Reverend Robert Taylor
The Devil’s Chaplain
The life of Reverend Robert Taylor (1784–1844) remains one of the most provocative chapters in the history of nineteenth-century freethought.
Known by the evocative nickname "The Devil’s Chaplain," Taylor was a man of immense erudition and ecclesiastical standing who turned his back on the Anglican orthodoxy to become a radical critic of Christianity. His journey from the pulpit to the prison cell serves as a powerful case study in the volatile intersection of religion, science, and the law in Regency-era England.
The man they tried to silence in prison: twice!
Controversy and "The Devil’s Chaplain"
Taylor was not merely a quiet scholar; he was a flamboyant performer. He began delivering lectures at the Rotunda, a radical theater in London, dressed in full episcopal robes. These performances were part intellectual lecture and part theatrical satire, earning him the "Devil's Chaplain" moniker—a title he wore with a mixture of irony and pride.
His activities did not go unnoticed by the authorities. Taylor was prosecuted for blasphemous libel multiple times:
1. 1828: Sentenced to one year in Oakham Gaol.
2. 1831: Sentenced to two years in Horsemonger Lane Gaol.
These imprisonments were intended to silence him, but they had the opposite effect. During his time behind bars, he wrote extensively, and his "Devil's Pulpit" sermons were smuggled out and published, circulating widely among the working classes and radical reformers.
Legacy and Influence
Robert Taylor’s influence extended beyond the radical circles of London. He was a primary influence on the young Charles Darwin, who was a student at Cambridge when Taylor’s trial was the talk of the university.
While Darwin moved toward biological evolution rather than mythological deconstruction, the atmosphere of skepticism fostered by Taylor helped pave the way for the secularisation of the Victorian mind.
Taylor eventually retired to France, where he practiced medicine and lived a quieter life until his death in 1844. He remains a pivotal figure for his role in:
• Challenging the Blasphemy Laws: His trials highlighted the tension between state-mandated religion and freedom of speech.
• Comparative Religion: Though some of his specific astronomical theories are now considered fringe, his core methodology of comparing Christian motifs to earlier mythologies was ahead of its time.
The Evolution of a Radical
Taylor began his career conventionally enough. Educated at St. John’s College, Cambridge, he was ordained as a priest in the Church of England. However, his tenure as a clergyman was short-lived. Influenced by the works of Thomas Paine and the burgeoning field of comparative mythology,
Taylor began to publicly doubt the historical accuracy of the New Testament.
By 1824, he had moved to London and founded the Christian Evidence Society. Despite its pious-sounding name, the society was a platform for Taylor to challenge the divine origin of Christianity. He argued that the religion was not a unique revelation but rather a synthesis of earlier pagan myths and astronomical observations.
The Mythicist and "The Diegesis"
Taylor’s most significant contribution to radical literature was his 1829 work, The Diegesis. Written while he was imprisoned for blasphemy, the book is an exhaustive attempt to prove that Christianity was derived from Egyptian, Greek, and Hindu mythologies.
• Astro-theology: Taylor was a pioneer of the "astro-theological" interpretation of the Bible. He argued that Jesus Christ was a personification of the Sun, and the twelve apostles represented the signs of the Zodiac.
• Historical Skepticism: He contended that there was no contemporary historical evidence for the existence of Jesus, suggesting the narrative was constructed by the Gnostics and later literalised by the early Church.
“The Diegesis remains a monument to Taylor's defiant scholarship, blending deep classical knowledge with a biting, satirical wit that infuriated the religious establishment of his day."
Robert Taylor was a man of contradictions: a priest who preached against the church, a scholar who used satire as a weapon, and a prisoner who found intellectual freedom in a cell. His life reminds us that the quest for truth often requires the courage to be an outcast. Be like him; question everything and find out for yourself how this world really works.