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The Deist Minimum
Avery Cardinal DullesCopyright (c) 2005 First Things 149 (January 2005): 25-30. As Christianity spread throughout the Greco-Roman
world, it became apparent that the biblical doctrines concerning God, morality,
and future retribution had similarities with the philosophical speculations of
the Platonists, Aristotelians, and Stoics. The Fathers and medieval theologians
had no difficulty in admitting this; on the contrary, they saw it as a
confirmation of the truth of revelation. Human reason at its best, they
explained, is able to discover some of the doctrines that God revealed through
the prophets and Jesus Christ. This being granted, revelation was still necessary
for two reasons. First, because even the naturally knowable truths were attained
only by a few, and by them with great difficulty and a considerable admixture of
error. Second, because certain truths very important for salvation could not be
attained in any other way than by revelation accepted in faith. Among the truths
in this second category were the Trinity, the Incarnation, the redemptive death
of Christ on the Cross, his Resurrection and Ascension into glory, the
institution of the Church, the sacraments, the bestowal of grace, and the
beatific vision. Human reason could find solid reasons for believing the
Christian revelation, but in the end the believer had to make a free and
trusting commitment to the word of God. In that sense, faith was above reason. The position on faith and reason that I have just
sketched is not simply that of ancient or medieval Christianity. It remains, by
and large, the standard position held today, with varying nuances, by Catholics,
Orthodox, Anglicans, and many Protestants. Revelation is relatively necessary to
know religious truths that lie within the grasp of reason and is absolutely
necessary to know strict mysteries. In the seventeenth century an alternative position
was put forward in Shortly after its invention by Lord Herbert, deism
received indirect support from the physics of Isaac Newton (1642-1727) and the
philosophy of John Locke (1632-1704). The physical world, according to From Locke’s system it was but a small step to
deism. In 1696 his disciple John Toland published the book Christianity not Mysterious, in which
he attributed the mysteries of Christianity to pagan conceptions and the
machinations of priestcraft. In 1730 another disciple, Matthew Tindal, published
the book Christianity
as Old as Creation, in which he sought to demonstrate that all
rational creatures have access to “a law of nature or reason, absolutely
perfect, eternal, and unchangeable; and that the design of the gospel was not to
add to, or take from this law,” but only to rescue humankind from
superstition. Tindal’s work, more radical than Toland’s, came be used as a
kind of Bible of deism. Both Toland and Tindal were Christian deists; they
accepted revelation but maintained that it was nothing more than a republication
of the religion of pure reason. Reason alone, they believed, could establish the
fundamental truths necessary for salvation. Three forms of deism may be distinguished, at
least schematically. The first, most friendly to faith, admitted two channels of
truth: reason, which gave access to the essential and necessary truths, and
revelation, which communicated certain supplementary truths, useful but not
essential for salvation. According to the second version, revelation was an aid
to reason, but it could do no more than confirm or clarify truths accessible to
reason alone. The most radical form held that reason was the sole font of truth
and that revelation was nonexistent. English deism spread rapidly to the continent,
especially to The deist outlook also gained a foothold in the
American colonies, where it became popular among the rich and well-born about
the time of the Revolution. Of the fifty-six signers of the Declaration of
Independence, the theological leanings of some twenty have been identified.
Three have been characterized as deists: Benjamin Franklin of Among the founders of the American republic who
were not signers of the Declaration of Independence, George Washington, James
Madison, and George Mason were religious liberals leaning toward deism. Samuel
Adams, Patrick Henry, and Alexander Hamilton were generally orthodox Christians
opposed to deism. None of the Founding Fathers meditated more
assiduously on religion than Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826). He was brought up in
the rituals and traditions of the Anglican Church, as it existed in In his public pronouncements as a statesman and
legislator, Jefferson’s public religion appears in the
Declaration of Independence, which refers to “the laws of Nature and
Nature’s God,” to “inalienable” rights conferred upon all human beings
by their Creator, and to “the protection of divine One of Like his contemporaries Priestley’s work made a deep impression on Following in Priestley’s footsteps, In his plan of studies for the In summary, then, In the closing decades of the eighteenth century,
deism in the We can discern several reasons why deism, which
once looked so promising, proved unable to sustain itself. Deism drew its
vitality from the oppressive policies of the religious establishments against
which it was reacting. In the minds of the Enlightenment thinkers, confessional
religion, unless checked by law or by free competition, led inevitably to
tyranny and persecution. But this assumption was based on a time-conditioned
union or alliance between throne and altar, not on the gospel of Christ, which
gave Caesar no authority over the things of God. Jefferson himself came gradually to this
realization. As a young adult he seems to have held that Christian faith was
favorable to despotism and hostile to free society. But his friend Benjamin Rush
convinced him that Christianity and republicanism were, so to speak, made for
each other. As Eugene Sheridan has written, Rush regarded Christianity as
“part of a divine plan to bring about the kingdom of God on earth by freeing
mankind from the burden of royal and ecclesiastical oppression through the
spread of the principles of human equality and Christian charity.” With
Rush’s help Jefferson found a way of accepting Christianity without
diminishing his commitment to the freedom of conscience. Deism, therefore, was
not necessary to offset religious oppression. By the middle of the twentieth century the major
