



Produced by D. R. Thompson





THE LIGHTS OF THE CHURCH AND THE LIGHT OF SCIENCE

ESSAY #6 FROM "SCIENCE AND HEBREW TRADITION"


By Thomas Henry Huxley



There are three ways of regarding any account of past occurrences,
whether delivered to us orally or recorded in writing.

The narrative may be exactly true. That is to say, the words, taken in
their natural sense, and interpreted according to the rules of grammar,
may convey to the mind of the hearer, or of the reader an idea precisely
correspondent with one which would have remained in the mind of a
witness. For example, the statement that King Charles the First was
beheaded at Whitehall on the 30th day of January 1649, is as exactly
true as any proposition in mathematics or physics; no one doubts that
any person of sound faculties, properly placed, who was present at
Whitehall throughout that day, and who used his eyes, would have seen
the King's head cut off; and that there would have remained in his mind
an idea of that occurrence which he would have put into words of the
same value as those which we use to express it.

Or the narrative may be partly true and partly false. Thus, some
histories of the time tell us what the King said, and what Bishop Juxon
said; or report royalist conspiracies to effect a rescue; or detail the
motives which induced the chiefs of the Commonwealth to resolve that
the King should die. One account declares that the King knelt at a high
block, another that he lay down with his neck on a mere plank. And
there are contemporary pictorial representations of both these modes of
procedure. Such narratives, while veracious as to the main event,
may and do exhibit various degrees of unconscious and conscious
misrepresentation, suppression, and invention, till they become hardly
distinguishable from pure fictions. Thus, they present a transition
to narratives of a third class, in which the fictitious element
predominates. Here, again, there are all imaginable gradations, from
such works as Defoe's quasi-historical account of the Plague year,
which probably gives a truer conception of that dreadful time than any
authentic history, through the historical novel, drama, and epic, to
the purely phantasmal creations of imaginative genius, such as the old
"Arabian Nights" or the modern "Shaving of Shagpat." It is not strictly
needful for my present purpose that I should say anything about
narratives which are professedly fictitious. Yet it may be well,
perhaps, if I disclaim any intention of derogating from their value,
when I insist upon the paramount necessity of recollecting that there is
no sort of relation between the ethical, or the aesthetic, or even
the scientific importance of such works, and their worth as historical
documents. Unquestionably, to the poetic artist, or even to the student
of psychology, "Hamlet" and "Macbeth" may be better instructors than
all the books of a wilderness of professors of aesthetics or of moral
philosophy. But, as evidence of occurrences in Denmark, or in
Scotland, at the times and places indicated, they are out of court;
the profoundest admiration for them, the deepest gratitude for their
influence, are consistent with the knowledge that, historically
speaking, they are worthless fables, in which any foundation of reality
that may exist is submerged beneath the imaginative superstructure.

At present, however, I am not concerned to dwell upon the importance
of fictitious literature and the immensity of the work which it has
effected in the education of the human race. I propose to deal with the
much more limited inquiry: Are there two other classes of consecutive
narratives (as distinct from statements of individual facts), or only
one? Is there any known historical work which is throughout exactly
true, or is there not? In the case of the great majority of histories
the answer is not doubtful: they are all only partially true. Even those
venerable works which bear the names of some of the greatest of ancient
Greek and Roman writers, and which have been accepted by generation
after generation, down to modern times, as stories of unquestionable
truth, have been compelled by scientific criticism, after a long battle,
to descend to the common level, and to confession to a large admixture
of error. I might fairly take this for granted; but it may be well that
I should entrench myself behind the very apposite words of a historical
authority who is certainly not obnoxious to even a suspicion of
sceptical tendencies. [1]

    Time was--and that not very long ago--when all the relations of
    ancient authors concerning the old world were received with a
    ready belief; and an unreasoning and uncritical faith accepted
    with equal satisfaction the narrative of the campaigns of Caesar
    and of the doings of Romulus, the account of Alexander's marches
    and of the conquests of Semiramis. We can most of us remember
    when, in this country, the whole story of regal Rome, and even
    the legend of the Trojan settlement in Latium, were seriously
    placed before boys as history, and discoursed of as
    unhesitatingly and in as dogmatic a tone as the tale of the
    Catilline Conspiracy or the Conquest of Britain....

    But all this is now changed. The last century has seen the birth
    and growth of a new science--the Science of Historical
    Criticism.... The whole world of profane history has been
    revolutionised....

If these utterances were true when they fell from the lips of a Bampton
lecturer in 1859, with how much greater force do they appeal to us now,
when the immense labours of the generation now passing away constitute
one vast illustration of the power and fruitfulness of scientific
methods of investigation in history, no less than in all other
departments of knowledge.

At the present time, I suppose, there is no one who doubts that
histories which appertain to any other people than the Jews, and their
spiritual progeny in the first century, fall within the second class
of the three enumerated. Like Goethe's Autobiography, they might all be
entitled "Wahrheit und Dichtung"--"Truth and Fiction." The proportion
of the two constituents changes indefinitely; and the quality of the
fiction varies through the whole gamut of unveracity. But "Dichtung" is
always there. For the most acute and learned of historians cannot
remedy the imperfections of his sources of information; nor can the
most impartial wholly escape the influence of the "personal equation"
generated by his temperament and by his education. Therefore, from the
narratives of Herodotus to those set forth in yesterday's "Times," all
history is to be read subject to the warning that fiction has its share
therein. The modern vast development of fugitive literature cannot be
the unmitigated evil that some do vainly say it is, since it has put
an end to the popular delusion of less press-ridden times, that
what appears in print must be true. We should rather hope that some
beneficent influence may create among the erudite a like healthy
suspicion of manuscripts and inscriptions, however ancient; for a
bulletin may lie, even though it be written in cuneiform characters.
Hotspur's starling, that was to be taught to speak nothing but
"Mortimer" into the ears of King Henry the Fourth, might be a useful
inmate of every historian's library, if "Fiction" were substituted for
the name of Harry Percy's friend.

