the unseen world and other essays-第33章
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Ducal Library at Wolfenbuttel; of which he was librarian; Lessing published the first portion of this work; under the title of 〃Fragments drawn from the Papers of an Anonymous Writer。〃 This first Fragment; on the 〃Toleration of Deists;〃 awakened but little opposition; for the eighteenth century; though intolerant enough; did not parade its bigotry; but rather saw fit to disclaim it。 A hundred years before; Rutherford; in his 〃Free Disputation;〃 had declared 〃toleration of alle religions to bee not farre removed from blasphemie。〃 Intolerance was then a thing to be proud of; but in Lessing's time some progress had been achieved; and men began to think it a good thing to seem tolerant。 The succeeding Fragments were to test this liberality and reveal the flimsiness of the stuff of which it was made。 When the unknown disputant began to declare 〃the impossibility of a revelation upon which all men can rest a solid faith;〃 and when he began to criticize the evidences of Christ's resurrection; such a storm burst out in the theological world of Germany as had not been witnessed since the time of Luther。 The recent Colenso controversy in England was but a gentle breeze compared to it。 Press and pulpit swarmed with 〃refutations;〃 in which weakness of argument and scantiness of erudition were compensated by strength of acrimony and unscrupulousness of slander。 Pamphlets and sermons; says M。 Fontanes; 〃were multiplied; to denounce the impious blasphemer; who; destitute alike of shame and of courage; had sheltered himself behind a paltry fiction; in order to let loose upon society an evil spirit of unbelief。〃 But Lessing's artifice had been intended to screen the memory of Reimarus; rather than his own reputation。 He was not the man to quail before any amount of human opposition; and it was when the tempest of invective was just at its height that he published the last and boldest Fragment of all;on 〃the Designs of Jesus and his Disciples。〃
The publication of these Fragments led to a mighty controversy。 The most eminent; both for uncompromising zeal and for worldly position; of those who had attacked Lessing; was Melchior Goetze; 〃pastor primarius〃 at the Hamburg Cathedral。 Though his name is now remembered only because of his connection with Lessing; Goetze was not destitute of learning and ability。 He was a collector of rare books; an amateur in numismatics; and an antiquarian of the narrow…minded sort。 Lessing had known him while at Hamburg; and had visited him so constantly as to draw forth from his friends malicious insinuations as to the excellence of the pastor's white wine。 Doubtless Lessing; as a wise man; was not insensible to the attractions of good Moselle; but that which he chiefly liked in this theologian was his logical and rigorously consistent turn of mind。 〃He always;〃 says M。 Fontanes; 〃cherished a holy horror of loose; inconsequent thinkers; and the man of the past; the inexorable guardian of tradition; appeared to him far more worthy of respect than the heterodox innovator who stops in mid…course; and is faithful neither to reason nor to faith。〃
But when Lessing published these unhallowed Fragments; the hour of conflict had sounded; and Goetze cast himself into the arena with a boldness and impetuosity which Lessing; in his artistic capacity; could not fail to admire。 He spared no possible means of reducing his enemy to submission。 He aroused against him all the constituted authorities; the consistories; and even the Aulic Council of the Empire; and he even succeeded in drawing along with him the chief of contemporary rationalists; Semler; who so far forgot himself as to declare that Lessing; for what he had done; deserved to be sent to the madhouse。 But with all Goetze's orthodox valour; he was no match for the antagonist whom he had excited to activity。 The great critic replied with pamphlet after pamphlet; invincible in logic and erudition; sparkling with wit; and irritating in their utter coolness。 Such pamphlets had not been seen since Pascal published the 〃Provincial Letters。〃 Goetze found that he had taken up arms against a master in the arts of controversy; and before long he became well aware that he was worsted。 Having brought the case before the Aulic Council; which consisted in great part of Catholics; the stout pastor; forgetting that judgment had not yet been rendered; allowed himself to proclaim that all who do not recognize the Bible as the only source of Christianity are not fit to be called Christians at all。 Lessing was not slow to profit by this unlucky declaration。 Questioned; with all manner of ferocious vituperation; by Goetze; as to what sort of Christianity might have existed prior to and independently of the New Testament canon; Lessing imperturbably answered: 〃By the Christian religion I mean all the confessions of faith contained in the collection of creeds of the first four centuries of the Christian Church; including; if you wish it; the so…called creed of the apostles; as well as the creed of Athanasius。 The content of these confessions is called by the earlier Fathers the regula fidei; or rule of faith。 This rule of faith is not drawn from the writings of the New Testament。 It existed before any of the books in the New Testament were written。 It sufficed not only for the first Christians of the age of the apostles; but for their descendants during four centuries。 And it is; therefore; the veritable foundation upon which the Church of Christ is built; a foundation not based upon Scripture。〃 Thus; by a master…stroke; Lessing secured the adherence of the Catholics constituting a majority of the Aulic Council of the Empire。 Like Paul before him; he divided the Sanhedrim。 So that Goetze; foiled in his attempts at using violence; and disconcerted by the patristic learning of one whom he had taken to be a mere connoisseur in art and writer of plays for the theatre; concluded that discretion was the surest kind of valour; and desisted from further attacks。
Lessing's triumph came opportunely; for already the ministry of Brunswick had not only confiscated the Fragments; but had prohibited him from publishing anything more on the subject without first obtaining express authority to do so。 His last replies to Goetze were published at Hamburg; and as he held himself in readiness to depart from Wolfenbuttel; he wrote to several friends that he had conceived the design of a drama; with which he would tear the theologians in pieces more than with a dozen Fragments。 〃I will try and see;〃 said he; 〃if they will let me preach in peace from my old pulpit; the theatre。〃 In this way originated 〃Nathan the Wise。〃 But it in no way answered to the expectations either of Lessing's friends or of his enemies。 Both the one and the other expected to see the controversy with Goetze carried on; developed; and generalized in the poem。 They looked for a satirical comedy; in which orthodoxy should be held up for scathing ridicule; or at least for a direful tragedy; the moral of which; like that of the great poem of Lucretius; should be
〃Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum。〃
Had Lessing produced such a poem; he would doubtless have gratified his free…thinking friends and wreaked due literary vengeance upon his theological persecutors。 He would; perhaps; have given articulate expression to the radicalism of his own time; and; like Voltaire; might have constituted himself the leader of the age; the incarnation of its most conspicuous tendencies。 But Lessing did nothing of the kind; and the expectations formed of him by friends and enemies alike show how little he was understood by either。 〃Nathan the Wise〃 was; as we shall see; in the eighteenth century an entirely new phenomenon; and its author was the pioneer of a quite new religious philosophy。
Reimarus; the able author of the Fragments; in his attack upon the evidences of revealed religion; had taken the same ground as Voltaire and the old English deists。 And when we have said this; we have sufficiently defined his position; for the tenets of the deists are at the present day pretty well known; and are; moreover; of very little vital importance; having long since been supplanted by a more just and comprehensive philosophy。 Reimarus accepted neither m