1496 lines
71 KiB
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1496 lines
71 KiB
Plaintext
23 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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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1885
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I
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Happiness is the true end and aim of life. It is the task of
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intelligence to ascertain the conditions of happiness, and when
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found the truly wise will live in accordance with them. By
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happiness is meant not simply the joy of eating and drinking -- the
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gratification of the appetite -- but good, well being, in the
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highest and noblest form. The joy that springs from obligation
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discharged, from duty done, from generous acts, from being true to
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the ideal, from a perception of the beautiful in nature, art and
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conduct. The happiness that is born of and gives birth to poetry
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and music, that follows the gratification of the highest wants.
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Happiness is the result of all that is really right and sane.
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But there are many people who regard the desire to he happy as a
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very low and degrading ambition. These people call themselves
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spiritual. They pretend to care nothing for the pleasures of
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"sense." They hold this world, this life, in contempt. They do not
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want happiness in this world -- but in another. Here, happiness
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degrades -- there, it purifies and ennobles.
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These spiritual people have been known as prophets, apostles,
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augurs, hermits, monks, priests, popes, bishops and parsons. They
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are devout and useless. They do not cultivate the soil. They
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produce nothing. They live on the labor of others. They are pious
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and parasitic. They pray for others, if the others will work for
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then. They claim to have been selected by the Infinite to instruct
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and govern mankind. They are "meek" and arrogant, "long-suffering"
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and revengeful.
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They ever have been, now are, and always will be the enemies
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of liberty, of investigation and science. They are believers in the
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supernatural, the miraculous and the absurd. They have filled the
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world with hatred, bigotry and fear. In defence of their creeds
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they have committed every crime and practiced every cruelty.
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They denounce as worldly and sensual, those who are gross
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enough to love wives and children, to build homes, to fell the
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forests, to navigate the seas, to cultivate the earth, to chisel
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statues, to paint pictures and fill the world with love and art.
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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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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They have denounced and maligned the thinkers, the poets, the
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dramatists, the composers, the actors, the orators, the workers --
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those who have conquered the world for man.
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According to them this world is only the vestibule of the
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next, a kind of school, an ordeal, a place of Probation. They have
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always insisted that this life should be spent in preparing for the
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next; that those who supported and obeyed the "spiritual guides" --
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the shepherds. would be rewarded with an eternity of joy, and that
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all others would suffer eternal pain.
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These spiritual people have always hated labor. They have
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added nothing to the wealth of the world. They have always lived on
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alms -- on the labor of others. They have always been the enemies
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of innocent pleasure, and of human love.
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These spiritual people have produced a literature. The books
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they have written are called sacred. Our sacred books are called
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the Bible. The Hindoos have the Vedas and many others, the Persians
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the Zend Avesta -- the Egyptians had the Book of the Dead -- the
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Aztecs the Popol Vuh, and the Mohammedans have the Koran.
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These books, for the most part, treat of the unknowable. They
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describe gods and winged phantoms of the air. They give accounts of
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the origin of the universe, the creation of man and the worlds
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beyond this. They contain nothing of value. Millions and millions
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of people have wasted their lives studying these absurd and
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ignorant books.
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The "spiritual people" in each country claimed that their
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books had been written by inspired men -- that God was the real
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author, and that all men and women who denied this would be, after
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death, tormented forever.
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And yet, the worldly people, the uninspired, the wicked, have
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produced a far greater literature than the spiritual and the
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inspired.
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Not all the sacred books of the world combined equal
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Shakespeare's "volume of the brain." A purer philosophy, grander,
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nobler, fell from the lips of Shakespeare's clowns than the Old
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Testament or the New, contains.
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The Declaration of Independence is nobler far than all the
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utterances from Sinai's cloud and flame. "A Man's a Man for a'
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That," by Robert Burns, is better than anything the sacred books
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contain. For my part, I would rather hear Beethoven's Sixth
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Symphony than to read the five books of Moses. Give me the Sixth
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Symphony -- this sound-wrought picture of the fields and woods, of
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flowering hedge and happy home, where thrushes build and swallows
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fly, and mothers sing to babes; this echo of the babbled lullaby of
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brooks that, dallying, wind and fall where meadows bare their
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daisied bosoms to the sun; this joyous mimicry of summer rain, the
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laugh of children, and the rhythmic rustle of the whispering
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leaves; this strophe of peasant life; this perfect poem of content
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and love.
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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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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I would rather listen to Tristan and Isolde -- that
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Mississippi of melody -- where the great notes, winged like eagles,
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lift the soul above the cares and griefs of this weary world --
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than to all the orthodox sermons ever preached. I would rather look
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at the Venus de Milo than to read the Presbyterian creed.
