for john mureith
DEISM: The religion of those believing in a God who rules the world by
established laws but not believing in the divinity of Christ or the
inspiration of the Bible; "natural" religion, based on reason and a study
of nature, as opposed to "revealed" religion. The scientific movement
which grew out of the new knowledge of the world and the universe
following upon the discoveries and theories of Columbus, Copernicus,
Galileo, Francis Bacon, and later the members of the Royal Society,
furthered the development of a rationalistic point of view which more and
more tended to rely upon reason instead of upon revelation in the
consideration of humanity's relation to God and the Universe. The fact
that the conceptions of the physical world found in the Old Testament
seemed inconsistent with the newer knowledge shook the faith of many in
the doctrine of the special inspiration of the Bible. DEISM was a
product of this general point of view.
1. The Bible is not the inspired word of God; it is good so far
as it reflects "natural" religion and bad so far as it
contains "additions" made by superstitious or designing
persons.
2. Certain Christian theological doctrines are the product of
superstition or the invention of priests and must be
rejected; e.g., the deity of Christ, the doctrine of the
Trinity, and theory of the atonement for sins.
3. God is perfect, is the creator and governor of the Universe,
and works not capriciously but through unchangeable laws
(hence "miracles" are to be rejected as impossible).
4. Human beings are free agents, whose minds work as they
themselves choose; even God cannot control human thought.
5. Since human beings are rational creatures, like God, they are
capable of understanding the laws of the universe; and as God
is perfect, so can humanity become perfect through a study of
nature, which shows design and must therefore be an
expression of God.
6. Practical religion for the individual consists in achieving
virtue through the rational guidance of conduct (as
exemplified in the scheme for developing the moral virtues
recorded by Franklin in his Autobiography).
(Thrall, Hibbard, Holman. A Handbook to Literature.)