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46 KiB
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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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INDIVIDUALITY
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1873
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"HIS SOUL WAS LIKE A STAR AND DWELT APART"
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On every hand are the enemies of individuality and mental
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freedom. Custom meets us at the cradle and leaves us only at the
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tomb. Our first questions are answered by ignorance, and our last
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by superstition. We are pushed and dragged by countless hands along
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the beaten track, and our entire training can be summed up in the
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word -- suppression. Our desire to have a thing, or to do a thing,
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is considered as conclusive evidence that we ought not to have it,
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and ought not to do it. At every turn we run against cherubim and
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a flaming sword guarding some entrance to the Eden of our desire.
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We are allowed to investigate all subjects in which we feel no
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particular interest, and to express the opinions of the majority
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with the utmost freedom. We are taught that liberty of speech
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should never be carried to the extent of contradicting the dead
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witnesses of a popular superstition. Society offers continual
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rewards for self-betrayal, and they are nearly all earned and
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claimed, and some are paid.
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We have all read accounts of Christian gentlemen remarking,
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when about to be hanged, how much better it would have been for
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them if they had only followed a mother's advice. But after all,
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how fortunate it is for the world that the maternal advice has not
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always been followed. How fortunate it is for us all that it is
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somewhat unnatural for a human being to obey. Universal obedience
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is universal stagnation; disobedience is one of the conditions of
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progress. Select any age of the world and tell me what would have
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been the effect of implicit obedience. Suppose the church had had
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absolute control of the human mind at any time, would not the words
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liberty and progress have been blotted from human speech? In
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defiance of advice, the world has advanced.
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Suppose the astronomers had controlled the science of
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astronomy; suppose the doctors had controlled the science of
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medicine; suppose kings had been left to fix the forms of
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government; suppose our fathers had taken the advice of Paul, who
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said, "be subject to the powers that be, because they are ordained
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of God;" suppose the church could control the world to-day, we
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would go back to chaos and old night. Philosophy would be branded
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as infamous; Science would again press its pale and thoughtful face
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against the prison bars, and round the limbs of liberty would climb
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the bigot's flame.
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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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INDIVIDUALITY
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It is a blessed thing that in every age some one has had
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individuality enough and courage enough to stand by his own
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convictions, -- some one who had the grandeur to say his say. I
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believe it was Magellan who said, "The church says the earth is
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flat; but I have seen its shadow on the moon, and I have more
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confidence even in a shadow than in the church." On the prow of his
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ship were disobedience, defiance, scorn, and success.
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The trouble with most people is, they bow to what is called
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authority; they have a certain reverence for the old because it is
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old. They think a man is better for being dead, especially if he
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has been dead a long time. They think the fathers of their nation
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were the greatest and best of all mankind. All these things they
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implicitly believe because it is popular and patriotic, and because
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they were told so when they were very small, and remember
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distinctly of hearing mother read it out of a book. It is hard to
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over-estimate the influence of early training in the direction of
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superstition. You first teach children that a certain book is true
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-- that it was written by God himself -- that to question its truth
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is a sin, that to deny it is a crime, and that should they die
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without believing that book they will be forever damned without
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benefit of clergy. The consequence is, that long before they read
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that book, they believe it to be true. When they do read it their
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minds are wholly unfitted to investigate its claims. They accept it
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as a matter of course.
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In this way the reason is overcome, the sweet instincts of
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humanity are blotted from the heart, and while reading its infamous
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pages even justice throws aside her scales, shrieking for revenge,
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and charity, with bloody hands, applauds a deed of murder. In this
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way we are taught that the revenge of man is the justice of God;
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that mercy is not the same everywhere. In this way the ideas of our
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race have been subverted. In this way we have made tyrants, bigots,
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and inquisitors. In this way the brain of man has become a kind of
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palimpsest upon which, and over the writings of nature,
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superstition has scrawled her countless lies. One great trouble is
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that most teachers are dishonest. They teach as certainties those
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things concerning which they entertain doubts. They do not say, "we
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think this is so." but "we know this is so." They do not appeal to
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the reason of the pupil, but they command his faith. They keep all
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doubts to themselves; they do not explain, they assert. All this is
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infamous. In this way you may make Christians, but you cannot make
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men; you cannot make women. You can make followers, but no leaders;
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disciples, but no Christs. You may promise power, honor, and
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happiness to all those who will blindly follow, but you cannot keep
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your promise.
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A monarch said to a hermit, "Come with me and I will give you
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power."
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"I have all the power that I know how to use," replied the
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hermit.
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"Come," said the king, "I will give you wealth."
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"I have no wants that money can supply." said the hermit.
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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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INDIVIDUALITY
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"I will give you honor," said the monarch.
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"Ah, honor cannot be given, it must he earned," was the
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hermit's answer. "Come," said the king, making a last appeal, "and
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I will give you happiness." "No," said the man of solitude, "there
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is no happiness without liberty, and he who follows cannot be
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free."
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"You shall have liberty too," said the king. "Then I will stay
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where I am," said the old man.
