1106 lines
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Plaintext
1106 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
17 page printout.
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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HERETICS AND HERESIES
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1874
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LIBERTY, A WORD WITHOUT WHICH
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ALL WORDS ARE VAIN.
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WHOEVER has an opinion of his own, and honestly expresses it,
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will be guilty of heresy. Heresy is what the minority believe; it
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is the name given by the powerful to the doctrine of the weak. This
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word was born of the hatred, arrogance and cruelty of those who
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love their enemies, and who, when smitten on one cheek, turn the
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other. This word was born of intellectual slavery in the feudal
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ages of thought. It was an epithet used in the place of argument.
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From the commencement of the Christian era, every art has been
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exhausted and every conceivable punishment inflicted to force all
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people to hold the same religious opinions. This effort was born of
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the idea that a certain belief was necessary to the salvation of
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the soul. Christ taught, and the church still teaches. that
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unbelief is the blackest of crimes. God is supposed to hate with an
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infinite and implacable hatred, every heretic upon the earth, and
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the heretics who have died are supposed at this moment to be
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suffering the agonies of the damned. The church persecutes the
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living and her God burns, for all eternity, the dead.
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It is claimed that God wrote a book called the Bible, and it
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is generally admitted that this book is somewhat difficult to
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understand. As long as the church had all the copies of this book,
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and the people were not allowed to read it, there was comparatively
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little heresy in the world; but when it was printed and read,
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people began honestly to differ as to its meaning. A few were
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independent and brave enough to give the world their real thoughts,
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and for the extermination of these men the church used all her
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power. Protestants and Catholics vied with each other in the work
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of enslaving the human mind. For ages they were rivals in the
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infamous effort to rid the earth of honest people. They infested
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every country, every city, town, hamlet and family. They appealed
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to the worst passions of the human heart. They sowed the seeds of
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discord and hatred in every land. Brother denounced brother, wives
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informed against their husbands, mothers accused their children,
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dungeons were crowded with the innocent; the flesh of the good and
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true rotted in the clasp of chains; the flames devoured the heroic,
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and in the name of the most merciful God, his children were
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exterminated with famine, sword, and fire. Over the wild waves of
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battle rose and fell the banner of Jesus Christ. for sixteen
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hundred years the robes of the church were red with innocent blood.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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HERETICS AND HERESIES
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The ingenuity of Christians was exhausted in devising punishment
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severe enough to be inflicted upon other Christians who honestly
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and sincerely differed with them upon any point whatever.
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Give any orthodox church the power, and to-day they would
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punish heresy with whip, and chain, and fire. As long as a church
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deems a certain belief essential to salvation, just so long it will
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kill and burn if it has the power. Why should the church pity a man
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whom her God hates? Why should she show mercy to a kind and noble
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heretic whom her God will burn in eternal fire? Why should a
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Christian be better than his God? It is impossible for the
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imagination to conceive of a greater atrocity than has been
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perpetrated by the church. Every nerve in the human body capable of
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pain has been sought out and touched.
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Let it be remembered that all churches have persecuted
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heretics to the fullest extent of their power. Toleration has
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increased only when and where the power of the church has
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diminished. From Augustine until now the spirit of the Christians
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has remained the same. There has been the same intolerance, the
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same undying hatred of all who think for themselves, and the same
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determination to crush out of the human brain all knowledge
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inconsistent with an ignorant creed.
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Every church pretends that it has a revelation from God, and
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that this revelation must be given to the people through the
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church; that the church acts through its priests, and that ordinary
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mortals must be content with a revelation -- not from God -- but
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from the church. Had the people submitted to this preposterous
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claim, of course there could have been but one church, and that
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church never could have advanced. It might have retrograded,
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because it is not necessary to think or investigate in order to
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forget. Without heresy there could have been no progress.
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The highest type of the orthodox Christian does not forget;
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neither does he learn. He neither advances nor recedes. He is a
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living fossil embedded in that rock called faith. He makes no
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effort to better his condition, because all his strength is
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exhausted in keeping other people from improving theirs. The
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supreme desire of his heart is to force all others to adopt his
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creed, and in order to accomplish this object he denounces free
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thinking as a crime, and this crime he calls heresy. When he had
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power, heresy was the most terrible and formidable of words. It
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meant confiscation, exile, imprisonment, torture, and death.
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In those days the cross and rack were inseparable companions.
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Across the open Bible lay the sword and fagot. Not content with
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burning such heretics as were alive, they even tried the dead, in
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order that the church might rob their wives and children. The
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property of all heretics was confiscated, and on this account they
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charged the dead with being heretical -- indicted, as it were,
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their dust -- to the end that the church might clutch the bread of
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orphans. Learned divines discussed the propriety of tearing out the
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tongues of heretics before they were burned, and the general
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opinion was, that this ought to be done so that the heretics should
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not be able, by uttering blasphemies, to shock the Christians who
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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HERETICS AND HERESIES
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were burning them. With a mixture of ferocity and Christianity, the
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priests insisted that heretics ought to be burned at a slow fire,
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giving as a reason that more time was given them for repentance.
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No wonder that Jesus Christ said, "I came not to bring peace,
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but a sword."
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Every priest regarded himself as the agent of God. He answered
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all questions by authority, and to treat him with disrespect was an
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insult offered to God. No one was asked to think, but all were
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commanded to obey.
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||
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In 1208 the Inquisition was established. Seven years
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||
afterward, the fourth council of the Lateran enjoined all kings and
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rulers to swear an oath that they would exterminate heretics from
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their dominions. The sword of the church was unsheathed, and the
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world was at the mercy of ignorant and infuriated priests, whose
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eyes feasted upon the agonies they inflicted. Acting, as they
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believed, or pretended to believe, under the command of God;
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stimulated by the hope of infinite reward in another world --
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hating heretics with every drop of their bestial blood; savage
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||
beyond description; merciless beyond conception, -- these infamous
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priests, in a kind of frenzied joy, leaped upon the helpless
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victims of their rage. They crushed their bones in iron boots; tore
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their quivering flesh with iron hooks and pincers; cut off their
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lips and eyelids; pulled out their nails, and into the bleeding
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quick thrust needles; tore out their tongues; extinguished their
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eyes; stretched them upon racks; flayed them alive; crucified them
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||
with their heads downward; exposed them to wild beasts; burned them
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||
at the stake; mocked their cries and groans; robbed their children,
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and then prayed God to finish the holy work in hell.
