There are fanatics of various kinds. Some people
are wine fanatics and cigar fanatics. Some think that if men gave up smoking
cigars, the world would arrive at the millennium. Women are generally amongst
these fanatics. There was a young lady here one day, in this class. She was one
of a number of ladies in Chicago who have built a house where they take in the
working people and give them music and gymnastics. One day this young lady was
talking about the evils of the world and said she knew the remedy. I asked,
"How do you know?" and she answered, "Have you seen Hull
House?" In her opinion, this Hull House is the one panacea for all the
evils that flesh is heir to. This will grow upon her. I am sorry for her. There
are some fanatics in India who think that if a woman could marry again when her
husband died, it would cure all evil. This is fanaticism.
When I was a boy I thought that fanaticism was a
great element in work, but now, as I grow older, I find out that it is not.
There may be a woman who would steal and make no
objection to taking someone else's bag and going away with it. But perhaps that
woman does not smoke. She becomes a smoke fanatic, and as soon as she finds a
man smoking, she strongly disapproves of him, because he smokes a cigar. There may be a man
who goes about cheating people; there is no trusting him; no
woman is safe with him. But perhaps this scoundrel
does not drink wine. If so, he sees nothing good in anyone who drinks wine. All
these wicked things that he himself does are of no consideration. This is only
natural human selfishness and one-sidedness.
You must also remember that the world has God to
govern it, and He has not left it to our charity. The Lord God is its Governor
and Maintainer, and in spite of these wine fanatics and cigar fanatics, and all
sorts of marriage fanatics, it would go on. If all these persons were to die,
it would go on none the worse.
Do you not remember in your own history how the
"Mayflower" people came out here, and began to call themselves
Puritans? They were very pure and good as far as they went, until they began to
persecute other people; and throughout the history of mankind it has been the
same. Even those that run away from persecution indulge in persecuting others
as soon as a favourable opportunity to do so occurs.
In ninety cases out of a hundred, fanatics must have
bad livers, or they are dyspeptics, or are in some way diseased. By degrees
even physicians will find out that fanaticism is a kind of disease. I have seen
plenty of it. The Lord save me from it!
My experience comes to this, that it is rather wise
to avoid all sorts of fanatical reforms. This world is slowly going on; let it
go slowly. Why are you in a hurry? Sleep well and keep your nerves in good
order; eat right food, and have sympathy with the world. Fanatics only make
hatred. Do you mean to say that the temperance fanatic loves these poor people
who become drunkards? A fanatic is a fanatic simply because he expects to get
something for himself in return. As soon as the battle is over, he goes for the
spoil. When you come out of the company of fanatics you may learn how really to
love and sympathise. And the more you attain of love and sympathy, the less
will be your power to condemn these poor creatures; rather you will sympathise
with their faults. It will become possible for you to sympathise with the
drunkard and to know that he is also a man like yourself. You will then try to
understand the many circumstances that are dragging him down, and feel that if
you had been in his place you would perhaps have committed suicide. I remember
a woman whose husband was a great drunkard, and she complained to me of his
becoming so. I replied, "Madam, if there were twenty millions of wives
like yourself, all husbands would become drunkards." I am convinced that a
large number of drunkards are manufactured by their wives. My business is to
tell the truth and not to flatter anyone. These unruly women from whose minds
the words bear and forbear are gone for ever, and whose false ideas of
independence lead them to think that men should be at their feet, and who begin
to howl as soon as men dare to say anything to them which they do not like —
such women are becoming the bane of the world, and it is a wonder that they do
not drive half the men in it to commit suicide. In this way things should not
go on. Life is not so easy as they believe it to be; it is a more serious
business!
A man must not only have faith but intellectual
faith too. To make a man take up everything and believe it, would be to make
him a lunatic. I once had a book sent me, which said I must believe everything
told in it. It said there was no soul, but that there were gods and goddesses
in heaven, and a thread of light going from each of our heads to heaven! How
did the writer know all these things? She had been inspired, and wanted me to
believe it too; and because I refused, she said, "You must be a very bad
man; there is no hope for you!" This is fanaticism.
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