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And all the king's courtiers thought the hermit a fool.
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Now and then somebody examines, and in spite of all keeps his
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manhood, and has the courage to follow where his reason leads. Then
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the pious get together and repeat wise saws, and exchange knowing
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nods and most prophetic winks. The stupidly wise sit owl-like on
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the dead limbs of the tree of knowledge, and solemnly hoot. Wealth
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sneers, and fashion laughs, and respectability passes by on the
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other side, and scorn points with all her skinny fingers, and all
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the snakes of superstition writhe and hiss, and slander lends her
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tongue, and infamy her brand, and perjury her oath, and the law its
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power, and bigotry tortures, and the church kills.
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The church hates a thinker precisely for the same reason a
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robber dislikes a sheriff, or a thief despises the prosecuting
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witness. Tyranny likes courtiers, flatterers, followers, fawners,
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and superstition wants believers, disciples, zealots, hypocrites,
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and subscribers. The church demands worship -- the very thing that
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man should give to no being, human or divine. To worship another is
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to degrade yourself. Worship is awe and dread and vague fear and
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blind hope. It is the spirit of worship that elevates the one and
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degrades the many; that builds palaces for robbers, erects
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monuments to crime, and forges manacles even for its own hands. The
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spirit of worship is the spirit of tyranny. The worshiper always
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regrets that he is not the worshiped. We should all remember that
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the intellect has no knees, and that whatever the attitude of the
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body may be, the brave soul is always found erect. Whoever
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worships, abdicates. Whoever believes at the command of power,
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tramples his own individuality beneath his feet, and voluntarily
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robs himself of all that renders man superior to the brute.
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The despotism of faith is justified upon the ground that
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Christian countries are the grandest and most prosperous of the
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world. At one time the same thing could have been truly said in
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India, in Egypt, in Greece, in Rome, and in every other country
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that has, in the history of the world, swept to empire. Numberless
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circumstances and countless conditions have produced the prosperity
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of the Christian world. The truth is, we have advanced in spite of
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religious zeal, ignorance, and opposition. The church has won no
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victories for the rights of man. Luther labored to reform the
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church -- Voltaire, to reform men. Over every fortress of tyranny
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has waved, and still waves, the banner of the church.
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Wherever brave blood has been shed, the sword of the church
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has been wet. On every chain has been the sign of the cross. The
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altar and throne have leaned against and supported each other.
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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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INDIVIDUALITY
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All that is good in our civilization is the result of
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commerce, climate, soil, geographical position, industry,
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invention, discovery, art, and science. The church has been the
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enemy of progress, for the reason that it has endeavored to prevent
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man thinking for himself. To prevent thought is to prevent all
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advancement except in the direction of faith.
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Who can imagine the infinite impudence of a church assuming to
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think for the human race? Who can imagine the infinite impudence of
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a church that pretends to be the mouthpiece of God, and in his name
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threatens to inflict eternal punishment upon those who honestly
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reject its claims and scorn its pretensions? By what right does a
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man, or an organization of men, or a god, claim to hold a brain in
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bondage? When a fact can be demonstrated, force is unnecessary;
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when it cannot be demonstrated, an appeal to force is infamous. In
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the presence of the unknown all have an equal right to think.
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Over the vast plain, called life, we are all travelers, and
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not one traveler is perfectly certain that he is going in the right
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direction. True it is that no other plain is so well supplied with
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guide-boards. At every turn and crossing you will find them, and
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upon each one. is written the exact direction and distance. One
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great trouble is, however, that these boards are all different, and
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the result is that most travelers are confused in proportion to the
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number they read. Thousands of people are around each of these
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signs, and each one is doing his best to convince the traveler that
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his particular board is the only one upon which the least reliance
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can be placed, and that if his road is taken the reward for so
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doing will be infinite and eternal, while all the other roads are
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said to lead to hell, and all the makers of the other guide-boards
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are declared to be heretics, hypocrites and liars. "Well," says a
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traveler, "you may be right in what you say, but allow me at least
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to read some of the other directions and examine a little into
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their claims. I wish to rely a little upon my own judgment in a
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matter of so great importance." "No, sir," shouts the zealot, "that
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is the very thing you are not allowed to do. You must go my way
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without investigation, or you are as good as damned already."
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"Well," says the traveler, "if that is so, I believe I had better
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go your way." And so most of them go along, taking the word of
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those who know as little as themselves. Now and then comes one who,
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in spite of all threats, calmly examines the claims of all, and as
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calmly rejects them all. These travelers take roads of their own,
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and are denounced by all the others as infidels and atheists.
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Around all of these guide-boards, as far as the eye can reach,
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the ground is covered with mountains of human bones, crumbling and
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bleaching in the rain and sun. They are the bones of martyrs,
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murdered men and women -- fathers, mothers and babes.