branches of Christianity accepted the principle of religious freedom not as a
reluctant concession but as a requirement of the gospel itself. The Catholic
Church in its “Declaration on Religious Freedom” (Dignitatis Humanae) teaches that the
gospel itself demands that “in matters religious every manner of coercion on
the part of men should be excluded.” A major factor in the rise of deism has
therefore ceased to exist. Although deism portrayed itself as a pure product
of unaided reason, it was not what it claimed to be. Its basic tenets concerning
God, the virtuous life, and rewards beyond the grave were in fact derived from
Christianity, the faith in which the deists themselves had been reared. It is
doubtful whether anyone who had not been brought up in a biblical religion could
embrace the tenets of deism. The children of deists rarely persevered in the
faith of their parents. Deism also suffered from grave philosophical
weaknesses. Its leading proponents were pamphleteers such as Toland and Tindal
in England and Encyclopedists such as Diderot in France. They lacked the
metaphysical principles needed to build a viable natural theology. Empiricists
like Locke and rationalists like Newton lacked the rich ontology of Thomas
Aquinas and the medieval schoolmen. Their epistemology was a shallow empiricism
and their cosmology a universalized physics, both of which crumbled when faced
with the penetrating critiques of David Hume and Immanuel Kant. Additionally, the deist system suffered from some
internal tensions. If there is an omnipotent God, capable of designing the
entire universe and launching it into existence, it seems strange to hold that
this God cannot intervene in the world He had made or derogate from the laws He
had established. He might have good reasons for bestowing some added benefits
not contained in the work of creation. American deists such as Jefferson and
Franklin did not rule out all divine intervention. They were convinced that God
punished evil and rewarded virtue both in this life and in the next. They also
encouraged prayer in ways that seemed inconsistent with deism in its pure form. If God was infinite in being, moreover, it was
unreasonable to reject the notion of mystery. It would seem quite natural to
suppose that there are depths of the divine being surpassing all that could be
inferred from the created world. We cannot know what is going on in the minds of
our fellow human beings unless they manifest it by word or deed. How much less,
then, could we grasp the thoughts of God unless He were to disclose them to us
by revelation? Since God knows far more about Himself and His plans than His
creatures do, it is difficult to see why He could not reveal truths hidden from
reason that would be important for persons such as ourselves. Throughout the
centuries Christianity has held that central articles of faith, such as the
Trinity, the Incarnation, and the atoning death of Christ, are revealed truths. We can understand them to some extent even if we
cannot penetrate the full richness of their meaning. Yet more, the deist God, who ceased to be active
after launching the world into existence, seemed to be a useless vestige of the
God of biblical religion. If God never intervened in the world, His existence
could only be, from a human perspective, superfluous. It would be pointless to
pray to Him or expect any blessings from Him. The pupils of the deists, carrying
the critique of religion one stage further, questioned the existence of this
idle Supreme Being. Thus deism came to be a halfway house on the road to
atheism. Toland drifted gradually from deism into pantheism. Voltaire was unable
to dissuade his erstwhile allies Diderot and d’Holbach from abandoning the
deist camp and embracing atheism. In the United States atheism surfaced more
slowly but was defended in the nineteenth century by Robert Ingersoll among
others. Yet another weakness in the deist system was the
time-conditioned nature of its cosmological underpinnings. The system
presupposed the static unalterable order of nature that appealed to
mathematicians like Isaac Newton. But as the positive sciences matured, the
universe appeared to be far less orderly than the deists had assumed. Eventually
the Newtonian system would be superseded by the theories of Darwin and Huxley,
Einstein and Heisenberg. William Paley’s depiction of God as the cosmic
watchmaker lost its plausibility. Deism also failed as a religion. Its static deity
was a pallid reflection of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jesus Christ. The
religion of the New Testament and of orthodox Christianity offered hope and
consolation that lay far beyond the powers of deism. The gospel assures us that
God never ceases to be active in the world: He freely calls us to Himself, hears
our prayers, and enriches our lives with His grace. The doctrine that God became
man in order to raise us to a share in His own divine life satisfied a deep
desire of the human heart to which deism could not respond. It was impossible to
enter into communion of life and love with the cold and distant God of deism. Finally, the deist reconstruction of the
historical Jesus lacked any serious foundation in biblical research. Jefferson
claimed that it was “obvious and easy” to distinguish the authentic words of
Jesus from those attributed to him by later Christians. In his view they were
“as easily distinguishable as diamonds in a dunghill.” But even the most
confident members of the Jesus Seminar today would make no such claim. Jefferson
fell into the common error of simply projecting onto Jesus the moral ideals of
his age. An older contemporary of Jefferson, the German
deist H. S. Reimarus (1694-1768), composed a lengthy Defense for the Rational Adorers of God,
fragments of which were posthumously published by Gotthold Lessing in 1778. His
fragment on “The True Aims of Jesus and His Disciples,” apparently unknown
to Jefferson, was the first serious effort to reconstruct the life and preaching
of Jesus with the tools of critical history. Although he was a deist himself,
Reimarus did not attribute his own philosophy to Jesus. On the contrary, he
regarded Jesus as a deluded apocalyptic preacher who shared the Jewish
expectations of his day about the imminent arrival of the kingdom of God. The long history of the quest for the historical
Jesus that dates from Reimarus has overthrown the liberal humanitarian portrait.