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The spiritual have endeavored to civilize the world through
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fear and faith -- by the promise of reward and the threat of pain
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in other worlds. They taught men to hate and persecute their
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fellow-men. In all ages they have appealed to force. During all the
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years they have practiced fraud. They have pretended to have
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influence with the gods -- that their prayers gave rain, sunshine
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and harvest -- that their curses brought pestilence and famine, and
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that their blessings filled the world with plenty. They have
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subsisted on the fears their falsehoods created. Like poisonous
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vines, they have lived on the oak of labor. They have praised
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charity, but they never gave. They have denounced revenge, but they
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never forgave.
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Whenever the spiritual have had power, art has died, learning
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has languished, science has been despised, liberty destroyed, the
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thinkers have been imprisoned, the intelligent and honest have been
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outcasts, and the brave have been murdered.
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The "spiritual" have been, are, and always will be the enemies
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of the human race.
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For all the blessings that we now enjoy -- for progress in
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every form, for science and art -- for all that has lengthened
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life, that has conquered disease, that has lessened pain, for
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raiment, roof and food, for music in its highest forms -- for the
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poetry that has ennobled and enriched our lives -- for the
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marvelous machines now working for the world -- for all this we are
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indebted to the worldly -- to those who turned their attention to
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the affairs of this life. They have been the only benefactors of
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our race.
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II
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And yet all of these religions -- these "sacred books," these
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priests, have been naturally produced. From the dens and caves of
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savagery to the palaces of civilization men have traveled by the
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necessary paths and roads. Back of every step has been the
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efficient cause. In the history of the world there has been no
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chance, no interference from without, nothing miraculous.
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Everything in accordance with and produced by the facts in nature.
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We need not blame the hypocritical and cruel. They thought and
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acted as they were compelled to think and act.
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In all ages man has tried to account for himself and his
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surroundings. He did the best he could. He wondered why the water
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ran, why the trees grew, why the clouds floated, why the stars
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shone, why the sun and moon journeyed through the heavens. He was
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troubled about life and death, about darkness and dreams. The seas,
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the volcanoes, the lightning and thunder, the earthquake and
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||
cyclone, filled him with fear. Behind all life and growth 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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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motion, and even inanimate things, he placed a spirit -- an
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intelligent being -- a fetich, person, something like himself -- a
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god, controlled by love and hate. To him causes and effects became
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gods -- supernatural beings. The Dawn was a maiden, wondrously
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fair, the Sun, a warrior and lover; the Night, a serpent, a wolf --
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the Wind, a musician; Winter, a wild beast; Autumn, Proserpine
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gathering flowers.
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Poets were the makers of these myths. They were the first to
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account for what they saw and felt. The great multitude mistook
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these fancies for facts. Myths strangely alike, were produced by
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most nations, and gradually took possession of the world.
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The Sleeping Beauty, a myth of the year, has been found among
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most peoples. In this myth, the Earth was a maiden -- the Sun was
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her lover. She had fallen asleep in winter. Her blood was still and
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her breath had gone. In the Spring the lover came, clasped her in
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his arms, covered her lips and cheeks with kisses. She was
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thrilled, her heart began to beat, she breathed, her blood flowed,
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and she awoke to love and joy. This myth has made the circuit of
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the globe.
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So, Red Riding-Hood is the history of a day. Little Red
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Riding-Hood -- the morning, touched with red, goes to visit her
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kindred, a day that is past. She is attacked by the wolf of night
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and is rescued by the hunter, Apollo, who pierces the heart of the
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beast with an arrow of light.
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The beautiful myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is the story of the
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year. Eurydice has been captured and carried to the infernal world.
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Orpheus, playing upon his harp, goes after her. Such is the effect
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of his music when he reaches the realm of Pluto, the laughterless,
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that Tantalus ceases his efforts to slake his thirst. He listens
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and forgets his withered lips, the daughters of the Danaides cease
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their vain efforts to fill the sieve with water, Sisyphus sits down
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on the stone that he so often had heaved against the mountain's
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misty side, Ixion pauses upon his wheel of fire, even Pluto smiles,
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and for the first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the
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Furies are wet with tears.
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"Give me back Eurydice," cried Orpheus, and Pluto said: "Take
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her, but look not back." Orpheus led the way and Eurydice followed.
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Just as he reached the upper world, he missed her footsteps,
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turned, looked, and she vanished.
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And thus the summer comes, is lost, and comes again through
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all the years.