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In my judgment, every human being should take a road of his
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own. Every mind should be true to itself -- should think,
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investigate and conclude for itself. This is a duty alike incumbent
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upon pauper and prince. Every soul should repel dictation and
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tyranny no matter from what source they come -- from earth or
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heaven from men or gods. Besides, every traveler upon this vast
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plain should give to every other traveler his best idea as to the
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road that should be taken. Each is entitled to the honest opinion
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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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INDIVIDUALITY
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of all. And there is but one way to get an honest opinion upon any
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subject whatever. The person giving the opinion must be free from
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fear. The merchant must not fear to lose his custom, the doctor his
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practice, nor the preacher his pulpit. There can he no advance
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without liberty. Suppression of honest inquiry is retrogression,
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and must end in intellectual night. The tendency of orthodox
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religion to-day is toward mental slavery and barbarism. Not one of
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the orthodox ministers dare preach what he thinks if he knows a
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majority of his congregation think otherwise. He knows that every
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member of his church stands guard over his brain with a creed, like
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a club, in his hand. He knows that he is not expected to search
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after the truth, but that he is employed to defend the creed. Every
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pulpit is a pillory, in which stands a hired culprit, defending the
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justice of his own imprisonment.
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Is it desirable that all should be exactly alike in their
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religious convictions? Is any such thing possible? Do we not know
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that there are no two persons alike in the whole world? No two
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trees, no two leaves, no two anything that are alike? Infinite
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diversity is the law. Religion tries to force all minds into one
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mould. Knowing that all cannot believe, the church endeavors to
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make all say they believe. She longs for the unity of hypocrisy,
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and detests the splendid diversity of individuality and freedom.
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Nearly all people stand in great horror of annihilation, and
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yet to give up your individuality is to annihilate yourself. Mental
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slavery is mental death, and every man who has given up his
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intellectual freedom is the living coffin of his dead soul. In this
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sense, every church is a cemetery and every creed an epitaph.
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We should all remember that to be like other people is to be
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unlike ourselves, and that nothing can be more detestable in
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character than servile imitation. The great trouble with imitation
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is, that we are apt to ape those who are in reality far below us.
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After all, the poorest bargain that a human being can make, is to
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give his individuality for what is called respectability.
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There is no saying more degrading than this: It is better to
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be the tail of a lion than the head of a dog. It is a
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responsibility to think and act for yourself. Most people hate
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responsibility; therefore they join something and become the tail
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of some lion. They say, My party can act for me -- my church can do
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my thinking. It is enough for me to pay taxes and obey the lion to
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which I belong, without troubling myself about the right, the
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wrong, or the why or the wherefore of anything whatever. These
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people are respectable. They hate reformers, and dislike
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exceedingly to have their minds disturbed. They regard convictions
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as very disagreeable things to have. They love forms and enjoy
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beyond everything else, telling what a splendid tail their lion has
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and what a troublesome dog their neighbor is. Besides this natural
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inclination to avoid personal responsibility, is and always has
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been, the fact that every religionist has warned men against the
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presumption and wickedness of thinking for themselves. Reason has
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been denounced by all Christendom as the only unsafe guide. The
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church has left nothing undone to prevent man following the logic
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of his brain. The plainest facts have been covered with the mantle
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of mystery. The grossest absurdities have been declared to be self-
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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INDIVIDUALITY
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evident facts. The order of nature has been as it were, reversed,
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that the hypocritical few might govern the honest many. The man who
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stood by the conclusion of his reason was denounced as a scorner
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and hater of God and his holy church. From the organization of the
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first church until this moment, to think your own thoughts has been
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inconsistent with membership. Every member has borne the marks of
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collar and chain, and whip. No man ever seriously attempted to
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reform a church without being cast out and hunted down by the
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hounds of hypocrisy. The highest crime against a creed is to change
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it. Reformation is treason.
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Thousands of young men are being educated at this moment by
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the various churches. What for? In order that they may be prepared
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to investigate the phenomena by which we are surrounded? No! The
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object, and the only object, is that they may be prepared to defend
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a creed; that they may learn the arguments of their respective
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churches, and repeat them in the dull ears of a thoughtless
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||
congregation. If one, after being thus trained at the expense of
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the Methodists, turns Presbyterian or Baptist, he is denounced as
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||
an ungrateful wretch. Honest investigation is utterly impossible
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||
within the pale of any church, for the reason, that if you think
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the church is right you will not investigate, and if you think it
|
||
wrong, the church will investigate you. The consequence of this is,
|
||
that most of the theological literature is the result of
|
||
suppression, of fear, tyranny and hypocrisy.
|
||
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||
Every orthodox writer necessarily said to himself; If I write
|
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that, my wife and children may want for bread. I will be covered
|
||
with shame and branded with infamy; but if I write this, I will
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||
gain position, power, and honor. My church rewards defenders, and
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||
burns reformers.