But it was the chief object of the lecturer to the congregation gathered
in St. Mary's, Oxford, thirty-one years ago, to prove to them, by
evidence gathered with no little labour and marshalled with much skill,
that one group of historical works was exempt from the general rule; and
that the narratives contained in the canonical Scriptures are free from
any admixture of error. With justice and candour, the lecturer impresses
upon his hearers that the special distinction of Christianity, among the
religions of the world, lies in its claim to be historical; to be surely
founded upon events which have happened, exactly as they are declared to
have happened in its sacred books; which are true, that is, in the sense
that the statement about the execution of Charles the First is
true. Further, it is affirmed that the New Testament presupposes the
historical exactness of the Old Testament; that the points of contact
of "sacred" and "profane" history are innumerable; and that the
demonstration of the falsity of the Hebrew records, especially in regard
to those narratives which are assumed to be true in the New Testament,
would be fatal to Christian theology.

My utmost ingenuity does not enable me to discover a flaw in the
argument thus briefly summarised. I am fairly at a loss to comprehend
how any one, for a moment, can doubt that Christian theology must stand
or fall with the historical trustworthiness of the Jewish Scriptures.
The very conception of the Messiah, or Christ, is inextricably
interwoven with Jewish history; the identification of Jesus of Nazareth
with that Messiah rests upon the interpretation of passages of the
Hebrew Scriptures which have no evidential value unless they possess the
historical character assigned to them. If the covenant with Abraham was
not made; if circumcision and sacrifices were not ordained by Jahveh; if
the "ten words" were not written by God's hand on the stone tables; if
Abraham is more or less a mythical hero, such as Theseus; the story
of the Deluge a fiction; that of the Fall a legend; and that of the
creation the dream of a seer; if all these definite and detailed
narratives of apparently real events have no more value as history than
have the stories of the regal period of Rome--what is to be said about
the Messianic doctrine, which is so much less clearly enunciated?
And what about the authority of the writers of the books of the New
Testament, who, on this theory, have not merely accepted flimsy fictions
for solid truths, but have built the very foundations of Christian dogma
upon legendary quicksands?

But these may be said to be merely the carpings of that carnal reason
which the profane call common sense; I hasten, therefore, to bring up
the forces of unimpeachable ecclesiastical authority in support of my
position. In a sermon preached last December, in St. Paul's Cathedral,
[2] Canon Liddon declares:--

"For Christians it will be enough to know that our Lord Jesus Christ set
the seal of His infallible sanction on the whole of the Old Testament.
He found the Hebrew canon as we have it in our hands to-day, and He
treated it as an authority which was above discussion. Nay more: He went
out of His way--if we may reverently speak thus--to sanction not a few
portions of it which modern scepticism rejects. When He would warn His
hearers against the dangers of spiritual relapse, He bids them remember
'Lot's wife.' [3] When He would point out how worldly engagements may
blind the soul to a coming judgment, He reminds them how men ate, and
drank, and married, and were given in marriage, until the day that Noah
entered into the ark, and the Flood came and destroyed them all. [4] If
He would put His finger on a fact in past Jewish history which, by its
admitted reality, would warrant belief in His own coming Resurrection,
He points to Jonah's being three days and three nights in the whale's
belly (p. 23)." [5]

The preacher proceeds to brush aside the common--I had almost said
vulgar--apologetic pretext that Jesus was using _ad hominem_ arguments,
or "accommodating" his better knowledge to popular ignorance, as well
as to point out the inadmissibility of the other alternative, that he
shared the popular ignorance. And to those who hold the latter view
sarcasm is dealt out with no niggard hand.

    But they will find it difficult to persuade mankind that, if He
    could be mistaken on a matter of such strictly religious
    importance as the value of the sacred literature of His
    countrymen, He can be safely trusted about anything else. The
    trustworthiness of the Old Testament is, in fact, inseparable
    from the trustworthiness of our Lord Jesus Christ; and if we
    believe that He is the true Light of the world, we shall close
    our ears against suggestions impairing the credit of those
    Jewish Scriptures which have received the stamp of His Divine
    authority. (p. 25)

Moreover, I learn from the public journals that a brilliant and
sharply-cut view of orthodoxy, of like hue and pattern, was only the
other day exhibited in that great theological kaleidoscope, the pulpit
of St. Mary's, recalling the time so long passed by, when a Bampton
lecturer, in the same place, performed the unusual feat of leaving the
faith of old-fashioned Christians undisturbed.

Yet many things have happened in the intervening thirty-one years. The
Bampton lecturer of 1859 had to grapple only with the infant Hercules of
historical criticism; and he is now a full-grown athlete, bearing on
his shoulders the spoils of all the lions that have stood in his path.
Surely a martyr's courage, as well as a martyr's faith, is needed by any
one who, at this time, is prepared to stand by the following plea for
the veracity of the Pentateuch:--

"Adam, according to the Hebrew original, was for 243 years contemporary
with Methuselah, who conversed for a hundred years with Shem. Shem was
for fifty years contemporary with Jacob, who probably saw Jochebed,
Moses's mother. Thus, Moses might by oral tradition have obtained the
history of Abraham, and even of the Deluge, at third hand; and that of
the Temptation and the Fall at fifth hand....

