In dealing with a nation's Intellectual Development the
historian has two courses open to him. As the present writer has elsewhere
remarked, an historical student may content himself with splitting his
subject into sections and dealing with each section in the spirit of a
narrator pure and simple. On the other hand, he may essay the more difficult
task of seizing the dynamic principle of intellectual development and
tracing its working through the various sections of thought and life. The
value of the latter method, if successfully applied, is that history,
instead of being a chaos of unrelated facts, is seen to be an intelligible
and luminous evolution. We discover the relations which exist between the
various factors in a nation's history: theology, philosophy, science,
literature, by means of the dynamic principle, are seen to be bound together
in organic unity.
What, then, is the dynamic principle of historical
evolution? In the opening chapter of the present writer's Century of
Intellectual Development an answer was given to this important
question—an answer which as being applicable to the subject under
consideration may fitly be reproduced: "Taking a large view of history it
will be found that man's intellect is mainly occupied upon three great
problems—God, the universe, and man as an individual and a social being. The
controlling factor in the process is man's conception of the Unseen Power
upon which all things rest, and of which nature and man are manifestations.
If we conceive of the Unseen Power as a supernatural Being, who by
revelations has made known his will to man, then philosophy, science and
literature will be moulded by, and permeated with, that conception. Even the
social order will feel its powerful influence. Society will be framed on
theocratic lines on the principle of authority." There comes a time when the
principle of authority—valuable at a certain stage in civilization—weighs
heavily on the social order, and by stereotyping ideas and institutions
results in intellectual and social stagnation. In the sixteenth century,
under the sway of Romanism, the intellectual and social life of Europe
suffered what may be termed arrested development. In the interest of
humanity it was necessary that the barriers to progress should be thrown
down. The great liberating movement which changed the current of European
thought and activity is known in history as the Reformation. From it we date
the beginning of Scotland's intellectual evolution.
There are those who contend that in Scotland the
Reformation was detrimental to the intellectual movement. It may be well,
therefore, to deal with the oft-repeated charge that the Reformation killed
the germs of Humanism which under James IV gave
promise of brilliant development. That reign has been described as "the
golden age of Scottish poetry." Why was the golden age so short-lived? The
answer of the anti-Reformation school is that the golden age disappeared in
the epidemic of gloomy and intolerant fanaticism of the religion of Knox and
his successors. The explanation is altogether wide of the mark. The outburst
of literary genius at the time of James IV was not
the herald of a new day, the early rays of the rising sun. Rather was it the
declining splendour of approaching night, the fitful gleams of the setting
sun. The literature of the "golden age" had no future, simply because in a
time when society was passing out of the feudal stage it gave expression to
sentiments and ideals which beyond court circles had no hold upon men's
hearts. Before there is a national literature there must first be a nation,
and to the making of a nation there go three things—unity of belief, unity
of sentiment, and unity of feeling. During the pre-Reformation period
Scotland was not a nation; it was a collection of warring atoms. Unity of
belief was absent, because there was a revolt of the thinking section of the
people against the doctrines and practices of the Romish Church. Unity of
sentiment and feeling there could not be in the absence of unity of belief.
Any literary movement under these conditions was bound to be evanescent. It
lacked the fundamental element of durability.
In his volume, The Transition Period, in the
European Literature series, Mr. Gregory Smith has the following
corroborative remarks—
"With the reign of James IV we
enter on the classic period of Scots poetry. In some respects it illustrates
a mere access of high spirits in companionship with sudden violence and
social exuberance—a kind of carnival before the Lenten fastings of the
sixteenth century. .. It does not even inspire any patriotic verse, such as
we find in the days of Queen Bess. In Scotland, on the other hand, poetry
was the expression of the narrower life of the court, and the influences
which it felt were specific and personal. Literature," adds Mr. Smith, "was
confined, almost to the exclusion of everything else, in the directly
allegorical mood of a dying tradition."