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||
Under these conditions all your Scotts, Henrys, and McKnights
|
||
have written; and weighed in these scales, what are their
|
||
commentaries worth? They are not the ideas and decisions of honest
|
||
judges, but the sophisms of the paid attorneys of superstition. Who
|
||
can tell what the world has lost by this infamous system of
|
||
suppression? How many grand thinkers have died with the mailed hand
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||
of superstition upon their lips? How many splendid ideas have
|
||
perished in the cradle of the brain, strangled in the poison-coils
|
||
of that python, the Church!
|
||
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||
For thousands of years a thinker was hunted down like an
|
||
escaped convict. To him who had braved the church, every door was
|
||
shut, every knife was open. To shelter him from the wild storm, to
|
||
give him a crust when dying, to put a cup of water to his cracked
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||
and bleeding lips; these were all crimes, not one of which the
|
||
church ever did forgive; and with the justice taught of her God,
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||
his helpless children were exterminated as scorpions and vipers.
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||
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||
Who at the present day can imagine the courage, the devotion
|
||
to principle, the intellectual and moral grandeur it once required
|
||
to be an infidel, to brave the church, her racks, her fagots, her
|
||
dungeons, her tongues of fire, -- to defy and scorn her heaven and
|
||
her hell -- her devil and her God? They were the noblest sons of
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||
earth. They were the real saviors of our race, the destroyers of
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||
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||
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||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
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|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
superstition and the creators of Science. They were the real Titans
|
||
who bared their grand foreheads to all the thunderbolts of all the
|
||
gods.
|
||
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||
The church has been, and still is, the great robber. She has
|
||
rifled not only the pockets but the brains of the world. She is the
|
||
stone at the sepulchre of liberty; the upas tree, in whose shade
|
||
the intellect of man has withered; the Gorgon beneath whose gaze
|
||
the human heart has turned to stone. Under her influence even the
|
||
Protestant mother expects to be happy in heaven, while her brave
|
||
boy, who fell fighting for the rights of man, shall writhe in hell.
|
||
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||
It is said that some of the Indian tribes place the heads of
|
||
their children between pieces of bark until the form of the skull
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||
is permanently changed. To us this seems a most shocking custom:
|
||
and yet, after all, is it as bad as to put the souls of our
|
||
children in the strait-jacket of a creed? to so utterly deform
|
||
their minds that they regard the God of the Bible as a being of
|
||
infinite mercy, and really consider it a virtue to believe a thing
|
||
just because it seems unreasonable? Every child in the Christian
|
||
world has uttered its wondering protest against this outrage. All
|
||
the machinery of the church is constantly employed in corrupting
|
||
the reason of children. In every possible way they are robbed of
|
||
their own thoughts and forced to accept the statements of others.
|
||
Every Sunday school has for its object the crushing out of every
|
||
germ of individuality. The poor children are taught that nothing
|
||
can be more acceptable to God than unreasoning obedience and
|
||
eyeless faith, and that to believe God did an impossible act, is
|
||
far better than to do a good one yourself. They are told that all
|
||
religions have been simply the John-the-Baptists of ours; that all
|
||
the gods of antiquity have withered and shrunken into the Jehovah
|
||
of the Jews; that all the longings and aspirations of the race are
|
||
realized in the motto of the Evangelical Alliance. "Liberty in non-
|
||
essentials;" that all there is, or ever was, of religion can be
|
||
found in the apostles' creed; that there is nothing left to be
|
||
discovered; that all the thinkers are dead, and all the living
|
||
should simply be believers; that we have only to repeat the epitaph
|
||
found on the grave of wisdom; that grave-yards are the best
|
||
possible universities and that the children must be forever beaten
|
||
with the bones of the fathers.
|
||
|
||
It has always seemed absurd to suppose that a god would choose
|
||
for his companions, during all eternity, the dear souls whose
|
||
highest and only ambition is to obey. He certainly would now and
|
||
then be tempted to make the same remark made by an English
|
||
gentleman to his poor guest. The gentleman had invited a man in
|
||
humble circumstances to dine with him. The man was so overcome with
|
||
the honor that to everything the gentleman said he replied Yes.
|
||
Tired at last with the monotony of acquiescence, the gentleman
|
||
cried out, "For God's sake, my good man, say 'no,' just once, so
|
||
there will be two of us."
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that an infinite God created this world simply
|
||
to be the dwelling-place of slaves and serfs? simply for the
|
||
purpose of raising orthodox Christians? That he did a few miracles
|
||
to astonish them; that all the evils of life are simply his
|
||
punishments, and that he is finally going to turn heaven into a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
kind of religious museum filled with Baptist barnacles, petrified
|
||
Presbyterians and Methodist mummies? I want no heaven for which I
|
||
must give my reason; no happiness in exchange for my liberty, and
|
||
no immortality that demands the surrender of my individuality.
|
||
Better rot in the windowless tomb, to which there is no door but
|
||
the red mouth of the pallid worm, than wear the jeweled collar even
|
||
of a god.
|
||
|
||
Religion does not, and cannot, contemplate man as free. She
|
||
accepts only the homage of the prostrate, and scorns the offerings
|
||
of those who stand erect. She cannot tolerate the liberty of
|
||
thought. The wide and sunny fields belong not to her domain. The
|
||
star-lit heights of genius and individuality are above and beyond
|
||
her appreciation and power. Her subjects cringe at her feet,
|
||
covered with the dust of obedience. They are not athletes standing
|
||
posed by rich life and brave endeavor like antique statues, but
|
||
shriveled deformities, studying with furtive glance the cruel face
|
||
of power.