"If it be granted--as it seems to be--that the great and stirring events
in a nation's life will, under ordinary circumstances, be remembered
(apart from all written memorials) for the space of 150 years, being
handed down through five generations, it must be allowed (even on more
human grounds) that the account which Moses gives of the Temptation and
the Fall is to be depended upon, if it passed through no more than four
hands between him and Adam." [6]

If "the trustworthiness of our Lord Jesus Christ" is to stand or fall
with the belief in the sudden transmutation of the chemical components
of a woman's body into sodium chloride, or on the "admitted reality"
of Jonah's ejection, safe and sound, on the shores of the Levant, after
three days' sea-journey in the stomach of a gigantic marine animal, what
possible pretext can there be for even hinting a doubt as to the precise
truth of the longevity attributed to the Patriarchs? Who that has
swallowed the camel of Jonah's journey will be guilty of the affectation
of straining at such a historical gnat--nay, midge--as the supposition
that the mother of Moses was told the story of the Flood by Jacob; who
had it straight from Shem; who was on friendly terms with Methuselah;
who knew Adam quite well?

Yet, by the strange irony of things, the illustrious brother of the
divine who propounded this remarkable theory, has been the guide and
foremost worker of that band of investigators of the records of Assyria
and of Babylonia, who have opened to our view, not merely a new chapter,
but a new volume of primeval history, relating to the very people who
have the most numerous points of contact with the life of the ancient
Hebrews. Now, whatever imperfections may yet obscure the full value of
the Mesopotamian records, everything that has been clearly ascertained
tends to the conclusion that the assignment of no more than 4000 years
to the period between the time of the origin of mankind and that
of Augustus Caesar, is wholly inadmissible. Therefore the Biblical
chronology, which Canon Rawlinson trusted so implicitly in 1859, is
relegated by all serious critics to the domain of fable.

But if scientific method, operating in the region of history, of
philology, of archaeology, in the course of the last thirty or forty
years, has become thus formidable to the theological dogmatist, what may
not be said about scientific method working in the province of
physical science? For, if it be true that the Canonical Scriptures have
innumerable points of contact with civil history, it is no less true
that they have almost as many with natural history; and their accuracy
is put to the test as severely by the latter as by the former. The
origin of the present state of the heavens and the earth is a problem
which lies strictly within the province of physical science; so is that
of the origin of man among living things; so is that of the physical
changes which the earth has undergone since the origin of man; so is
that of the origin of the various races and nations of men, with all
their varieties of language and physical conformation. Whether the
earth moves round the sun or the contrary; whether the bodily and mental
diseases of men and animals are caused by evil spirits or not; whether
there is such an agency as witchcraft or not--all these are purely
scientific questions; and to all of them the Canonical Scriptures
profess to give true answers. And though nothing is more common than the
assumption that these books come into conflict only with the speculative
part of modern physical science, no assumption can have less foundation.

The antagonism between natural knowledge and the Pentateuch would be as
great if the speculations of our time had never been heard of. It arises
out of contradiction upon matters of fact. The books of ecclesiastical
authority declare that certain events happened in a certain fashion; the
books of scientific authority say they did not. As it seems that this
unquestionable truth has not yet penetrated among many of those who
speak and write on these subjects, it may be useful to give a full
illustration of it. And for that purpose I propose to deal, at some
length, with the narrative of the Noachian Deluge given in Genesis.


The Bampton lecturer in 1859, and the Canon of St. Paul's in 1890, are
in full agreement that this history is true, in the sense in which I
have defined historical truth. The former is of opinion that the account
attributed to Berosus records a tradition--

   not drawn from the Hebrew record, much less the foundation of
   that record; yet coinciding with it in the most remarkable way.
   The Babylonian version is tricked out with a few extravagances,
   as the monstrous size of the vessel and the translation of
   Xisuthros; but otherwise it is the Hebrew history _down to its
   minutiae._ (p. 64).

Moreover, correcting Niebuhr, the Bampton lecturer points out that the
narrative of Berosus implies the universality of the Flood.

   It is plain that the waters are represented as prevailing above
   the tops of the loftiest mountains in Armenia--a height which
   must have been seen to involve the submersion of all the
   countries with which the Babylonians were acquainted (p. 66).

I may remark, in passing, that many people think the size of Noah's ark
"monstrous," considering the probable state of the art of shipbuilding
only 1600 years after the origin of man; while others are so
unreasonable as to inquire why the translation of Enoch is less an
"extravagance" than that of Xisuthros. It is more important, however, to
note that the Universality of the Deluge is recognised, not merely as
a part of the story, but as a necessary consequence of some of its
details. The latest exponent of Anglican orthodoxy, as we have seen,
insists upon the accuracy of the Pentateuchal history of the Flood in a
still more forcible manner. It is cited as one of those very narratives
to which the authority of the Founder of Christianity is pledged,
and upon the accuracy of which "the trustworthiness of our Lord Jesus
Christ" is staked, just as others have staked it upon the truth of the
histories of demoniac possession in the Gospels.

Now, when those who put their trust in scientific methods of
ascertaining the truth in the province of natural history find
themselves confronted and opposed, on their own ground, by
ecclesiastical pretensions to better knowledge, it is, undoubtedly, most
desirable for them to make sure that their conclusions, whatever they
may be, are well founded. And, if they put aside the unauthorised
interference with their business and relegate the Pentateuchal history
to the region of pure fiction, they are bound to assure themselves that
they do so because the plainest teachings of Nature (apart from all
doubtful speculations) are irreconcilable with the assertions which they
reject.