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Millions upon millions were sacrificed upon the altars of
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bigotry. The Catholic burned the Lutheran, the Lutheran burned the
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Catholic, the Episcopalian tortured the Presbyterian. the
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||
Presbyterian tortured the Episcopalian. Every denomination killed
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all it could of every other; and each Christian felt in duty bound
|
||
to exterminate every other Christian who denied the smallest
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fraction of his creed.
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In the reign of Henry VIII. -- that pious and moral founder of
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the apostolic Episcopal Church. -- there was passed by the
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parliament of England an act entitled "An act for abolishing of
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diversity of opinion." And in this act was set forth what a good
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||
Christian was obliged to believe:
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First, That in the sacrament was the real body and blood of
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Jesus Christ.
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Second, That the body and blood of Jesus Christ was in the
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||
bread, and the blood and body of Jesus Christ was in the wine.
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Third, That priests should not marry.
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||
Fourth, That vows of chastity were of perpetual obligation.
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Fifth, That private masses ought to be continued; and,
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
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Sixth, That auricular confession to a priest must be
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maintained.
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This creed was made by law, in order that all men might know
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just what to believe by simply reading the statute. The church
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||
hated to see the people wearing out their brains in thinking upon
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||
these subjects. It was thought far better that a creed should be
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||
made by parliament, so that whatever might be lacking in evidence
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might be made up in force. The punishment for denying the first
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article was death by fire. For the denial of any other article,
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imprisonment, and for the second offence -- death.
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Your attention is called to these six articles, established
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during the reign of Henry VIII., and by the Church of England,
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simply because not one of these articles is believed by that church
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to-day. If the law then made by the church could he enforced now,
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every Episcopalian would be burned at the stake.
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Similar laws were passed in most Christian countries, as all
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orthodox churches firmly believed that mankind could be legislated
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into heaven. According to the creed of every church, slavery leads
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to heaven, liberty leads to hell. It was claimed that God had
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founded the church, and that to deny the authority of the church
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was to be a traitor to God, and consequently an ally of the devil.
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||
To torture and destroy one of the soldiers of Satan was a duty no
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||
good Christian cared to neglect. Nothing can he sweeter than to
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||
earn the gratitude of God by killing your own enemies. Such a
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mingling of profit and revenge, of heaven for yourself and
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||
damnation for those you dislike, is a temptation that your ordinary
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||
Christian never resists.
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||
According to the theologians, God, the Father of us all, wrote
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a letter to his children. The children have always differed
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||
somewhat as to the meaning of this letter. In consequence of these
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honest differences, these brothers began to cut out each other's
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||
hearts. In every land, where this letter from God has been read,
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||
the children to whom and for whom it was written have been filled
|
||
with hatred and malice. They have imprisoned and murdered each
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||
other, and the wives and children of each other. In the name of God
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every possible crime has been committed, every conceivable outrage
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||
has been perpetrated. Brave men, tender and loving women, beautiful
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girls, and prattling babes have been exterminated in the name of
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Jesus Christ. For more than fifty generations the church has
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carried the black flag. Her vengeance has been measured only by her
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power. During all these years of infamy no heretic has ever been
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||
forgiven. With the heart of a fiend she has hated; with the clutch
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of avarice she has grasped; with the jaws of a dragon she has
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devoured; pitiless as famine, merciless as fire, with the
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conscience of a serpent: such is the history of the Church of God.
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I do not say, and I do not believe, that Christians are as bad
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as their creeds. In spite of church and dogma, there have been
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millions and millions of men and women true to the loftiest and
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||
most generous promptings of the human heart. They have been true to
|
||
their convictions, and, with a self-denial and fortitude excelled
|
||
by none, have labored and suffered for the salvation of men. Imbued
|
||
with the spirit of self-sacrifice, believing that by personal
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
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||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
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effort they could rescue at least a few souls from the infinite
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shadow of hell, they have cheerfully endured every hardship and
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||
scorned every danger. And yet, notwithstanding all this, they
|
||
believed that honest error was a crime. They knew that the Bible so
|
||
declared, and they believed that all unbelievers would be eternally
|
||
lost. They believed that religion was of God, and all heresy of the
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devil. They killed heretics in defence of their own souls and the
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souls of their children. They killed them because, according to
|
||
their idea, they were the enemies of God, and because the Bible
|
||
teaches that the blood of the unbeliever is a most acceptable
|
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sacrifice to heaven.
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Nature never prompted a loving mother to throw her child into
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the Ganges. Nature never prompted men to exterminate each other for
|
||
a difference of opinion concerning the baptism of infants. These
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||
crimes have been produced by religions filled with all that is
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||
illogical, cruel and hideous. These religions were produced for the
|
||
most part by ignorance, tyranny and hypocrisy. Under the impression
|
||
that the infinite ruler and creator of the universe had commanded
|
||
the destruction of heretics and infidels, the church perpetrated
|
||
all these crimes.
|
||
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Men and women have been burned for thinking there is but one
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God; that there was none; that the Holy Ghost is younger than God;
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that God was somewhat older than his son; for insisting that good
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works will save a man without faith; that faith will do without
|
||
good works; for declaring that a sweet babe will not be burned
|
||
eternally, because its parents failed to have its head wet by a
|
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priest; for speaking of God as though he had a nose; for denying
|
||
that Christ was his own father; for contending that three persons,
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rightly added together, make more than one; for believing in
|
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purgatory; for denying the reality of hell; for pretending that
|
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priests can forgive sins; for preaching that God is an essence; for
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denying that witches rode through the air on sticks; for doubting
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the total depravity of the human heart; for laughing at
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||
irresistible grace, predestination and particular redemption; for
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||
denying that good bread could be made of the body of a dead man;
|
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for pretending that the pope was not managing this world for God,
|
||
and in the place of God; for disputing the efficacy of a vicarious
|
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atonement; for thinking the Virgin Mary was born like other people;
|
||
for thinking that a man's rib was hardly sufficient to make a good-
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sized woman; for denying that God used his finger for a pen; for
|
||
asserting that prayers are not answered, that diseases are not sent
|
||
to punish unbelief; for denying the authority of the Bible; for
|
||
having a Bible in their possession; for attending mass, and for
|
||
refusing to attend; for wearing a surplice; for carrying a cross,
|
||
and for refusing; for being a Catholic, and for being a Protestant;
|
||
for being an Episcopalian, a Presbyterian, a Baptist, and for being
|
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a Quaker. In short, every virtue has been a crime, and every crime
|
||
a virtue. The church has burned honesty and rewarded hypocrisy. And
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all this, because it was commanded by a book -- a book that men had
|
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been taught implicitly to believe, long before they knew one word
|
||
that was in it. They had been taught that to doubt the truth of
|
||
this book -- to examine it, even -- was a crime of such enormity
|
||
that it could not be forgiven, either in this world or in the next.