|
||
|
||
No religionist seems capable of comprehending this plain
|
||
truth. There is this difference between thought and action: for our
|
||
actions we are responsible to ourselves and to those injuriously
|
||
affected; for thoughts, there can, in the nature of things, be no
|
||
responsibility to gods or men, here or hereafter. And yet the
|
||
Protestant has vied with the Catholic in denouncing freedom of
|
||
thought; and while I was taught to hate Catholicism with every drop
|
||
of my blood, it is only justice to say, that in all essential
|
||
particulars it is precisely the same as every other religion.
|
||
Luther denounced mental liberty with all the coarse and brutal
|
||
vigor of his nature; Calvin despised, from the very bottom of his
|
||
petrified heart, anything that even looked like religious
|
||
toleration, and solemnly declared that to advocate it was to
|
||
crucify Christ afresh. All the founders of all the orthodox
|
||
churches have advocated the same infamous tenet. The truth is, that
|
||
what is called religion is necessarily inconsistent with free
|
||
thought.
|
||
|
||
A believer is a bird in a cage, a Freethinker is an eagle
|
||
parting the clouds with tireless wing. At present, owing to the
|
||
inroads that have been made by liberals and infidels, most of the
|
||
churches pretend to be in favor of religious liberty. Of these
|
||
churches we will ask this question: How can a man, who
|
||
conscientiously believes in religious liberty, worship a God who
|
||
does not? They say to us: We will not imprison you on account of
|
||
your belief, but our God will. We will not burn you because you
|
||
throw away the sacred Scriptures, but their author will. We think
|
||
it an infamous crime to persecute our brethren for opinion's sake,
|
||
-- but the God, whom we ignorantly worship, will on that account,
|
||
damn his own children forever.
|
||
|
||
Why is it that these Christians not only detest the infidels,
|
||
but cordially despise each other? Why do they refuse to worship in
|
||
the temples of each other? Why do they care so little for the
|
||
damnation of men, and so much for the baptism of children? Why will
|
||
they adorn their churches with the money of thieves and flatter
|
||
vice for the sake of subscriptions? Why will they attempt to bribe
|
||
Science to certify to the writings of God? Why do they torture the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
words of the great into an acknowledgment of the truth of
|
||
Christianity? Why do they stand with hat in hand before presidents,
|
||
kings, emperors, and scientists, begging, like Lazarus, for a few
|
||
crumbs of religious comfort? Why are they so delighted to find an
|
||
allusion to Providence in the message of Lincoln? Why are they so
|
||
afraid that some one will find out that Paley wrote an essay in
|
||
favor of the Epicurean philosophy, and that Sir Isaac Newton was
|
||
once an infidel? Why are they so anxious to show that Voltaire
|
||
recanted; that Paine died palsied with fear; that the Emperor
|
||
Julian cried out "Galilean, thou hast conquered"; that Gibbon died
|
||
a Catholic; that Agassiz had a little confidence in Moses; that the
|
||
old Napoleon was once complimentary enough to say that he thought
|
||
Christ greater than himself or Caesar; that Washington was caught
|
||
on his knees at Valley Forge; that blunt old Ethan Allen told his
|
||
child to believe the religion of her mother; that Franklin said,
|
||
"Don't unchain the tiger, and that Volney got frightened in a storm
|
||
at sea?
|
||
|
||
Is it because the foundation of their temple is crumbling,
|
||
because the walls are cracked, the pillars leaning, the great dome
|
||
swaying to its fall and because Science has written over the high
|
||
altar its MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN -- the old words, destined to
|
||
be the epitaph of all religions?
|
||
|
||
Every assertion of individual independence has been a step
|
||
toward infidelity. Luther started toward Humboldt, -- Wesley,
|
||
toward John Stuart Mill. To really reform the church is to destroy
|
||
it. Every new religion has a little less superstition than the old,
|
||
so that the religion of Science is but a question of time.
|
||
|
||
I will not say the church has been an unmitigated evil in all
|
||
respects. Its history is infamous and glorious. It has delighted in
|
||
the production of extremes. It has furnished murderers for its own
|
||
martyrs. It has sometimes fed the body, but has always starved the
|
||
soul. It has been a charitable highwayman -- a profligate beggar --
|
||
a generous pirate. It has produced some angels and a multitude of
|
||
devils. It has built more prisons than asylums. It made a hundred
|
||
orphans while it cared for one. In one hand it has carried the
|
||
alms-dish and in the other a sword. lt has founded schools and
|
||
endowed universities for the purpose of destroying true learning.
|
||
It filled the world with hypocrites and zealots, and upon the cross
|
||
of its own Christ it crucified the individuality of man. It has
|
||
sought to destroy the independence of the soul and put the world
|
||
upon its knees. This is its crime. The commission of this crime was
|
||
necessary to its existence. In order to compel obedience it
|
||
declared that it had the truth, and all the truth; that God had
|
||
made it the keeper of his secrets; his agent and his vicegerent. It
|
||
declared that all other religions were false and infamous. It
|
||
rendered all compromise impossible and all thought superfluous.
