or measure distances between the stars. There is no turning back, even if we wished to turn back. There is no living outside of this age, even for traditionalists. I say, again, let us have done with confusion. The liberating faith is the only possible faith for the world into which we are moving. It makes problems more difficult only for those who resist and obstruct the truth. It demands the impossible only from those who have lost the will to win a full humanity, who have let the inner sources of all honest faith decay and lost their courage. There is a religion that says Freedom! Freedom from ignorance and false belief. Freedom from spurious claims and bitter prejudices. Freedom to seek the truth, both old and new, and freedom to follow it. Freedom from the hates and greeds that divide mankind and spill the blood of every generation. Freedom for honest thought. Freedom for equal justice, freedom to seek the true, the good and the beautiful with minds unimpaired by cramping dogmas and spirits uncrippled by abject dependence. There is a religion that adds to Freedom, Universal Brotherhood! -- a religion that says mankind is not divided -- except by ignorance and prejudice and hate -- that sees mankind as naturally one and waiting to be spiritually united; a religion which proclaims an end to creedal reservations and exclusions -- and declares a brotherhood unbounded! a religion that know that we shall never find the fullness of the wonder and the glory of life until we are tall enough in moral stature to deserve it; that we shall never have hearts big enough for the love we call the love of God until we have made them big enough for the world- wide love of man. Only this faith in freedom linked with universal brotherhood can be enough to save the world and then rebuild it. All lesser faiths are dwindling and collapsing -- or running for protection to brutality and tyranny. They will be swept away or ridden to their doom by fierce fanaticisms to which they yield in desperation. Only this faith, this free and universal faith, is now possible; only this faith is powerful. Only this faith can march with truth; only this faith can liberate us from the fear and ignorance of the past or set us free towards the future; the faith that begins in individual freedom of belief and goes out to the limitless, building throughout the world the Free and Universal Church. I am an unrepentant liberal. If the gods of yesterday are dying, I am willing that they die. For these is a God who never dies, the one and only living God whose face is ever set towards tomorrow. And for those who follow where he leads, the winds of morning are already blowing, and however long the night may linger, the day of triumph is in sight.