|
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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5
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HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
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The Bible was the real persecutor. The Bible burned heretics,
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built dungeons, founded the Inquisition, and trampled upon all the
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liberties of men.
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How long, O how long will mankind worship a book? How long
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will they grovel in the dust before the ignorant legends of the
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barbaric past? How long, O how long will they pursue phantoms in a
|
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darkness deeper than death?
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Unfortunately for the world, about the beginning of the
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sixteenth century, a man by the name of Gerard Chauvin was married
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to Jeanne Lefranc, and still more unfortunately for the world, the
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fruit of this marriage was a son, called John Chauvin, who
|
||
afterwards became famous as John Calvin, the founder of the
|
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Presbyterian Church.
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This man forged five fetters for the brain. These fetters he
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called points. That is to say, predestination, particular
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||
redemption, total depravity, irresistible grace, and the
|
||
perseverance of the saints. About the neck of each follower he put
|
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a collar bristling with these live iron points. The presence of all
|
||
these points on the collar is still the test of orthodoxy in the
|
||
church he founded. This man, when in the flush of youth, was
|
||
elected to the office of preacher in Geneva. He at once, in union
|
||
with Farel, drew up a condensed statement of the Presbyterian
|
||
doctrine, and all the citizens of Geneva, on pain of banishment,
|
||
were compelled to take an oath that they believed this statement.
|
||
Of this proceeding Calvin very innocently remarked that it produced
|
||
great satisfaction. A man named Caroli had the audacity to dispute
|
||
with Calvin. For this outrage he was banished.
|
||
|
||
To show you what great subjects occupied the attention of
|
||
Calvin, it is only necessary to state that he furiously discussed
|
||
the question as to whether the sacramental bread should be leavened
|
||
or unleavened. He drew up laws regulating the cut of the citizens'
|
||
clothes, and prescribing their diet, and all those whose garments
|
||
were not in the Calvin fashion were refused the sacrament. At last,
|
||
the people becoming tired of this petty theological tyranny,
|
||
banished Calvin. In a few years, however, he was recalled and
|
||
received with great enthusiasm. After this he was supreme, and the
|
||
will of Calvin became the law of Geneva.
|
||
|
||
Under his benign administration, James Gruet was beheaded
|
||
because he had written some profane verses. The slightest word
|
||
against Calvin or his absurd doctrines was punished as a crime.
|
||
|
||
In 1553 a man was tried at Vienna by the Catholic Church for
|
||
heresy. He was convicted and sentenced to death by burning. It was
|
||
apparently his good fortune to escape. Pursued by the sleuth hounds
|
||
of intolerance he fled to Geneva for protection. A dove flying from
|
||
hawks, sought safety in the nest of a vulture. This fugitive from
|
||
the cruelty of Rome asked shelter from John Calvin, who had written
|
||
a book in favor of religious toleration. Serviettes had forgotten
|
||
that this book was written by Calvin when in the minority; that it
|
||
was written in weakness to be forgotten in power; that it was
|
||
produced by fear instead of principle. He did not know that Calvin
|
||
had caused his arrest at Vienna, in France, and had sent a copy of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
his work, which was claimed to be blasphemous, to the archbishop.
|
||
He did not then know that the Protestant Calvin was acting as one
|
||
of the detectives of the Catholic Church, and had been instrumental
|
||
in procuring his conviction for heresy. Ignorant of all this
|
||
unspeakable infamy, he put himself in the power of this very
|
||
Calvin. The maker of the Presbyterian creed caused the fugitive
|
||
Serviettes to be arrested for blasphemy. He was tried. Calvin was
|
||
his accuser. He was convicted and condemned to death by fire. On
|
||
the morning of the fatal day, Calvin saw him, and Serviettes, the
|
||
victim, asked forgiveness of Calvin, the murderer. Serviettes was
|
||
bound to the stake, and the fagots were lighted. The wind carried
|
||
the flames somewhat away from his body, so that he slowly roasted
|
||
for hours. Vainly he implored a speedy death. At last the flames
|
||
climbed round his form; through smoke and fire his murderers saw a
|
||
white heroic face. And there they watched until a man became a
|
||
charred and shriveled mass.
|
||
|
||
Liberty was banished from Geneva, and nothing but
|
||
Presbyterianism was left. Honor, justice, mercy, reason and charity
|
||
were all exiled; but the five points of predestination, particular
|
||
redemption, irresistible grace, total depravity, and the certain
|
||
perseverance of the saints remained instead.
|
||
|
||
Calvin founded a little theocracy, modeled after the Old
|
||
Testament, and succeeded in erecting the most detestable government
|
||
that ever existed, except the one from which it was copied.
|
||
|
||
Against all this intolerance, one man, a minister, raised his
|
||
voice. The name of this man should never be forgotten. It was
|
||
Castalio. This brave man had the goodness and the courage to
|
||
declare the innocence of honest error. He was the first of the so-
|
||
called reformers to take this noble ground. I wish I had the genius
|
||
to pay a fitting tribute to his memory. Perhaps it would be
|
||
impossible to pay him a grander compliment than to say. Castalio
|
||
was in all things the opposite of Calvin. To plead for the right of
|
||
individual judgment was considered a crime, and Castalio was driven
|
||
from Geneva by John Calvin. By him he was denounced as a child of
|
||
the devil, as a dog of Satan, as a beast from hell, and as one who,
|
||
by this horrid blasphemy of the innocence of honest error,
|
||
crucified Christ afresh, and by him he was pursued until rescued by
|
||
the hand of death.