All the available sources point to a figure totally unlike the enlightened moral
teacher postulated by Franklin and Jefferson. The teaching of Jesus, as reported
in the earliest testimonies, is inextricably bound up with his messianic or
divine claims and with the miraculous deeds by which he vindicated them. The
belief and evangelizing fervor of the apostles cannot be accounted for without
reference to the claims of Jesus, his miracles, and his bodily resurrection.
Benjamin Rush pointed out to Jefferson his failure to address these objections,
but Jefferson was unresponsive. Because of these and other weaknesses, deism
deserved to perish as it did, but it did not die without leaving a valuable
legacy. Its influence on the American tradition has been enduring, beneficial
and, one might say, providential. Although the Founding Fathers refrained from
enshrining the particular theses of deism in official documents or public
speeches, they composed these statements in such a way as to affirm the vestiges
of faith that still survived in Christian deism without excluding more robust
forms of Jewish and Christian faith. Our American republic has therefore had what,
following Jean-Jacques Rousseau, we may call a civil religion. Rousseau
enumerates the positive dogmas of such a religion as follows: “the existence
of a mighty, intelligent, beneficent divinity, possessed of foresight and
providence, the life to come, the happiness of the just, the punishment of the
wicked, and [Rousseau added] the sanctity of the social contract.” The civil
religion of this country has been expressed in our national institutions and in
the great pronouncements of our national heroes, most notably Abraham Lincoln. The dominance of civil religion produced a
favorable climate in which the various forms of biblical religion could and did
thrive. Although the United States was never, in the technical sense, a
Christian nation, it has been and remains a nation in which the biblical faiths
are at home and in which other religions are welcome, provided that their tenets
and practices are not a threat to public order. Deism by itself was too dry and
abstract to elicit warm adherence, but the American consensus always surrounded
the positive teachings of deism with the flesh and bones of specific faiths,
whether Protestant, Catholic, or Jewish. The American civil religion can still
be heard in the pronouncements of recent Presidents, but it is now being eroded
or at least threatened by the increasingly pluralist shape of American society
and by a judiciary that is reluctant to support or encourage any form of
religion, however generic. Today, therefore, we are faced with new questions.
Can the biblical religions maintain themselves and win new adherents or must
they resign themselves to becoming a minority? Should the American consensus be
modified to make room for a broader pluralism? Can Islam, the Eastern religions,
New Age religion, and even agnosticism and atheism, find equal acceptance in
American society? Jefferson would probably have insisted on the
positive articles of deism as a required minimum. For him and the other Founding
Fathers, the good of society requires a people who believe in one almighty God,
in providence, in a divinely given moral code, in a future life, and in divinely
administered rewards and punishments. He and they expected that the example and
teachings of Jesus, as known from the Gospels, would be accepted in principle by
the great majority of citizens. Although Jefferson wanted the state to refrain
from meddling in the particulars of religion, he counted on families, churches,
and educational institutions to perpetuate and disseminate in more vivid and
concrete forms the basic truths also taught in his moderate form of deism. If he were alive today, Jefferson would doubtless
ask himself whether the welfare of the republic can stand in the absence of the
minimal consensus I have described. If pluralism goes unchecked, will the nation
still have a corporate vision sufficient to sustain the sense of mission and
collective purpose that have characterized it at its best? Will factionalism,
corruption, violence, and aimlessness proliferate? Each of us must strive to
answer these questions as best we can with the help of the Sage of Monticello. Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., holds the Laurence J.
McGinley Chair in Religion and Society at Fordham University. N.B. – The Center for Theology at Lenoir-Rhyne
College has a standing agreement of permission with First Things to study
and discuss articles therefrom in the monthly Colloquia as circumstances arise.
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