|
||
Thought was its enemy, obedience was its friend. Investigation was
|
||
fraught with danger; therefor investigation was suppressed. The
|
||
holy of holies was behind the curtain. All this was upon the
|
||
principle that forgers hate to have the signature examined by an
|
||
expert, and that imposture detests curiosity.
|
||
|
||
He that hath ears to hear, let him hear has always been the
|
||
favorite text of the church.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
In short, Christianity has always opposed every forward
|
||
movement of the human race. Across the highway of progress it has
|
||
always been building breastworks of Bibles, tracts, commentaries,
|
||
prayer-books, creeds, dogmas and platforms, and at every advance
|
||
the Christians have gathered together behind these heaps of rubbish
|
||
and shot the poisoned arrows of malice at the soldiers of freedom.
|
||
|
||
And even the liberal Christian of to-day has his holy of
|
||
holies, and in the niche of the temple of his heart has his idol.
|
||
He still clings to a part of the old superstition, and all the
|
||
pleasant memories of the old belief linger in the horizon of his
|
||
thoughts like a sunset. We associate the memory of those we love
|
||
with the religion of our childhood. It seems almost a sacrilege to
|
||
rudely destroy the idols that our fathers worshiped, and turn their
|
||
sacred and beautiful truths into the fables of barbarism. Some
|
||
throw away the Old Testament and cling to the New, while others
|
||
give up everything except the idea that there is a personal God,
|
||
and that in some wonderful way we are the objects of his care.
|
||
|
||
Even this, in my opinion, as Science, the great iconoclast,
|
||
marches onward, will have to be abandoned with the rest. The great
|
||
ghost will surely share the fate of the little ones. They fled at
|
||
the first appearance of the dawn, and the other will vanish with
|
||
the perfect day. Until then the independence of man is little more
|
||
than a dream. Overshadowed by an immense personality, in the
|
||
presence of the irresponsible and the infinite, the individuality
|
||
of man is lost, and he falls prostrate in the very dust of fear.
|
||
Beneath the frown of the absolute, man stands a wretched, trembling
|
||
slave, -- beneath his smile he is at best only a fortunate serf.
|
||
Governed by a being whose arbitrary will is law, chained to the
|
||
chariot of power, his destiny rests in the pleasure of the unknown.
|
||
Under these circumstances, what wretched object can he have in
|
||
lengthening out his aimless life?
|
||
|
||
And yet, in most minds, there is a vague fear of the gods --
|
||
a shrinking from the malice of the skies. Our fathers were slaves,
|
||
and nearly all their children are mental serfs. The enfranchisement
|
||
of the soul is a slow and painful process. Superstition, the mother
|
||
of those hideous twins, Fear and Faith, from her throne of skulls,
|
||
still rules the world, and will until the mind of woman ceases to
|
||
be the property of priests.
|
||
|
||
When women reason, and babes sit in the lap of philosophy, the
|
||
victory of reason over the shadowy host of darkness will be
|
||
complete.
|
||
|
||
In the minds of many, long after the intellect has thrown
|
||
aside as utterly fabulous the legends of the church, there still
|
||
remains a lingering suspicion, born of the mental habits contracted
|
||
in childhood, that after all there may be a grain of truth in these
|
||
mountains of theological mist, and that possibly the superstitious
|
||
side is the side of safety.
|
||
|
||
A gentleman, walking among the ruins of Athens, came upon a
|
||
fallen statue of Jupiter; making an exceedingly low bow he said: "O
|
||
Jupiter! I salute thee." He then added: "Should you ever sit upon
|
||
the throne of heaven again, do not, I pray you, forget that I
|
||
treated you politely when you were prostrate."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
We have all been taught by the church that nothing is so well
|
||
calculated to excite the ire of the Deity as to express a doubt as
|
||
to his existence, and that to deny it is an unpardonable sin.
|
||
Numerous well-attested instances are referred to of atheists being
|
||
struck dead for denying the existence of God. According to these
|
||
religious people, God is infinitely above us in every respect,
|
||
infinitely merciful, and yet he cannot bear to hear a poor finite
|
||
man honestly question his existence. Knowing, as he does, that his
|
||
children are groping in darkness and struggling with doubt and
|
||
fear; knowing that he could enlighten them if he would he still
|
||
holds the expression of a sincere doubt as to his existence, the
|
||
most infamous of crimes. According to orthodox logic, God having
|
||
furnished us with imperfect minds, has a right to demand a perfect
|
||
result.
|
||
|
||
Suppose Mr. Smith should overhear a couple of small bugs
|
||
holding a discussion as to the existence of Mr. Smith, and suppose
|
||
one should have the temerity to declare, upon the honor of a bug,
|
||
that he had examined the whole question to the best of his ability,
|
||
including the argument based upon design, and had come to the
|
||
conclusion that no man by the name of Smith had ever lived. Think
|
||
then of Mr. Smith flying into an ecstasy of rage, crushing the
|
||
atheist bug beneath his iron heel, while he exclaimed "I will teach
|
||
you, blasphemous wretch, that Smith is a diabolical fact!" What
|
||
then can we think of a God who would open the artillery of heaven
|
||
upon one of his own children for simply expressing his honest
|
||
thought? And what man who really thinks can help repeating the
|
||
words of Ennius: "If there are gods they certainly pay no attention
|
||
to the affairs of man."