|
||
|
||
Upon the name of Castalio, Calvin heaped every epithet, until
|
||
his malice was nearly satisfied and his imagination entirely
|
||
exhausted. It is impossible to conceive how human nature can become
|
||
so frightfully perverted as to pursue a fellow-man with the
|
||
malignity of a fiend, simply because he is good, just, and
|
||
generous.
|
||
|
||
Calvin was of a pallid, bloodless complexion, thin, sickly,
|
||
irritable, gloomy, impatient, egotistic, tyrannical, heartless, and
|
||
infamous. He was a strange compound of revengeful morality,
|
||
malicious forgiveness, ferocious charity, egotistic humility, and
|
||
a kind of hellish justice. In other words. he was as near like the
|
||
God of the Old Testament as his health permitted. The best thing,
|
||
however, about the Presbyterians of Geneva was, that they denied
|
||
the power of the Pope, and the best thing about the Pope was, that
|
||
he was not a Presbyterian.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
The doctrines of Calvin spread rapidly, and were eagerly
|
||
accepted by multitudes on the continent; but Scotland, in a few
|
||
years, became the real fortress of Presbyterianism. The Scotch
|
||
succeeded in establishing the same kind of theocracy that
|
||
flourished in Geneva. The clergy took possession and control of
|
||
everybody and everything. It is impossible to exaggerate the mental
|
||
degradation, the abject superstition of the people of Scotland
|
||
during the reign of Presbyterianism. Heretics were hunted and
|
||
devoured as though they had been wild beasts. The gloomy insanity
|
||
of Presbyterianism took possession of a great majority of the
|
||
people. They regarded their ministers as the Jews did Moses and
|
||
Aaron. They believed that they were the especial agents of God, and
|
||
that whatsoever they bound in Scotland would be bound in heaven.
|
||
There was not one particle of intellectual freedom. No man was
|
||
allowed to differ with the church, or to even contradict a priest.
|
||
Had Presbyterianism maintained its ascendancy, Scotland would have
|
||
been peopled by savages to-day.
|
||
|
||
The revengeful spirit of Calvin took possession of the
|
||
Puritans, and caused them to redden the soil of the New World with
|
||
the brave blood of honest men. Clinging to the five points of
|
||
Calvin, they too established governments in accordance with the
|
||
teachings of the Old Testament. They too attached the penalty of
|
||
death to the expression of honest thought. They too believed their
|
||
church supreme, and exerted all their power to curse this continent
|
||
with a spiritual despotism as infamous as it was absurd. They
|
||
believed with Luther that universal toleration is universal error,
|
||
and universal error is universal hell. Toleration was denounced as
|
||
a crime.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately for us, civilization has had a softening effect
|
||
even upon the Presbyterian Church. To the ennobling influence of
|
||
the arts and sciences the savage spirit of Calvinism has, in some
|
||
slight degree, succumbed. True, the old creed remains substantially
|
||
as it was written, but by a kind of tacit understanding it has come
|
||
to be regarded as a relic of the past. The cry of "heresy" has been
|
||
growing fainter and fainter, and, as a consequence, the ministers
|
||
of that denomination have ventured, now and then, to express doubts
|
||
as to the damnation of infants, and the doctrine of total
|
||
depravity. The fact is, the old ideas became a little monotonous to
|
||
the people. The fall of man, the scheme of redemption and
|
||
irresistible grace, began to have a familiar sound. The preachers
|
||
told the old stories while the congregations slept. Some of the
|
||
ministers became tired of these stories themselves. The five points
|
||
grew dull, and they felt that nothing short of irresistible grace
|
||
could bear this endless repetition. The outside world was full of
|
||
progress, and in every direction men advanced, while this church,
|
||
anchored to a creed, idly rotted at the shore. Other denominations,
|
||
imbued some little with the spirit of investigation, were springing
|
||
up on every side, while the old Presbyterian ark rested on the
|
||
Ararat of the past, filled with the theological monsters of another
|
||
age.
|
||
|
||
Lured by the splendors of the outer world, tempted by the
|
||
achievements of science, longing to feel the throb and heat of the
|
||
mighty march of the human race, a few of the ministers of this
|
||
conservative denomination were compelled, by irresistible sense, to
|
||
say a few words in harmony with the splendid ideas of to-day.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
These utterances have upon several occasions so nearly wakened
|
||
some of the members that, rubbing their eyes, they have feebly
|
||
inquired whether these grand ideas were not somewhat heretical.
|
||
These ministers found that just in the proportion that their
|
||
orthodoxy decreased, their congregations increased. Those who dealt
|
||
in the pure unadulterated article found themselves demonstrating
|
||
the five points to a less number of hearers than they had points.
|
||
Stung to madness by this bitter truth this galling contrast, this
|
||
harassing fact, the really orthodox have raised the cry of heresy,
|
||
and expect with this cry to seal the lips of honest men. One of the
|
||
Presbyterian ministers, and one who has been enjoying the luxury of
|
||
a little honest thought, and the real rapture of expressing it, has
|
||
already been indicted, and is about to be tried by the Presbyter of
|
||
Illinois. He is charged --
|
||
|
||
First, With having neglected to preach that most comforting
|
||
and consoling truth, the eternal damnation of the soul.
|
||
|
||
Surely, that man must be a monster who could wish to blot this
|
||
blessed doctrine out and rob earth's wretched children of this
|
||
blissful hope!
|
||
|
||
Who can estimate the misery that has been caused by this most
|
||
infamous doctrine of eternal punishment? Think of the lives it has
|
||
blighted, of the tears it has caused -- of the agony it has
|
||
produced. Think of the millions who have been driven to insanity by
|
||
this most terrible of dogmas. This doctrine renders God the basest
|
||
and most cruel being in the universe. Compared with him, the most
|
||
frightful deities of the most barbarous and degraded tribes are
|
||
miracles of goodness and mercy. There is nothing more degrading
|
||
than to worship such a god. Lower than this the soul can never
|
||
sink. If the doctrine of eternal damnation is true, let me share
|
||
the fate of the unconverted; let me have my portion in hell, rather
|
||
than in heaven with a god infamous enough to inflict eternal misery
|
||
upon any of the sons of men.
