religion, from those of gratitude and obedience.
Morality, therefore, entirely abstracted from religion,
can have nothing meritorious in it; it being but wisdom,
prudence, or good economy, which, like health, beauty,
or riches, are rather obligations conferred upon us
by God, than merits in us towards him; for, though
we may be justly punished for injuring ourselves,
we can claim no reward for self-preservation; as suicide
deserves punishment and infamy, but a man deserves
no reward or honours for not being guilty of it.
This I take to be the meaning of all those passages
in our scriptures, in which works are represented
to have no merit without faith; that is, not without
believing in historical facts, in creeds, and articles,
but, without being done in pursuance of our belief
in God, and in obedience to his commands. And
now, having mentioned scripture, I cannot omit observing,
that the christian is the only religious or moral institution
in the world, that ever set, in a right light, these
two material points, the essence and the end of virtue,
that ever founded the one in the production of happiness,
that is, in universal benevolence, or, in their language,
charity to all men; the other, in the probation of
man, and his obedience to his creator. Sublime
and magnificent as was the philosophy of the ancients,
all their moral systems were deficient in these two
important articles. They were all built on the
sandy foundations of the innate beauty of virtue,
or enthusiastic patriotism; and their great point
in view was the contemptible reward of human glory;
foundations, which were, by no means, able to support
the magnificent structures which they erected upon
them; for the beauty of virtue, independent of its
effects, is unmeaning nonsense; patriotism, which
injures mankind in general, for the sake of a particular
country, is but a more extended selfishness, and really
criminal; and all human glory, but a mean and ridiculous
delusion.
“The whole affair, then, of religion and morality,
the subject of so many thousand volumes, is, in short,
no more than this: the supreme being, infinitely
good, as well as powerful, desirous to diffuse happiness
by all possible means, has created innumerable ranks
and orders of beings, all subservient to each other
by proper subordination. One of these is occupied
by man, a creature endued with such a certain degree
of knowledge, reason, and freewill, as is suitable
to his situation, and placed, for a time, on this
globe, as in a school of probation and education.
Here he has an opportunity given him of improving
or debasing his nature, in such a manner, as to render
himself fit for a rank of higher perfection and happiness,
or to degrade himself to a state of greater imperfection
and misery; necessary, indeed, towards carrying on
the business of the universe, but very grievous and
burdensome to those individuals who, by their own misconduct,
are obliged to submit to it. The test of this
his behaviour is doing good, that is, cooperating