|
||
|
||
Think of the millions of men and women who have been destroyed
|
||
simply for loving and worshiping this God. Is it possible that this
|
||
God, having infinite power, saw his loving and heroic children
|
||
languishing in the darkness of dungeons; heard the clank of their
|
||
chains when they lifted their hands to him in the agony of prayer;
|
||
saw them stretched upon the bigot's rack, where death alone had
|
||
pity; saw the serpents of flame crawl hissing round their shrinking
|
||
forms -- saw all this for sixteen hundred years and sat as silent
|
||
as a stone?
|
||
|
||
From such a God, why should man expect assistance? Why should
|
||
he waste his days in fruitless prayer? Why should he fall upon his
|
||
knees and implore a phantom -- a phantom that is deaf, and dumb,
|
||
and blind?
|
||
|
||
Although we live in what is called a free government, -- and
|
||
politically we are free, -- there is but little religious liberty
|
||
in America. Society demands, either that you belong to some church,
|
||
or that you suppress your opinions. It is contended by many that
|
||
ours is a Christian government, founded upon the Bible, and that
|
||
all who look upon that book as false or foolish are destroying the
|
||
foundation of our country. The truth is, our government is not
|
||
founded upon the rights of gods, but upon the rights of men. Our
|
||
Constitution was framed, not to declare and uphold the deity of
|
||
Christ, but the sacredness of humanity. Ours is the first
|
||
government made by the people and for the people. It is the only
|
||
nation with which the gods have had nothing to do. And yet there
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
are some judges dishonest and cowardly enough to solemnly decide
|
||
that this is a Christian country, and that our free institutions
|
||
are based upon the infamous laws of Jehovah. Such judges are the
|
||
Jeffries of the church. They believe that decisions, made by
|
||
hirelings at the bidding of kings, are binding upon man forever.
|
||
They regard old law as far superior to modern justice. They are
|
||
what might be called orthodox judges. They spend their days in
|
||
finding out, not what ought to be, but what has been. With their
|
||
backs to the sunrise thy worship the night. There is only one
|
||
future event with which they concern themselves, and that is their
|
||
reelection. No honest court ever did, or ever will decide that our
|
||
Constitution is Christian. The Bible teaches that the powers that
|
||
be, are ordained of God. The Bible teaches that God is the source
|
||
of all authority, and that all kings have obtained their power from
|
||
him. Every tyrant has claimed to be the agent of the Most High. The
|
||
Inquisition was founded, not in the name of man, but in the name of
|
||
God. All the governments of Europe recognize the greatness of God,
|
||
and the littleness of the people. In all ages, hypocrites, called
|
||
priests, have put crowns upon the heads of thieves called kings.
|
||
|
||
The Declaration of Independence announces the sublime truth,
|
||
that all power comes from the people. This was a denial, and the
|
||
first denial of a nation, of the infamous dogma that God confers
|
||
the right upon one man to govern others. It was the first grand
|
||
assertion of the dignity of the human race. It declared the
|
||
governed to be the source of power, and in fact denied the
|
||
authority of any and all gods. Through the ages of slavery --
|
||
through the weary centuries of the lash and chain, God was the
|
||
acknowledged ruler of the world. To enthrone man, was to dethrone
|
||
God.
|
||
|
||
To Paine, Jefferson, and Franklin, are we indebted, more than
|
||
to all others, for a human government, and for a Constitution in
|
||
which no God is recognized superior to the legally expressed will
|
||
of the people.
|
||
|
||
They knew that to put God in the Constitution was to put man
|
||
out. They knew that the recognition of a Deity would be seized upon
|
||
by fanatics and zealots as a pretext for destroying the liberty of
|
||
thought. They knew the terrible history of the church too well to
|
||
place in her keeping, or in the keeping of her God, the sacred
|
||
rights of man. They intended that all should have the right to
|
||
worship, or not to worship; that our laws should make no
|
||
distinction on account of creed. They intended to found and frame
|
||
a government for man, and for man alone. They wished to preserve
|
||
the individuality and liberty of all; to prevent the few from
|
||
governing the many, and the many from persecuting and destroying
|
||
the few.
|
||
|
||
Notwithstanding all this, the spirit of persecution still
|
||
lingers in our laws. In many of the States, only those who believe
|
||
in the existence of some kind of God, are under the protection of
|
||
the law.