Rightly understood, there can be no durable literature
apart from a healthy national life; and in the evolution of the Protestant
religion in Scotland the first clearly-marked stage was the creation of a
healthy national life. In these days we have come to think of religion as a
thing solely between man and his Maker. This is entirely a modern idea. At
the time of the Reformation, and till long after, religion was a matter of
State concern as well as an individual affair. When the Reformers denied the
right of Rome to close the approach of man to his Maker except through
priestly mediation, they brought to the front the modern idea that man as
man has certain fundamental religious rights, with which no Church on earth
had the right to tamper. But the Roman Catholic Church claimed that right,
and, what was more, claimed to have the power of coercion, which it did not
scruple to exercise over nations as well as individuals.
The question which confronted the Reformers was this : If
the people as such have the right to worship God apart from priestly
mediation and Romanist practices generally, what should be their attitude to
Romanism, which claimed the right to put down liberty of conscience by
despotic exercise of civil and political power? The answer of Knox was
decisive—the attitude of a Protestant people to the claim of Rome must be
one of resistance. Loyalty to God meant disloyalty to the existing State,
and in the struggle which ensued it followed that the success of the new
religion was impossible except by making the State Protestant instead of
Romanist. This is the key to the policy of Knox, whose remark that he feared
the celebration of Mass by Mary at Holyrood more than ten thousand armed men
has been cited by drawing-room critics of the kid-gloved type as a specimen
of the Reformer's ferocious intolerance. What Knox saw, and saw clearly, was
that the public recognition of Romanist practices was calculated to increase
the influence of the Romanist Church to the detriment of Protestantism.
How was Rome to be fought? Not by isolated individuals,
but by the co-operation of those who believed that not only religion, but
civil and political liberty were at stake. The three great nation-making
forces—unity of belief, of feeling, and of sentiment, came into play, and
thus in the course of the evolution of the Protestant religion there also
evolved the Protestant State. It is a favourite contention of a certain
class of writers that in substituting Protestantism for Romanism Scotland
simply substituted one form of despotism for another—the despotism of the
theocratic regime of Geneva for that of Rome. Where is the difference, it is
asked, between an infallible Pope and an infallible book? The answer is
plain. The one crushes intellectual vitality in the germ by insisting upon
abject acceptance of ecclesiastical and theological decrees, while the
other, by making a book the standard, sends the individual in an
interpretative mood to the standard, by which he tests the dogmas of the
Church and the conduct of her leaders. Once the right of private judgment is
recognized it extends to all departments, thereby greatly stimulating the
intellectual life of a people.
In Scotland the Reformation did its work with great
thoroughness. In this respect Scotland contrasts favourably with England and
Germany. In England the work of the Reformers was arrested long before the
controversy with Rome was logically finished; while in Germany Lutheranism
retained something of the spirit and tendencies of Romanism. Political
conditions had much to do with the different forms which the Reformed
religion assumed in the three countries; but the success of Scotland is
mainly to be attributed to the fact that it confronted Romanism with a
life-system as comprehensive as its own. It is sometimes claimed for
Protestantism in Scotland that the principal weapon with which it fought and
overthrew Romanism was what is called the right of private judgment. In the
religious sphere that of course meant that man as man had the right to
approach God apart from the mediatorship of the Church of Rome, which not
only arrogated to itself infallibility in the sphere of doctrine, but also
claimed a monopoly of the conditions by which Divine blessings could descend
to man. True, the Reformers in Scotland took their stand upon the principle
that religion was a personal matter between man and his Maker; but had they
not gone beyond this contention, they would never have shaken the entire
fabric of Romanism to its foundations. Lutheranism and Anglicanism both
failed in thoroughness. In Scotland alone was the victory over Romanism
complete. What is the explanation? Simply this, that Scotland confronted
Romanism with Calvinism.
Hasty students of theology are apt to identify Calvinism
with certain doctrines—election, reprobation, etc.—which are highly
distasteful to the modern mind. We never can come to a real understanding of
Calvinism till we recognize that it stands for something much wider than a
theory of the Atonement with special reference to the future condition of
the non-elect. Had Calvinism been purely a theological theory, it would
never have conquered Romanism. Calvinism conquered because it was presented
in the form of an all-embracing life-system, by means of which it was able
to combat the equally comprehensive life-system of Romanism.