At the present time, it is difficult to persuade serious scientific
inquirers to occupy themselves, in any way, with the Noachian Deluge.
They look at you with a smile and a shrug, and say they have more
important matters to attend to than mere antiquarianism. But it was not
so in my youth. At that time, geologists and biologists could hardly
follow to the end any path of inquiry without finding the way blocked
by Noah and his ark, or by the first chapter of Genesis; and it was a
serious matter, in this country at any rate, for a man to be suspected
of doubting the literal truth of the Diluvial or any other Pentateuchal
history. The fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of the Geological
Club (in 1824) was, if I remember rightly, the last occasion on which
the late Sir Charles Lyell spoke to even so small a public as the
members of that body. Our veteran leader lighted up once more; and,
referring to the difficulties which beset his early efforts to create
a rational science of geology, spoke, with his wonted clearness and
vigour, of the social ostracism which pursued him after the publication
of the "Principles of Geology," in 1830, on account of the obvious
tendency of that noble work to discredit the Pentateuchal accounts of
the Creation and the Deluge. If my younger contemporaries find this hard
to believe, I may refer them to a grave book, "On the Doctrine of the
Deluge," published eight years later, and dedicated by its author to
his father, the then Archbishop of York. The first chapter refers to the
treatment of the "Mosaic Deluge," by Dr. Buckland and Mr. Lyell, in the
following terms:

   Their respect for revealed religion has prevented them from
   arraying themselves openly against the Scriptural account of it
   --much less do they deny its truth--but they are in a great
   hurry to escape from the consideration of it, and evidently
   concur in the opinion of Linnaeus, that no proofs whatever of
   the Deluge are to be discovered in the structure of the
   earth (p. 1).

And after an attempt to reply to some of Lyell's arguments, which it
would be cruel to reproduce, the writer continues:--

   When, therefore, upon such slender grounds, it is
   determined, in answer to those who insist upon its universality,
   that the Mosaic Deluge must be considered a preternatural event,
   far beyond the reach of philosophical inquiry; not only as to
   the causes employed to produce it, but as to the effects most
   likely to result from it; that determination wears an aspect of
   scepticism, which, however much soever it may be unintentional
   in the mind of the writer, yet cannot but produce an evil
   impression on those who are already predisposed to carp and
   cavil at the evidences of Revelation (pp. 8-9).

The kindly and courteous writer of these curious passages is evidently
unwilling to make the geologists the victims of general opprobrium
by pressing the obvious consequences of their teaching home. One is
therefore pained to think of the feelings with which, if he lived so
long as to become acquainted with the "Dictionary of the Bible," he must
have perused the article "Noah," written by a dignitary of the Church
for that standard compendium and published in 1863. For the doctrine
of the universality of the Deluge is therein altogether given up; and I
permit myself to hope that a long criticism of the story from the point
of view of natural science, with which, at the request of the learned
theologian who wrote it, I supplied him, may, in some degree, have
contributed towards this happy result.

Notwithstanding diligent search, I have been unable to discover that the
universality of the Deluge has any defender left, at least among those
who have so far mastered the rudiments of natural knowledge as to be
able to appreciate the weight of evidence against it. For example, when
I turned to the "Speaker's Bible," published under the sanction of
high Anglican authority, I found the following judicial and judicious
deliverance, the skilful wording of which may adorn, but does not hide,
the completeness of the surrender of the old teaching:--

"Without pronouncing too hastily on any fair inferences from the
words of Scripture, we may reasonably say that their most natural
interpretation is, that the whole race of man had become grievously
corrupted since the faithful had intermingled with the ungodly; that the
inhabited world was consequently filled with violence, and that God
had decreed to destroy all mankind except one single family; that,
therefore, all that portion of the earth, perhaps as yet a very small
portion, into which mankind had spread was overwhelmed with water. The
ark was ordained to save one faithful family; and lest that family, on
the subsidence of the waters, should find the whole country round them a
desert, a pair of all the beasts of the land and of the fowls of the
air were preserved along with them, and along with them went forth to
replenish the now desolated continent. The words of Scripture (confirmed
as they are by universal tradition) appear at least to mean as much as
this. They do not necessarily mean more." [7]

In the third edition of Kitto's "Cyclopaedia of Biblical Literature"
(1876), the article "Deluge," written by my friend, the present
distinguished head of the Geological Survey of Great Britain,
extinguishes the universality doctrine as thoroughly as might be
expected from its authorship; and, since the writer of the article
"Noah" refers his readers to that entitled "Deluge," it is to be
supposed, notwithstanding his generally orthodox tone, that he does
not dissent from its conclusions. Again, the writers in Herzog's
"Real-Encyclopadie" (Bd. X. 1882) and in Riehm's "Handworterbuch"
(1884)--both works with a conservative leaning--are on the same side;
and Diestel, [8] in his full discussion of the subject, remorselessly
rejects the universality doctrine. Even that staunch opponent of
scientific rationalism--may I say rationality?--Zockler [9] flinches
from a distinct defence of the thesis, any opposition to which,
well within my recollection, was howled down by the orthodox as mere
"infidelity." All that, in his sore straits, Dr. Zockler is able to do,
is to pronounce a faint commendation upon a particularly absurd attempt
at reconciliation, which would make out the Noachian Deluge to be
a catastrophe which occurred at the end of the Glacial Epoch. This
hypothesis involves only the trifle of a physical revolution of which
geology knows nothing; and which, if it secured the accuracy of the
Pentateuchal writer about the fact of the Deluge, would leave the
details of his account as irreconcilable with the truths of elementary
physical science as ever. Thus I may be permitted to spare myself and my
readers the weariness of a recapitulation of the overwhelming arguments
against the universality of the Deluge, which they will now find for
themselves stated, as fully and forcibly as could be wished, by Anglican
and other theologians, whose orthodoxy and conservative tendencies
have, hitherto, been above suspicion. Yet many fully admit (and, indeed,
nothing can be plainer) that, as a matter of fact, the whole earth known
to him was inundated; nor is it less obvious that unless all mankind,
with the exception of Noah and his family, were actually destroyed, the
references to the Flood in the New Testament are unintelligible.