|
||
|
||
The supreme court of Illinois decided, in the year of grace
|
||
1856, that an unbeliever in the existence of an intelligent First
|
||
Cause could not be allowed to testify in any court. His wife and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
children might have been murdered before his very face, and yet in
|
||
the absence of other witnesses the murderer could not have even
|
||
been indicted. The atheist was a legal outcast. To him, Justice was
|
||
not only blind, but deaf. He was liable, like other men, to support
|
||
the Government, and was forced to contribute his share towards
|
||
paying the salaries of the very judges who decided that under no
|
||
circumstances could his voice be heard in any court. This was the
|
||
law of Illinois and so remained until the adoption of the new
|
||
Constitution. By such infamous means has the church endeavored to
|
||
chain the human mind, and protect the majesty of her God. The fact
|
||
is, we have no national religion, and no national God; but every
|
||
citizen is allowed to have a religion and a God of his own, or to
|
||
reject all religions and deny the existence of all gods. The
|
||
church, however, never has, and never will understand and
|
||
appreciate the genius of our Government.
|
||
|
||
Last year, in a convention of Protestant bigots, held in the
|
||
city of New York for the purpose of creating public opinion in
|
||
favor of a religious amendment to the Federal Constitution, a
|
||
reverend doctor of divinity, speaking of atheists, said: What are
|
||
the rights of the atheist? I would tolerate him as I would tolerate
|
||
a poor lunatic. I would tolerate him as I would tolerate a
|
||
conspirator. He may live and go free, hold his lands and enjoy his
|
||
home -- he may even vote; but for any higher or more advanced
|
||
citizenship, he is, as I hold, utterly disqualified. These are the
|
||
sentiments of the church to-day.
|
||
|
||
Give the church a place in the Constitution, let her touch
|
||
once more the sword of power, and the priceless fruit of all the
|
||
ages will turn to ashes on the lips of men.
|
||
|
||
In religious ideas and conceptions there has been for ages a
|
||
slow and steady development. At the bottom of the ladder (speaking
|
||
of modern times) is Catholicism, and at the top is Science. The
|
||
intermediate rounds of this ladder are occupied by the various
|
||
sects, whose name is legion.
|
||
|
||
But whatever may be the truth upon any subject has nothing to
|
||
do with our right to investigate that subject, and express any
|
||
opinion we may form. All that I ask is the same right I freely
|
||
accord to all others.
|
||
|
||
A few years ago a Methodist clergyman took it upon himself to
|
||
give me a piece of friendly advice. "Although you may disbelieve
|
||
the Bible," said he, "you ought not to say so. That, you should
|
||
keep to yourself."
|
||
|
||
"Do you believe the Bible," said I.
|
||
|
||
He replied, "Most assuredly."
|
||
|
||
To which I retorted, "Your answer conveys no information to
|
||
me. You may be following your own advice. You told me to suppress
|
||
my opinions. Of course a man who will advise others to dissimulate
|
||
will not always be particular about telling the truth himself."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
INDIVIDUALITY
|
||
|
||
There can be nothing more utterly subversive of all that is
|
||
really valuable than the suppression of honest thought -- No man,
|
||
worthy of the form he bears, will at the command of church or state
|
||
solemnly repeat a creed his reason scorns.
|
||
|
||
It is the duty of each and every one to maintain his
|
||
individuality. "This above all, to thine own-self be true, and it
|
||
must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to
|
||
any man." It is a magnificent thing to be the sole proprietor of
|
||
yourself. It is a terrible thing to wake up at night and say,
|
||
"There is nobody in this bed." It is humiliating to know that your
|
||
ideas are all borrowed; that you are indebted to your memory for
|
||
your principles; that your religion is simply one of your habits,
|
||
and that you would have convictions if they were only contagious.
|
||
It is mortifying to feel that you belong to a mental mob and cry
|
||
"crucify him," because the others do; that you reap what the great
|
||
and brave have sown and that you can benefit the world only by
|
||
leaving it.
|
||
|
||
Surely every human being ought to attain to the dignity of the
|
||
unit. Surely it is worth something to be one, and to feel that the
|
||
census of the universe would be incomplete without counting you.
|
||
Surely there is grandeur in knowing that in the realm of thought,
|
||
at least, you are without a chain; that you have the right to
|
||
explore all heights and all depths; that there are no walls nor
|
||
fences, nor prohibited places, nor sacred corners in all the vast
|
||
expanse of thought; that your intellect owes no allegiance to any
|
||
being, human or divine; that you hold all in fee and upon no
|
||
condition and by no tenure whatever; that in the world of mind you
|
||
are relieved from all personal dictation, and from the ignorant
|
||
tyranny of majorities. Surely it is worth something to feel that
|
||
there are no priests, no popes, no parties, no governments, no
|
||
kings, no gods, to whom your intellect can be compelled to pay a
|
||
reluctant homage. Surely it is a joy to know that all the cruel
|
||
ingenuity of bigotry can devise no prison, no dungeon, no cell in
|
||
which for one instant to confine a thought; that ideas cannot be
|
||
dislocated by racks, nor crushed in iron boots, nor burned with
|
||
fire. Surely it is sublime to think that the brain is a castle, and
|
||
that within its curious bastions and winding halls the soul, in
|
||
spite of all worlds and all beings, is the supreme sovereign of
|
||
itself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
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