Then, as now, Romanism aspired to be more than a
religion. It aspired to take all phases of thought and life into its
embrace; it presented itself as the interpreter of the great facts of
existence—God, man, and the world. Romanism took under its care not only
theology, but philosophy, science, and politics. It professed to meet not
only the needs of man, but also of society. Manifestly such a compact system
could be effectively dealt with only by another system equally compact, and
more fitted to deal with the religious, theological, ecclesiastical, and
political needs of the new time. It is a trite remark that in the sphere of
Church government and politics Calvinism carried with it the germs of
democracy; but its fundamental work at the Reformation lay in the sphere of
theology. By their theory of God all religions stand or fall. The object of
a man's worship, as Carlyle somewhere says, determines the character of that
man. Now, the grave errors of Romanism took their rise in a conception of
God essentially pagan— a conception which carried with it materialism in the
shape of image-worship, superstition in the shape of belief in magical
rites, and a mechanical idea of morality which easily degenerated into
immorality as the result of a grossly anthropomorphic conception of God and
the method of approach to Him.
If Romanism was to receive a mortal wound, the first
essential was to strike at its conception of God. Calvinism did this by
placing in the forefront of its creed the doctrine of the sovereignty of
God. Calvin and Knox did for their day what the prophets did in the days of
Israel—they protested against idolatry, against the dragging down of the
Holy One to the level of the pagan deities, with the result of making
religion a round of senseless ceremonies, and salvation not a matter of
ethical purification, but of propitiation based on commercial principles. In
the eyes of Calvinism image-worship and all idolatrous practices were an
insult and abomination to God, who was viewed as the High and Lofty One, the
Sovereign over all, the Creator of the world and of man, the stern opponent
of sin, the disposer of events. In a word, what Calvinism as the first step
in the Reformation did was to overthrow the pagan conceptions of God which
Romanism had fostered, and to bring the mind of Scotland back to the pure
and elevated notions of Deity which are to be found in the Bible. And just
as we find the Jewish prophets insisting on the uprooting of idolatry by the
destruction of images, so we find Knox laying special emphasis on the
removal from Scotland of all outward emblems of what may be called Romanist
paganism.
He saw, and saw rightly, that it was hopeless to get into
the minds of the people Biblical conceptions of God so long as pagan emblems
and pagan influences were tolerated. At the Reformation, then, the
theological evolution of Scotland had its root in an august conception which
stands in the forefront of Protestantism—the sovereignty of God, as against
the pagan ideas which the Roman Catholic Church tolerated, if not
encouraged.
A very important question arises here— How does the
Calvinistic conception of God fare in these days of philosophy and science?
Can the advanced thinkers of to-day afford to look upon the Calvinistic
conception of God as good enough in past times as against the corrupt views
of Rome, but altogether discredited by modern thought?
It is a striking fact that the revolt against Calvinism
began not from the side of philosophy and science, but from the side of the
Church. In the Scottish Church loud complaints were made of the harshness of
Calvinism, in the extreme emphasis it lays upon justice to the exclusion of
the tenderer attributes. The Fatherhood of God was substituted for the
Sovereignty of God. It is an equally striking fact that while a large
section of the clergy were repudiating Calvinism, philosophers and
scientists were paying to it unconscious tributes. The strange fact has to
be recorded that the Calvinist conception of the universe is more in harmony
with 'modern philosophic and scientific conceptions than is the Broad Church
view. It is now seen that the old theologians of the Reforming and
Covenanting days grappled with marked ability with the problems which occupy
the minds of the Hegels and the Spencers of our own time. As I have said in
my Century of Intellectual Development—
"The conception of the universe reached by those old
Calvinists was in substance not far removed from that reached by modern
German and British philosophers. The last word of philosophy, German and
British, is determinism. Hegel, in the hands of Mr. Bradley, a brilliant
Oxford thinker, makes short work of what is understood as free-will; and
thinkers of the scientific school of Huxley are favourable to the view that
man is an automaton. Now what is philosophical and scientific determinism
but Calvinistic fore-ordination in a new dress? The only difference is, that
modern philosophers and scientists attribute to Nature a universal necessity
which has deprived man of freedom, while the Calvinists interpreted the
necessity of Nature as an ordination of God. In regard to the ultimate
nature of things those old Calvinists reached a view which is being endorsed
by the latest philosophic and scientific interpreters. Science brings us
down to atoms. Philosophy cannot rest in the atomic conception of the
Cosmos. It reduces the atoms to centres of force and energy. Thus we come to
the view that matter is but the phenomenal appearance of an Infinite Energy
which, though unseen, is the real basis of matter, the source of life, the
inspirer of law and order. Spencer's Infinite Energy, what is it but the
Calvinistic essence of God, which is everywhere, directly and immediately
energetic? Hegel and Spencer can go no farther in their researches and
definitions than the words of the Shorter Catechism: ' God is a Spirit,
infinite, eternal, and unchangeable.' "
If the Church of to-day is to regain its influence, it
will need to infuse into its teaching something of the spirit of Calvinism.