|
||
|
||
Second. With having spoken a few kind words of Robert Collyer
|
||
and John Stuart Mill.
|
||
|
||
I have the honor of a slight acquaintance with Robert Collyer.
|
||
I have read with pleasure some of his exquisite productions. He has
|
||
a brain full of the dawn, the head of a philosopher, the
|
||
imagination of a poet and the sincere heart of a child.
|
||
|
||
Is a minister to be silenced because he speaks fairly of a
|
||
noble and candid adversary? Is it a crime to compliment a lover of
|
||
justice, an advocate of liberty; one who devotes his life to the
|
||
elevation of man, the discovery of truth, and the promulgation of
|
||
what he believes to be right?
|
||
|
||
Can that tongue be palsied by a presbyter that praises a self-
|
||
denying and heroic life? Is it a sin to speak a charitable word
|
||
over the grave of John Stuart Mill? Is it heretical to pay a just
|
||
and graceful tribute to departed worth? Must the true Presbyterian
|
||
violate the sanctity of the tomb, dig open the grave and ask his
|
||
God to curse the silent dust? Is Presbyterianism so narrow that it
|
||
conceives of no excellence, of no purity of intention, of no
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
spiritual and moral grandeur outside of its barbaric creed? Does it
|
||
still retain within its stony heart all the malice of its founder?
|
||
Is it still warming its fleshless hands at the flames that consumed
|
||
Serviettes? Does it still glory in the damnation of infants, and
|
||
does it still persist in emptying the cradle in order that
|
||
perdition may be filled? Is it still starving the soul and
|
||
famishing the heart? Is it still trembling and shivering, crouching
|
||
and crawling before its ignorant Confession of Faith?
|
||
|
||
Had such men as Robert Collyer and John Stuart Mill been
|
||
present at the burning of Serviettes, they would have extinguished
|
||
the flames with their tears. Had the presbyter of Chicago been
|
||
there, they would have quietly turned their backs, solemnly divided
|
||
their coat tails, and warmed themselves.
|
||
|
||
Third. With having spoken disparagingly of the doctrine of
|
||
predestination.
|
||
|
||
If there is any dogma that ought to be protected by law,
|
||
predestination is that doctrine, Surely it is a cheerful, joyous
|
||
thing, to one who is laboring, struggling, and suffering in this
|
||
weary world, to think that before he existed; before the earth was;
|
||
before a star had glittered in the heavens; before a ray of light
|
||
had left the quiver of the sun, his destiny had been irrevocably
|
||
fixed, and that for an eternity before his birth he had been doomed
|
||
to bear eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
Fourth. With failing to preach the efficacy of a "vicarious
|
||
sacrifice."
|
||
|
||
Suppose a man had been convicted of murder, and was about to
|
||
be hanged -- the governor acting as the executioner; and suppose
|
||
that just as the doomed man was about to suffer death some one in
|
||
the crowd should step forward and say, "I am willing to die in the
|
||
place of that murderer. He has a family, and I have none." And
|
||
suppose further, that the governor should reply, "Come forward,
|
||
young man, your offer is accepted. A murder has been committed and
|
||
somebody must be hung, and your death will satisfy the law just as
|
||
well as the death of the murderer." What would you then think of
|
||
the doctrine of "vicarious sacrifice"?
|
||
|
||
This doctrine is the consummation of two outrages -- forgiving
|
||
one crime and committing another.
|
||
|
||
Fifth. With having inculcated a phase of the doctrine commonly
|
||
known as "evolution," or "development."
|
||
|
||
The church believes and teaches the exact opposite of this
|
||
doctrine. According to the philosophy of theology, man has
|
||
continued to degenerate for six thousand years. To teach that there
|
||
is that in nature which impels to higher forms and grander ends, is
|
||
heresy, of course. The Deity will damn Spencer and his "Evolution,"
|
||
Darwin and his "Origin of Species," Huxley and his "Protoplasm,"
|
||
Tyndall and his "Prayer Gauge," and will save those, and those
|
||
only, who declare that the universe has been cursed, from the
|
||
smallest atom to the grandest star; that everything tends to evil
|
||
and to that only, and that the only perfect thing in nature is the
|
||
Presbyterian Confession of Faith.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
Sixth. With having intimated that the reception of Socrates
|
||
and Penelope at heaven's gate was, to say the least, a trifle more
|
||
cordial than that of Catharine II. Penelope, waiting patiently and
|
||
trustfully for Her lord's return, delaying her suitors, while sadly
|
||
weaving and unweaving the shroud of Laertes, is the most perfect
|
||
type of wife and woman produced by the civilization of Greece.
|
||
|
||
Socrates, whose life was above reproach and whose death was
|
||
beyond all praise, stands to-day, in the estimation of every
|
||
thoughtful man, at least the peer of Christ.
|
||
|
||
Catharine II. assassinated her husband. Stepping upon his
|
||
corpse, she mounted the throne. She was the murderess of Prince
|
||
Iwan, grand nephew of Peter the Great, who was imprisoned for
|
||
eighteen years, and who during all that time saw the sky but once.
|
||
Taken all in all, Catharine was probably one of the most
|
||
intellectual beasts that ever wore a crown.
|
||
|
||
Catharine, however, was the head of the Greek Church, Socrates
|
||
was a heretic and Penelope lived and died without having once heard
|
||
of "particular redemption" or of "irresistible grace."
|
||
|
||
Seventh. With repudiating the idea of a "call" to the
|
||
ministry, and pretending that men were "called" to preach as they
|
||
were to the other avocations of life.
|
||
|
||
If this doctrine is true, God, to say the least of it, is an
|
||
exceedingly poor judge of human nature. It is more than a century
|
||
since a man of true genius has been found in an orthodox pulpit.
|
||
Every minister is heretical just to the extent that his intellect
|
||
is above the average. The Lord seems to be satisfied with
|
||
mediocrity; but the people are not.
