Part Sixteen
XVI
And I ceased to doubt, and became fully convinced that not all was true in
the religion I had joined. Formerly I should have said that it was all false,
but I could not say so now. The whole of the people possessed a knowledge of the
truth, for otherwise they could not have lived. Moreover, that knowledge was
accessible to me, for I had felt it and had lived by it. But I no longer doubted
that there was also falsehood in it. And all that had previously repelled me now
presented itself vividly before me. And though I saw that among the peasants
there was a smaller admixture of the lies that repelled me than among the
representatives of the Church, I still saw that in the people's belief also
falsehood was mingled with the truth.
But where did the truth and where did the falsehood come from? Both the
falsehood and the truth were contained in the so-called holy tradition and in
the Scriptures. Both the falsehood and the truth had been handed down by what is
called the Church.
And whether I liked or not, I was brought to the study and investigation of
these writings and traditions - which till now I had been so afraid to
investigate.
And I turned to the examination of that same theology which I had once
rejected with such contempt as unnecessary. Formerly it seemed to me a series of
unnecessary absurdities, when on all sides I was surrounded by manifestations of
life which seemed to me clear and full of sense; now I should have been glad to
throw away what would not enter a health head, but I had nowhere to turn to. On
this teaching religious doctrine rests, or at least with it the only knowledge
of the meaning of life that I have found is inseparably connected. However wild
it may seem too my firm old mind, it was the only hope of salvation. It had to
be carefully, attentively examined in order to understand it, and not even to
understand it as I understand the propositions of science: I do not seek that,
nor can I seek it, knowing the special character of religious knowledge. I shall
not seek the explanation of everything. I know that the explanation of
everything, like the commencement of everything, must be concealed in infinity.
But I wish to understand in a way which will bring me to what is inevitably
inexplicable. I wish to recognize anything that is inexplicable as being so not
because the demands of my reason are wrong (they are right, and apart from them
I can understand nothing), but because I recognize the limits of my intellect. I
wish to understand in such a way that everything that is inexplicable shall
present itself to me as being necessarily inexplicable, and not as being
something I am under an arbitrary obligation to believe.
That there is truth in the teaching is to me indubitable, but it is also
certain that there is falsehood in it, and I must find what is true and what is
false, and must disentangle the one from the other. I am setting to work upon
this task. What of falsehood I have found in the teaching and what I have found
of truth, and to what conclusions I came, will form the following parts of this
work, which if it be worth it and if anyone wants it, will probably some day be
printed somewhere.