Without losing its hold on the tender side of religion, the Church will
require to impart to its theology something of the awe which filled the
hearts of the old Hebrews and the Calvinists, and which fills the minds also
of reverent philosophers and scientists in presence of the Infinite, the
Eternal, the All-Embracing. In the words of the author of Natural
Religion: "If men can add once more the Christian confidence to the
Hebraic (and I might add the Calvinistic) awe, the Christianity that will
result will be of a higher kind than that which passes too often for
Christianity now, which, so far from being love added to fear, and casting
out fear, is a presumptuous and effeminate love that never knew fear."
From the anthropological point of view it is quite
correct to speak of the Reformation as destroying the whole system of
sacerdotal mediatorship, and bringing man as man face to face with God. From
the theological standpoint it is also correct to say that in Scotland, under
the influence of Calvinism, the Reformation also elevated and purified the
idea of God, which under Romanism had been lowered and degraded. Just as
Luther brought religion back to the Biblical idea by reviving the doctrine
of Justification by Faith, so Calvin brought religion back to the Biblical
idea by reviving in men's minds the idea of the glory, the majesty, and the
holiness of the Creator.
Not that this idea was absent from the writings of Luther
and other Reformers. What is meant is that with Calvinism the doctrine of
God stands in the forefront: it is made, so to speak, the starting-point of
the religious life, and of a comprehensive system of thought. Luther's
primary concern was with the salvation of man; Calvin's primary concern was
with the glory of God. In this Calvin was strictly following in the track of
the Biblical writers. What is the dominating conception of God in the Bible?
Is it not that of a Being in presence of whose infinite and awful majesty
the human mind instinctively bends in adoration—a Being whose favour is
better than life, and in awe-stricken communion with whom is the highest
bliss of which the soul of man is capable? How are we to think of this
Being? We know what Romanism thought. In our day thinkers have been busy
with speculations, but none of them have succeeded in presenting the modern
mind with such a full view as that of Calvinism. The problem is to find room
in a satisfying conception of God for personality. Personality, we are told,
is a human attribute, and cannot be predicated of the infinite and eternal
ground of the Universe. From Spinoza and Hegel to Spencer philosophy has
been baffled in the attempt to frame a conception which, while doing justice
to the ideas of infinity and eternity, yet finds a place for the element of
personality, without which we get no farther than a dead Universe, pursuing
its purposeless way to a purposeless end.
The value of Calvinism is that, while purifying the idea
of God from the errors of Romanism, it also saves it from the blank despair
of an agnostic materialism, and an equally agnostic idealism. The God of
Calvinism is a God whose greatness no mind can measure, but whose
personality is manifested in His all-embracing purpose in nature and in
history. All thinkers agree that there is Unity at the heart of things, and
the latest thinkers of eminence, like Lotze, are coming round to the
Calvinistic view, that to this Unity must
be attributed personality and purpose, and that in the
great world-drama there is traceable a providential ordering of events. In
the theological evolution of Scotland, Calvinism not only played an
important part at the time of the Reformation, but it may safely be said
that it embraced in its idea of God conceptions which will hold a permanent
place in the theology of the immediate future. Along with the permanent
elements, Calvinism contained notions which must be discarded. It aspired to
a familiar reading of the Divine will, an intimacy with the Divine purpose
in regard to the future of the race, which has done much to bring it into
discredit, and undoubtedly did much to provoke a reaction.