|
||
|
||
An old deacon, wishing to get rid of an unpopular preacher,
|
||
advised him to give up the ministry and turn his attention to
|
||
something else. The preacher replied that he could not
|
||
conscientiously desert the pulpit, as he had a "call" to the
|
||
ministry. To which the deacon replied, "That may be so, but it's
|
||
very unfortunate for you, that when God called you to preach, he
|
||
forgot to call anybody to hear you."
|
||
|
||
There is nothing more stupidly egotistic than the claim of the
|
||
clergy that they are, in some divine sense set apart to the service
|
||
of the Lord; that they have been chosen, and sanctified; that there
|
||
is an infinite difference between them and persons employed in
|
||
secular affairs. They teach us that all other professions must take
|
||
care of themselves; that God allows anybody to be a doctor, a
|
||
lawyer, statesman, soldier, or artist; that the Motts and Coopers
|
||
-- the Mansfields and Marshalls -- the Wilberforces and Sumners --
|
||
the Angelos and Raphaels, were never honored by a "call." They
|
||
chose their professions and won their laurels without the
|
||
assistance of the Lord. All these men were left free to follow
|
||
their own inclinations, while God was busily engaged selecting and
|
||
"calling" priests, rectors, elders, ministers and exhorters.
|
||
|
||
Eight. With having doubted that God was the author of the
|
||
109th Psalm.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
The portion of that psalm which carries with it the clearest
|
||
and most satisfactory evidences of inspiration, and which has
|
||
afforded almost unspeakable consolation to the Presbyterian Church,
|
||
is as follows:
|
||
|
||
Set thou a wicked man over him; and let Satan stand at his
|
||
right hand.
|
||
|
||
When he shall be judged, let him be condemned; and let his
|
||
prayer become sin.
|
||
|
||
Let his days be few; and let another take his office.
|
||
|
||
Let his children be fatherless and his wife a widow.
|
||
|
||
Let his children be continually vagabonds, and beg; let them
|
||
seek their bread also out of their desolate places.
|
||
|
||
Let the extortioner catch all that he hath; and let the
|
||
stranger spoil his labor.
|
||
|
||
Let there be none to extend mercy unto him; neither let there
|
||
be any to favor his fatherless children.
|
||
|
||
Let his posterity be cut off: and in the generation following
|
||
let there name be blotted out.
|
||
|
||
* * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
||
But do thou for me, O God the Lord, for Thy name's sake;
|
||
because; Thy mercy is good, deliver Thou me. * * I will greatly
|
||
praise the Lord with my mouth.
|
||
|
||
Think of a God wicked and malicious enough to inspire this
|
||
prayer. Think of one infamous enough to answer it.
|
||
|
||
Had this inspired psalm been found in some temple erected for
|
||
the worship of snakes, or in the possession of some cannibal king,
|
||
written with blood upon the dried skins of babes, there would have
|
||
been a perfect harmony between its surroundings and its sentiments.
|
||
|
||
No wonder that the author of this inspired psalm coldly
|
||
received Socrates and Penelope, and reserved his sweetest smiles
|
||
for Catharine the Second.
|
||
|
||
Ninth. With having said that the battles in which the
|
||
Israelites engaged, with the approval and command of Jehovah,
|
||
surpassed in cruelty those of Julius Caesar.
|
||
|
||
Was it Julius Caesar who said, "And the Lord our God delivered
|
||
him before us; and we smote him, and his sons, and all his people.
|
||
And we took all his cities, and utter!y destroyed the men, and the
|
||
women, and the little ones, of every city, we left none to remain"?
|
||
|
||
Did Julius Caesar send the following report to the Roman
|
||
senate? "And we took all his cities at that time, there was not a
|
||
city which we took not from them, three-score cities, all the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
region of Argob, the kingdom of Og in Bashan. All these cities were
|
||
fenced with high walls, gates, and Bars; beside unwalled towns a
|
||
great many. And we utterly destroyed them, as we did unto Sihon,
|
||
king of Heshbon, utterly destroying the men, women, and children of
|
||
every city."
|
||
|
||
Did Caesar take the city of Jericho "and utterly destroy all
|
||
that was in the city, both men and women, young and old"? Did he
|
||
smite "all the country of the hills, and of the south, and of the
|
||
vale, and of the springs, and all their kings, and leave none
|
||
remaining that breathed, as the Lord God had commanded"?
|
||
|
||
Search the records of the whole world, find out the history of
|
||
every barbarous tribe, and you can find no crime that touched a
|
||
lower depth of infamy than those the Bible's God commanded and
|
||
approved. For such a God I have no words to express my loathing and
|
||
contempt, and all the words in all the languages of man would
|
||
scarcely be sufficient. Away with such a God! Give me Jupiter
|
||
rather, with Io and Europa, or even Siva with his skulls and
|
||
snakes.
|
||
|
||
Tenth. With having repudiated the doctrine of "total
|
||
depravity."
|
||
|
||
What a precious doctrine is that of the total depravity of the
|
||
human heart! How sweet it is to believe that the lives of all the
|
||
good and great were continual sins and perpetual crimes; that the
|
||
love a mother bears her child is, in the sight of God, a sin; that
|
||
the gratitude of the natural heart is simple meanness; that the
|
||
tears of pity are impure; that for the unconverted to live and
|
||
labor for others is an offence to heaven; that the noblest
|
||
aspirations of the soul are low and groveling in the sight of God;
|
||
that man should fall upon his knees and ask forgiveness, simply for
|
||
loving his wife and child, and that even the act of asking
|
||
forgiveness is in fact a crime!
|
||
|
||
Surely it is a kind of bliss to feel that every woman and
|
||
child in the wide world, with the exception of those who believe
|
||
the five points, or some other equally cruel creed, and such
|
||
children as have been baptized, ought at this very moment to be
|
||
dashed down to the lowest glowing gulf of hell.
|
||
|
||
Take from the Christian the history of his own church -- leave
|
||
that entirely out of the question -- and he has no argument left
|
||
with which to substantiate the total depravity of man.
|
||
|
||
Eleventh. With having doubted the "perseverance of the
|
||
saints."