But I am quite aware that the strength of the demonstration that no
universal Deluge ever took place has produced a change of front in the
army of apologetic writers. They have imagined that the substitution
of the adjective "partial" for "universal," will save the credit of the
Pentateuch, and permit them, after all, without too many blushes,
to declare that the progress of modern science only strengthens the
authority of Moses. Nowhere have I found the case of the advocates of
this method of escaping from the difficulties of the actual position
better put than in the lecture of Professor Diestel to which I have
referred. After frankly admitting that the old doctrine of universality
involves physical impossibilities, he continues:--

   All these difficulties fall away as soon as we give up the
   universality of the Deluge, and imagine a _partial_
   flooding of the earth, say in western Asia. But have we a right
   to do so? The narrative speaks of "the whole earth." But what is
   the meaning of this expression? Surely not the whole surface of
   the earth according to the ideas of _modern_ geographers,
   but, at most, according to the conceptions of the Biblical
   author. This very simple conclusion, however, is never drawn by
   too many readers of the Bible. But one need only cast one's eyes
   over the tenth chapter of Genesis in order to become acquainted
   with the geographical horizon of the Jews. In the north it was
   bounded by the Black Sea and the mountains of Armenia;
   extended towards the east very little beyond the Tigris;
   hardly reached the apex of the Persian Gulf; passed, then,
   through the middle of Arabia and the Red Sea; went southward
   through Abyssinia, and then turned westward by the frontiers of
   Egypt, and inclosed the easternmost islands of the
   Mediterranean (p. 11).

The justice of this observation must be admitted, no less than the
further remark that, in still earlier times, the pastoral Hebrews very
probably had yet more restricted notions of what constituted the "whole
earth." Moreover, I, for one, fully agree with Professor Diestel that
the motive, or generative incident, of the whole story is to be sought
in the occasionally excessive and desolating floods of the Euphrates and
the Tigris.

Let us, provisionally, accept the theory of a partial deluge, and try to
form a clear mental picture of the occurrence. Let us suppose that, for
forty days and forty nights, such a vast quantity of water was poured
upon the ground that the whole surface of Mesopotamia was covered by
water to a depth certainly greater, probably much greater, than fifteen
cubits, or twenty feet (Gen. vii. 20). The inundation prevails upon
the earth for one hundred and fifty days and then the flood gradually
decreases, until, on the seventeenth day of the seventh month, the ark,
which had previously floated on its surface, grounds upon the "mountains
of Ararat" [10] (Gen. viii. 34). Then, as Diestel has acutely pointed
out ("Sintflut," p. 13), we are to imagine the further subsidence of the
flood to take place so gradually that it was not until nearly two months
and a half after this time (that is to say, on the first day of the
tenth month) that the "tops of the mountains" became visible. Hence it
follows that, if the ark drew even as much as twenty feet of water, the
level of the inundation fell very slowly--at a rate of only a few inches
a day--until the top of the mountain on which it rested became visible.
This is an amount of movement which, if it took place in the sea, would
be overlooked by ordinary people on the shore. But the Mesopotamian
plain <DW72>s gently, from an elevation of 500 or 600 feet at its
northern end, to the sea, at its southern end, with hardly so much as a
notable ridge to break its uniform flatness, for 300 to 400 miles.
These being the conditions of the case, the following inquiry naturally
presents itself: not, be it observed, as a recondite problem, generated
by modern speculation, but as a plain suggestion flowing out of that
very ordinary and archaic piece of knowledge that water cannot be piled
up like in a heap, like sand; or that it seeks the lowest level. When,
after 150 days, "the fountains also of the deep and the windows of
heaven were stopped, and the rain from heaven was restrained" (Gen.
viii.2), what prevented the mass of water, several, possibly very many,
fathoms deep, which covered, say, the present site of Bagdad, from
sweeping seaward in a furious torrent; and, in a very few hours,
leaving, not only the "tops of the mountains," but the whole plain,
save any minor depressions, bare? How could its subsistence, by any
possibility, be an affair of weeks and months?

And if this difficulty is not enough, let any one try to imagine how
a mass of water several perhaps very many, fathoms deep, could be
accumulated on a flat surface of land rising well above the sea,
and separated from it by no sort of barrier. Most people know Lord's
Cricket-ground. Would it not be an absurd contradiction to our common
knowledge of the properties of water to imagine that, if all the
mains of all the waterworks of London were turned on to it, they could
maintain a heap of water twenty feet deep over its level surface? Is it
not obvious that the water, whatever momentary accumulation might take
place at first, would not stop there, but that it would dash, like a
mighty mill-race, southwards down the gentle <DW72> which ends in the
Thames? And is it not further obvious, that whatever depth of water
might be maintained over the cricket-ground so long as all the mains
poured on to it, anything which floated there would be speedily whirled
away by the current, like a cork in a gutter when the rain pours? But
if this is so, then it is no less certain that Noah's deeply laden,
sailless, oarless, and rudderless craft, if by good fortune it escaped
capsizing in whirlpools, or having its bottom knocked into holes by
snags (like those which prove fatal even to well-built steamers on the
Mississippi in our day), would have speedily found itself a good way
down the Persian Gulf, and not long after in the Indian Ocean, somewhere
between Arabia and Hindostan. Even if, eventually, the ark might have
gone ashore, with other jetsam and flotsam, on the coasts of Arabia, or
of Hindostan, or of the Maldives, or of Madagascar, its return to the
"mountains of Ararat" would have been a miracle more stupendous than all
the rest.

Thus, the last state of the would-be reconcilers of the story of the
Deluge with fact is worse than the first. All that they have done is
to transfer the contradictions to established truth from the region
of science proper to that of common information and common sense. For,
really, the assertion that the surface of a body of deep water, to which
no addition was made, and which there was nothing to stop from running
into the sea, sank at the rate of only a few inches or even feet a day,
simply outrages the most ordinary and familiar teachings of every man's
daily experience. A child may see the folly of it.