|
||
|
||
I suppose the real meaning of this doctrine is, that
|
||
Presbyterians are just as sure of going to heaven as all other
|
||
folks are of going to hell. The real idea being, that it all
|
||
depends upon the will of God, and not upon the character of the
|
||
person to be damned or saved; that God has the weakness to send
|
||
Presbyterians to Paradise. and the justice to doom the rest of
|
||
mankind to eternal fire.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
It is admitted that no unconverted brain can see the least
|
||
particle of sense in this doctrine; that it is abhorrent to all who
|
||
have not been the recipients of a "new heart;" that only the
|
||
perfectly good can justify the perfectly infamous.
|
||
|
||
It is contended that the saints do not persevere of their own
|
||
free will -- that they are entitled to no credit for persevering;
|
||
but that God forces them to persevere, while on the other hand,
|
||
every crime is committed in accordance with the secret will of God,
|
||
who does all things for his own glory.
|
||
|
||
Compared with this doctrine, there is no other idea, that has
|
||
ever been believed by man, that can properly be called absurd.
|
||
|
||
Twelfth. With having spoken and written somewhat lightly of
|
||
the idea of converting the heathen with doctrinal sermons.
|
||
|
||
Of all the failures of which we have any history or knowledge,
|
||
the missionary effort is the most conspicuous. The whole question
|
||
has been decided here, in our own country, and conclusively
|
||
settled, We have nearly exterminated the Indians, but we have
|
||
converted none. From the days of John Eliot to the execution of the
|
||
last Modoc, not one Indian has been the subject of irresistible
|
||
grace or particular redemption. The few red men who roam the
|
||
western wilderness have no thought or care concerning the five
|
||
points of Calvin. They are utterly oblivious to the great and vital
|
||
truths contained in the Thirty-nine Articles, the Saybrook
|
||
platform, and the resolutions of the Evangelical Alliance. No
|
||
Indian has ever scalped another on account of his religious belief.
|
||
This of itself shows conclusively that the missionaries have had no
|
||
effect.
|
||
|
||
Why should we convert the heathen of China and kill our own?
|
||
Why should we send missionaries across the seas, and soldiers over
|
||
the plains? Why should we send Bibles to the east and muskets to
|
||
the west? If it is impossible to convert Indians who have no
|
||
religion of their own; no prejudice for or against the "eternal
|
||
procession of the Holy Ghost," how can we expect to convert a
|
||
heathen who has a religion; who has plenty of gods and Bibles and
|
||
prophets and Christs, and who has a religious literature far
|
||
grander than our own? Can we hope with the story of Daniel in the
|
||
lions' den to rival the stupendous miracles of India? Is there
|
||
anything in our Bible as lofty and loving as the prayer of the
|
||
Buddhist? Compare your "Confession of Faith" with the following:
|
||
"Never will I seek nor receive private individual salvation --
|
||
never enter into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will
|
||
I live and strive for the universal redemption of every creature
|
||
throughout all worlds. Until all are delivered, never will I leave
|
||
the world of sin, sorrow, and struggle, but will remain where I
|
||
am."
|
||
|
||
Think of sending an average Presbyterian to convert a man who
|
||
daily offers this tender, this infinitely generous, this
|
||
incomparable prayer. Think of reading the 109th Psalm to a heathen
|
||
who has a Bible of his own in which is found this passage. "Blessed
|
||
is that man and beloved of all the gods, who is afraid of no man,
|
||
and of whom no man is afraid."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
Why should you read even the New Testament to a Hindu, when
|
||
his own Chrishna has said, "If a man strike thee, and in striking
|
||
drop his staff, pick it up and hand it to him again"? Why send a
|
||
Presbyterian to a Sufi, who says, "Better one moment of silent
|
||
contemplation and inward love, than seventy thousand years of
|
||
outward worship? "Who would carelessly tread one worm that crawls
|
||
on earth, that heartless one is darkly alienated from God; but he
|
||
that, living, embraceth all things in his love, to live with him
|
||
God bursts all bounds above, below."
|
||
|
||
Compare this prayer with the curses and cruelties of the Old
|
||
Testament -- with the infamies commanded and approved by the being
|
||
whom we are taught to worship as a God -- and with the following
|
||
tender product of Presbyterianism: "It may seem absurd to human
|
||
wisdom that God should harden, blind, and deliver up some men to a
|
||
reprobate sense; that he should first deliver them over to evil,
|
||
and then condemn them for that evil; but the believing spiritual
|
||
man sees no absurdity in all this, knowing that God would be never
|
||
a whit less good even though he should destroy all men."
|
||
|
||
Of all the religions that have been produced by the egotism,
|
||
the malice, the ignorance and ambition of man, Presbyterianism is
|
||
the most hideous.
|
||
|
||
But what shall I say more, for the time would fail me to tell
|
||
of Sabellianism, of a "Modal Trinity," and the "Eternal Procession
|
||
of the Holy Ghost"?
|
||
|
||
Upon these charges, a minister is to be tried, here in
|
||
Chicago; in this city of pluck and progress -- this marvel of
|
||
energy -- this miracle of nerve. The cry of "heresy," here, sounds
|
||
like a wail from the Dark Ages -- a shriek from the Inquisition, or
|
||
a groan from the grave of Calvin.
|
||
|
||
Another effort is being made to enslave a man.
|
||
|
||
It is claimed that every member of the church has solemnly
|
||
agreed never to outgrow the creed; that he has pledged himself to
|
||
remain an intellectual dwarf. Upon this condition the church agrees
|
||
to save his soul, and he hands over his brains to bind the bargain.
|
||
Should a fact be found inconsistent with the creed, he binds
|
||
himself to deny the fact and curse the finder. With scraps of
|
||
dogmas and crumbs of doctrine, he agrees that his soul shall be
|
||
satisfied forever. What an intellectual feast the Confession of
|
||
Faith must be! It reminds one of the dinner described by Sydney
|
||
Smith, where everything was cold except the water, and everything
|
||
sour except the vinegar.
|
||
|
||
Every member of a church promises to remain orthodox, that is
|
||
to say -- stationary. Growth is heresy. Orthodox ideas are the
|
||
feathers that have been molted by the eagle of progress. They are
|
||
the dead leaves under the majestic palm, while heresy is the bud
|
||
and blossom at the top.
|
||
|
||
Imagine a vine that grows at one end and decays at the other.
|
||
The end that grows is heresy, the end that rots is orthodox. The
|
||
dead are orthodox, and your cemetery is the most perfect type of a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
well regulated church. No thought, no progress, no heresy there.
|
||
Slowly and silently, side by side, the satisfied members peacefully
|
||
decay. There is only this difference -- the dead do not persecute.
|
||
|
||
And what does a trial for heresy mean? It means that the
|
||
church says to a heretic, "Believe as I do, or I will withdraw my
|
||
support. I will not employ you. I will pursue you until your
|
||
garments are rags; until your children cry for bread; until your
|
||
cheeks are furrowed with tears. I will hunt you to the very portals
|
||
of the tomb, and then my God will do the rest. I will not imprison
|
||
you. I will not burn you. The law prevents my doing that. I helped
|
||
make the law, not however to protect you, nor to deprive me of the
|
||
right to exterminate you, but in order to keep other churches from
|
||
exterminating me."
|
||
|
||
A trial for heresy means that the spirit of persecution still
|
||
lingers in the church; that it still denies the right of private
|
||
judgement; that it still thinks more of creed than truth, and that
|
||
it is still determined to prevent the intellectual growth of man.
|
||
It means that churches are shambles in which are bought and sold
|
||
the souls of men. It means that the church is still guilty of the
|
||
barbarity of opposing thought with force. It means that if it had
|
||
the power, the mental horizon would be bounded by a creed; that it
|
||
would bring again the whips and chains and dungeon keys, the rack
|
||
and fagot of the past.
|
||
|
||
But let me tell the church it lacks the power. There have
|
||
been, and still are, too many men who own themselves -- too much
|
||
thought, too much knowledge for the church to grasp again the sword
|
||
of power. The church must abdicate. For the Eglon of superstition
|
||
Science has a message from Truth.
|
||
|
||
The heretics have not thought and suffered and died in vain.
|
||
Every heretic has been, and is, a ray of light. Not in vain did
|
||
Voltaire, that great man, point from the foot of the Alps the
|
||
finger of scorn at every hypocrite in Europe. Not in vain were the
|
||
splendid utterances of the infidels, while beyond all price are the
|
||
discoveries of science.
|
||
|
||
The church has impeded, but it has not and it cannot stop the
|
||
onward march of the human race. Heresy cannot be burned, nor
|
||
imprisoned, nor starved. It laughs at presbyters and synods, at
|
||
ecumenical councils and the impotent thunders of Sinai. Heresy is
|
||
the eternal dawn, the morning star, the glittering herald of the
|
||
day. Heresy is the last and best thought. It is the perpetual New
|
||
World, the unknown sea, toward which the brave all sail. It is the
|
||
eternal horizon of progress.
|
||
|
||
Heresy extends the hospitalities of the brain to a new
|
||
thought.
|
||
|
||
Heresy is a cradle; orthodoxy, a coffin.
|
||
|
||
Why should man be afraid to think, and why should he fear to
|
||
express his thoughts?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
HERETICS AND HERESIES
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that an infinite Deity is unwilling that a man
|
||
should investigate the phenomena by which he is surrounded? Is it
|
||
possible that a god delights in threatening and terrifying men?
|
||
What glory, what honor and renown a god must win on such a field!
|
||
The ocean raving at a drop; a star envious of a candle; the sun
|
||
jealous of a fire-fly.
|
||
|
||
Go on, presbyters and synods, go on! Thrust the heretics out
|
||
of the church -- that is to say, throw away your brains, -- put out
|
||
your eyes. The infidels will thank you. They are willing to adopt
|
||
your exiles. Every deserter from your camp is a recruit for the
|
||
army of progress. Cling to the ignorant dogmas of the past; read
|
||
the 109th Psalm; gloat over the slaughter of mothers and babes;
|
||
thank God for total depravity; shower your honors upon hypocrites,
|
||
and silence every minister who is touched with that heresy called
|
||
genius.
|
||
|
||
Be true to your history. Turn out the astronomers, the
|
||
geologists, the naturalists, the chemists, and all the honest
|
||
scientists. With a whip of scorpions, drive them all out. We want
|
||
them all. Keep the ignorant, the superstitious, the bigoted, and
|
||
the writers of charges and specifications. Keep them, and keep them
|
||
all. Repeat your pious platitudes in the drowsy ears of the
|
||
faithful, and read your Bible to heretics, as kings read some
|
||
forgotten riot-act to stop and stay the waves of revolution. You
|
||
are too weak to excite anger. We forgive your efforts as the sun
|
||
forgives a cloud -- as the air forgives the breath you waste.
|
||
|
||
How long, O how long, will man listen to the threats of God,
|
||
and shut his eyes to the splendid possibilities of Nature? How
|
||
long, O how long will man remain the cringing slave of a false and
|
||
cruel creed?
|
||
|
||
By this time the whole world should know that the real Bible
|
||
has not yet been written, but is being written, and that it will
|
||
never be finished until the race begins its downward march, or
|
||
ceases to exist.
|
||
|
||
The real Bible is not the work of inspired men, nor prophets,
|
||
nor apostles, nor evangelists, nor of Christs. Every man who finds
|
||
a fact, adds, as it were, a word to this great book. It is not
|
||
attested by prophecy, by miracles or signs. It makes no appeal to
|
||
faith, to ignorance, to credulity or fear. It has no punishment for
|
||
unbelief, and no reward for hypocrisy. It appeals to man in the
|
||
name of demonstration. It has nothing to conceal. It has no fear of
|
||
being read, of being contradicted, of being investigated and
|
||
understood. It does not pretend to be holy, or sacred; it simply
|
||
claims to be true. It challenges the scrutiny of all, and implores
|
||
every reader to verify every line for himself. It is incapable of
|
||
being blasphemed. This book appeals to all the surroundings of man.
|
||
Each thing that exists testifies of its perfection. The earth, with
|
||
its heart of fire and crowns of snow; with its forests and plains,
|
||
its rocks and seas; with its every wave and cloud; with its every
|
||
leaf and bud and flower, confirms its every word, and the solemn
|
||
stars, shining in the infinite abysses, are the eternal witnesses
|
||
of its truth.
|
||
**** ****
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|