In addition, I may remark that the necessary assumption of the "partial
Deluge" hypothesis (if it is confined to Mesopotamia) that the Hebrew
writer must have meant low hills when he said "high mountains," is quite
untenable. On the eastern side of the Mesopotamian plain, the snowy
peaks of the frontier ranges of Persia are visible from Bagdad, [11]
and even the most ignorant herdsmen in the neighbourhood of "Ur of the
Chaldees," near its western limit, could hardly have been unacquainted
with the comparatively elevated plateau of the Syrian desert which lay
close at hand. But, surely, we must suppose the Biblical writer to be
acquainted with the highlands of Palestine and with the masses of the
Sinaitic peninsula, which soar more than 8000 feet above the sea, if he
knew of no higher elevations; and, if so, he could not well have meant
to refer to mere hillocks when he said that "all the high mountains
which were under the whole heaven were covered" (Genesis vii. 19). Even
the hill-country of Galilee reaches an elevation of 4000 feet; and a
flood which covered it could by no possibility have been other than
universal in its superficial extent. Water really cannot be got to stand
at, say, 4000 feet above the sea-level over Palestine, without covering
the rest of the globe to the same height. Even if, in the course of
Noah's six hundredth year, some prodigious convulsion had sunk the whole
region inclosed within "the horizon of the geographical knowledge" of
the Israelites by that much, and another had pushed it up again, just
in time to catch the ark upon the "mountains of Ararat," matters are not
much mended. I am afraid to think of what would have become of a vessel
so little seaworthy as the ark and of its very numerous passengers,
under the peculiar obstacles to quiet flotation which such rapid
movements of depression and upheaval would have generated.

Thus, in view, not, I repeat of the recondite speculations of infidel
philosophers, but in the face of the plainest and most commonplace of
ascertained physical facts, the story of the Noachian Deluge has no more
claim to credit than has that of Deucalion; and whether it was, or was
not, suggested by the familiar acquaintance of its originators with the
effects of unusually great overflows of the Tigris and Euphrates, it is
utterly devoid of historical truth.

That is, in my judgment, the necessary result of the application of
criticism, based upon assured physical knowledge to the story of the
Deluge. And it is satisfactory that the criticism which is based, not
upon literary and historical speculations, but upon well-ascertained
facts in the departments of literature and history, tends to exactly the
same conclusion.

For I find this much agreed upon by all Biblical scholars of repute,
that the story of the Deluge in Genesis is separable into at least two
sets of statements; and that, when the statements thus separated are
recombined in their proper order, each set furnishes an account of
the event, coherent and complete within itself, but in some respects
discordant with that afforded by the other set. This fact, as I
understand, is not disputed. Whether one of these is the work of an
Elohist, and the other of a Jehovist narrator; whether the two have been
pieced together in this strange fashion because, in the estimation
of the compilers and editors of the Pentateuch, they had equal and
independent authority, or not; or whether there is some other way of
accounting for it--are questions the answers to which do not affect the
fact. If possible I avoid _a priori_ arguments. But still, I think it
may be urged, without imprudence, that a narrative having this structure
is hardly such as might be expected from a writer possessed of full and
infallibly accurate knowledge. Once more, it would seem that it is not
necessarily the mere inclination of the sceptical spirit to question
everything, or the wilful blindness of infidels, which prompts grave
doubts as to the value of a narrative thus curiously unlike the ordinary
run of veracious histories.

But the voice of archaeological and historical criticism still has to be
heard; and it gives forth no uncertain sound. The marvellous recovery of
the records of an antiquity, far superior to any that can be ascribed to
the Pentateuch, which has been effected by the decipherers of cuneiform
characters, has put us in possession of a series, once more, not of
speculations, but of facts, which have a most remarkable bearing upon
the question of the truthworthiness of the narrative of the Flood. It is
established, that for centuries before the asserted migration of Terah
from Ur of the Chaldees (which, according to the orthodox interpreters
of the Pentateuch, took place after the year 2000 B.C.) Lower
Mesopotamia was the seat of a civilisation in which art and science and
literature had attained a development formerly unsuspected or, if there
were faint reports of it, treated as fabulous. And it is also no matter
of speculation, but a fact, that the libraries of these people contain
versions of a long epic poem, one of the twelve books of which tells
a story of a deluge, which, in a number of its leading features,
corresponds with the story attributed to Berosus, no less than with the
story given in Genesis, with curious exactness. Thus, the correctness of
Canon Rawlinson's conclusion, cited above, that the story of Berosus was
neither drawn from the Hebrew record, nor is the foundation of it,
can hardly be questioned. It is highly probable, if not certain, that
Berosus relied upon one of the versions (for there seem to have been
several) of the old Babylonian epos, extant in his time; and, if that is
a reasonable conclusion, why is it unreasonable to believe that the
two stories, which the Hebrew compiler has put together in such an
inartistic fashion, were ultimately derived from the same source? I say
ultimately, because it does not at all follow that the two versions,
possibly trimmed by the Jehovistic writer on the one hand, and by the
Elohistic on the other, to suit Hebrew requirements, may not have been
current among the Israelites for ages. And they may have acquired great
authority before they were combined in the Pentateuch.

Looking at the convergence of all these lines of evidence to the
one conclusion--that the story of the Flood in Genesis is merely a
Bowdlerised version of one of the oldest pieces of purely fictitious
literature extant; that whether this is, or is not, its origin, the
events asserted in it to have taken place assuredly never did take
place; further, that, in point of fact, the story, in the plain and
logically necessary sense of its words, has long since been given up by
orthodox and conservative commentators of the Established Church--I can
but admire the courage and clear foresight of the Anglican divine who
tells us that we must be prepared to choose between the trustworthiness
of scientific method and the trustworthiness of that which the Church
declares to be Divine authority. For, to my mind, this declaration of
war to the knife against secular science, even in its most elementary
form; this rejection, without a moment's hesitation, of any and all
evidence which conflicts with theological dogma--is the only position
which is logically reconcilable with the axioms of orthodoxy. If the
Gospels truly report that which an incarnation of the God of Truth
communicated to the world, then it surely is absurd to attend to any
other evidence touching matters about which he made any clear statement,
or the truth of which is distinctly implied by his words. If the exact
historical truth of the Gospels is an axiom of Christianity, it is as
just and right for a Christian to say, Let us "close our ears against
suggestions" of scientific critics, as it is for the man of science to
refuse to waste his time upon circle-squarers and flat-earth fanatics.

It is commonly reported that the manifesto by which the Canon of St.
Paul's proclaims that he nails the colours of the straitest Biblical
infallibility to the mast of the ship ecclesiastical, was put forth as
a counterblast to "Lux Mundi"; and that the passages which I have more
particularly quoted are directed against the essay on "The Holy Spirit
and Inspiration" in that collection of treatises by Anglican divines of
high standing, who must assuredly be acquitted of conscious "infidel"
proclivities. I fancy that rumour must, for once, be right, for it is
impossible to imagine a more direct and diametrical contradiction than
that between the passages from the sermon cited above and those which
follow:--

   What is questioned is that our Lord's words foreclose certain
   critical positions as to the character of Old Testament
   literature. For example, does His use of Jonah's resurrection as
   a _type_ of His own, depend in any real degree upon whether
   it is historical fact or allegory?... Once more, our Lord uses
   the time before the Flood, to illustrate the carelessness of men
   before His own coming.... In referring to the Flood He
   certainly suggests that He is treating it as typical, for He
   introduces circumstances--"eating and drinking, marrying and
   giving in marriage "--which have no counterpart in the original
   narrative. (pp. 358-9).

While insisting on the flow of inspiration through the whole of the Old
Testament, the essayist does not admit its universality. Here, also, the
new apologetic demands a partial flood:

   But does the inspiration of the recorder guarantee the exact
   historical truth of what he records? And, in matter of fact, can
   the record with due regard to legitimate historical criticism,
   be pronounced true? Now, to the latter of these two questions
   (and they are quite distinct questions) we may reply that there
   is nothing to prevent our believing, as our faith strongly
   disposes us to believe, that the record from Abraham downward
   is, in substance, in the strict sense historical (p. 351).

It would appear, therefore, that there is nothing to prevent our
believing that the record, from Abraham upward, consists of stories in
the strict sense unhistorical, and that the pre-Abrahamic narratives are
mere moral and religious "types" and parables.

I confess I soon lose my way when I try to follow those who walk
delicately among "types" and allegories. A certain passion for clearness
forces me to ask, bluntly, whether the writer means to say that Jesus
did not believe the stories in question, or that he did? When Jesus
spoke, as of a matter of fact, that "the Flood came and destroyed them
all," did he believe that the Deluge really took place, or not? It seems
to me that, as the narrative mentions Noah's wife, and his sons'
wives, there is good scriptural warranty for the statement that the
antediluvians married and were given in marriage; and I should have
thought that their eating and drinking might be assumed by the firmest
believer in the literal truth of the story. Moreover, I venture to ask
what sort of value, as an illustration of God's methods of dealing with
sin, has an account of an event that never happened? If no Flood swept
the careless people away, how is the warning of more worth than the cry
of "Wolf" when there is no wolf? If Jonah's three days' residence in the
whale is not an "admitted reality," how could it "warrant belief" in
the "coming resurrection?" If Lot's wife was not turned into a pillar of
salt, the bidding those who turn back from the narrow path to "remember"
it is, morally, about on a level with telling a naughty child that a
bogy is coming to fetch it away. Suppose that a Conservative orator
warns his hearers to beware of great political and social changes,
lest they end, as in France, in the domination of a Robespierre;
what becomes, not only of his argument, but of his veracity, if he,
personally, does not believe that Robespierre existed and did the deeds
attributed to him?

Like all other attempts to reconcile the results of
scientifically-conducted investigation with the demands of the outworn
creeds of ecclesiasticism, the essay on Inspiration is just such a
failure as must await mediation, when the mediator is unable properly
to appreciate the weight of the evidence for the case of one of the two
parties. The question of "Inspiration" really possesses no interest for
those who have cast ecclesiasticism and all its works aside, and have no
faith in any source of truth save that which is reached by the
patient application of scientific methods. Theories of inspiration are
speculations as to the means by which the authors of statements, in the
Bible or elsewhere, have been led to say what they have said--and it
assumes that natural agencies are insufficient for the purpose. I prefer
to stop short of this problem, finding it more profitable to undertake
the inquiry which naturally precedes it--namely, Are these statements
true or false? If they are true, it may be worth while to go into
the question of their supernatural generation; if they are false, it
certainly is not worth mine.

Now, not only do I hold it to be proven that the story of the Deluge is
a pure fiction; but I have no hesitation in affirming the same thing of
the story of the Creation. [12] Between these two lies the story of the
creation of man and woman and their fall from primitive innocence,
which is even more monstrously improbable than either of the other two,
though, from the nature of the case, it is not so easily capable of
direct refutation. It can be demonstrated that the earth took longer
than six days in the making, and that the Deluge, as described, is a
physical impossibility; but there is no proving, especially to those who
are perfect in the art of closing their ears to that which they do not
wish to hear, that a snake did not speak, or that Eve was not made out
of one of Adam's ribs.

The compiler of Genesis, in its present form, evidently had a definite
plan in his mind. His countrymen, like all other men, were doubtless
curious to know how the world began; how men, and especially wicked
men, came into being, and how existing nations and races arose among the
descendants of one stock; and, finally, what was the history of their
own particular tribe. They, like ourselves, desired to solve the four
great problems of cosmogeny, anthropogeny, ethnogeny, and geneogeny. The
Pentateuch furnishes the solutions which appeared satisfactory to its
author. One of these, as we have seen, was borrowed from a Babylonian
fable; and I know of no reason to suspect any different origin for the
rest. Now, I would ask, is the story of the fabrication of Eve to be
regarded as one of those pre-Abrahamic narratives, the historical truth
of which is an open question, in face of the reference to it in a
speech unhappily famous for the legal oppression to which it has been
wrongfully forced to lend itself?

   Have ye not read, that he which made them from the beginning
   made them male and female, and said, For this cause shall a man
   leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife; and the
   twain shall become one flesh? (Matt. xix. 5.)

If divine authority is not here claimed for the twenty-fourth verse of
the second chapter of Genesis, what is the value of language? And again,
I ask, if one may play fast and loose with the story of the Fall as
a "type" or "allegory," what becomes of the foundation of Pauline
theology?--

   For since by man came death, by man came also the
   resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in
   Christ shall all be made alive (1 Corinthians xv. 21, 22).

If Adam may be held to be no more real a personage than Prometheus, and
if the story of the Fall is merely an instructive "type," comparable to
the profound Promethean mythus, what value has Paul's dialectic?

While, therefore, every right-minded man must sympathise with the
efforts of those theologians, who have not been able altogether to close
their ears to the still, small, voice of reason, to escape from the
fetters which ecclesiasticism has forged; the melancholy fact remains,
that the position they have taken up is hopelessly untenable. It is
raked alike by the old-fashioned artillery of the churches and by
the fatal weapons of precision with which the _enfants perdus_ of the
advancing forces of science are armed. They must surrender, or fall back
into a more sheltered position. And it is possible that they may long
find safety in such retreat.

It is, indeed, probable that the proportional number of those who will
distinctly profess their belief in the transubstantiation of Lot's wife,
and the anticipatory experience of submarine navigation by Jonah; in
water standing fathoms deep on the side of a declivity without anything
to hold it up; and in devils who enter swine--will not increase. But
neither is there ground for much hope that the proportion of those who
cast aside these fictions and adopt the consequence of that repudiation,
are, for some generations, likely to constitute a majority. Our age is
a day of compromises. The present and the near future seem given over
to those happily, if curiously, constituted people who see as little
difficulty in throwing aside any amount of post-Abrahamic Scriptural
narrative, as the authors of "Lux Mundi" see in sacrificing the
pre-Abrahamic stories; and, having distilled away every inconvenient
matter of fact in Christian history, continue to pay divine honours to
the residue. There really seems to be no reason why the next generation
should not listen to a Bampton Lecture modelled upon that addressed to
the last:--

   Time was--and that not very long ago--when all the relations of
   Biblical authors concerning the whole world were received with a
   ready belief; and an unreasoning and uncritical faith accepted
   with equal satisfaction the narrative of the Captivity and the
   doings of Moses at the court of Pharaoh, the account of the
   Apostolic meeting in the Epistle to the Galatians, and that of
   the fabrication of Eve. We can most of us remember when, in this
   country, the whole story of the Exodus, and even the legend of
   Jonah, were seriously placed before boys as history; and
   discoursed of in as dogmatic a tone as the tale of Agincourt or
   the history of the Norman Conquest.

   But all this is now changed. The last century has seen the
   growth of scientific criticism to its full strength. The whole
   world of history has been revolutionised and the mythology which
   embarrassed earnest Christians has vanished as an evil mist, the
   lifting of which has only more fully revealed the lineaments of
   infallible Truth. No longer in contact with fact of any kind,
   Faith stands now and for ever proudly inaccessible to the
   attacks of the infidel.

So far the apologist of the future. Why not? _Cantabit vacuus._




FOOTNOTES:

[Footnote 1: _Bampton Lectures_ (1859), on "The Historical Evidence of
the Truth of the Scripture Records stated anew, with Special Reference
to the Doubts and Discoveries of Modern Times," by the Rev. G.
Rawlinson, M.A., pp. 5-6.]

[Footnote 2: _The Worth of the Old Testament,_ a Sermon preached in St.
Paul's Cathedral on the second Sunday in Advent, 8th Dec., 1889, by
H. P. Liddon, D.D., D.C.L., Canon and Chancellor of St. Paul's. Second
edition revised and with a new preface, 1890.]

[Footnote 3: St. Luke xvii. 32.]

[Footnote 4: St. Luke xvii. 27.]

[Footnote 5: St. Matt. xii. 40.]

[Footnote 6: _Bampton Lectures,_ 1859, pp. 50-51.]

[Footnote 7: _Commentary on Genesis,_ by the Bishop of Ely, p. 77.]

[Footnote 8: _Die Sintflut,_ 1876.]

[Footnote 9: _Theologie und Naturwissenschaft,_ ii. 784-791 (1877).]

[Footnote 10: It is very doubtful if this means the region of the
Armenian Ararat. More probably it designates some part either of the
Kurdish range or of its south-eastern continuation.]

[Footnote 11: So Reclus (_Nouvelle Geographie Universelle,_ ix. 386),
but I find the statement doubted by an authority of the first rank.]

[Footnote 12: So far as I know, the narrative of the Creation is not now
held to be true, in the sense in which I have defined historical
truth, by any of the reconcilers. As for the attempts to stretch the
Pentateuchal days into periods of thousands or millions of years,
the verdict of the eminent Biblical scholar, Dr. Riehm (_Der
biblische Schopfungsbericht,_ 1881, pp. 15, 16) on such pranks of
"Auslegungskunst" should be final. Why do the reconcilers take Goethe's
advice seriously?--

     "Im Auslegen seyd frisch und munter!
      Legt ihr's nicht aus, so legt was unter."]





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lights of the Church and the Light
of Science, by Thomas Henry Huxley

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