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So, our ancestors believed in the Garden of Eden, in the
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Golden Age, in the blessed time when all were good and pure -- when
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nature satisfied the wants of all. The race, like the old man, has
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golden dreams of youth. The morning was filled with light and life
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and joy, and the evening is always sad. When the old man was young,
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girls were beautiful and men were honest. He remembers his Eden.
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And so the whole world has had its age of gold.
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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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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Our fathers were believers in the Elysian Fields. They were in
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the far, far West. They saw them at the setting of the sun. They
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saw the floating isles of gold in sapphire seas; the templed mist
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with spires and domes of emerald and amethyst: the magic caverns of
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the clouds, resplendent with the rays of every gem. And as they
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looked, they thought the curtain had been drawn aside and that
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their eyes had for a moment feasted on the glories of another
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world.
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The myth of the Flood has also been universal. Finding shells
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of the seas on plain and mountain, and everywhere some traces of
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the waves, they thought the world had been submerged -- that God in
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wrath had drowned the race, except a few his mercy saved.
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The Hindus say that Menu, a holy man, dipped from the Ganges
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some water, and in the basin saw a little fish. The fish begged him
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to throw him back into the river, and Menu, having pity, cast him
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back. The fish then told Menu that there was to be a flood -- told
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him to build an ark, to take on board, people, animals and food,
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and that when the flood came, he, the fish, would save him. The
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saint did as he was told, the flood came, the fish returned. By
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that time he had grown to be a whale with a horn in his head. About
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this horn Menu fastened a rope, attached the other end to the ark,
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and the fish towed the boat across the raging waves to a mountain's
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top, where it rested until the waters subsided. The name of this
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wonderful fish was Matsaya.
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Many other nations told similar stories of floods and arks and
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the sending forth of doves.
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In all these myths and legends of the past we find
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philosophies and dreams and efforts, stained with tears, of great
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and tender souls who tried to pierce the mysteries of life and
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death, to answer the questions of the whence and whither, and who
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vainly sought with bits of shattered glass to make a mirror that
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would in very truth reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect
|
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self. These myths were born of hopes and fears, of tears and
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smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is of joy
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and grief between the rosy dawn of birth and deaths sad night. They
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clothed even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults
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and frailties of the sons of men. In them the winds and waves were
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music, and all the springs, the mountains, woods and perfumed dells
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were haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of
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Spring with tremulous desire, made tawny Summer's billowy breast
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the throne and home of love, filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed
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grapes and gathered sheaves, and pictured Winter as a weak old
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king, who felt, like Lear, upon his withered face, Cordelia's
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tears.
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These myths, though false in fact, are beautiful and true in
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thought, and have for many ages and in countless ways enriched the
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heart and kindled thought.
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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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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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III
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In all probability the first religion was Sun-worship. Nothing
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could have been more natural. Light was life and warmth and love.
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The sun was the fireside of the world. The sun was the "all-seeing"
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-- the "Sky Father." Darkness was grief and death, and in the
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shadows crawled the serpents of despair and fear.
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The sun was a great warrior, fighting the hosts of Night.
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Apollo was the sun, and he fought and conquered the serpent of
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Night. Agni, the generous, who loved the lowliest and visited the
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humblest, was the sun. He was the god of fire, and the crossed
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sticks that by friction leaped into flame were his emblem. It was
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said that, in spite of his goodness, he devoured his father and
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mother, the two pieces of wood being his parents. Baldur was the
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sun. He was in love with the Dawn -- a maiden -- he deserted her
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and traveled through the heavens alone. At the twilight they met,
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were reconciled, and the drops of dew were the tears of joy they
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shed.
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Chrishna was the sun. At his birth the Ganges thrilled from
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its source to the sea. All the trees, the dead as well as the
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living, burst into leaf and bud and flower.
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Hercules was a sun-god.
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Jonah the same, rescued from the fiends of Night and carried
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by the fish through the under world. Samson was a sun-god. His
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strength was in his hair -- in his beams. He was shorn of his
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strength by Delilah, the shadow -- the darkness. So, Osiris,
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Bacchus, Mithra, Hermes, Buddha, Quelzalcoatle, Prometheus,
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Zoroaster, Perseus, Codom Lao-tsze Fo-hi, Horus and Rameses were
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all sun-gods.
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All these gods had gods for fathers and all their mothers were
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virgins.
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The births of nearly all were announced by stars.
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When they were born there was celestial music, voices declared
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that a blessing had come upon the earth.
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When Buddha was born, the celestial choir sang: "This day is
|
||
born for the good of men Buddha, and to dispel the darkness of
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their ignorance -- to give joy and peace to the world."
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||
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Chrishna was born in a cave, and protected by shepherds.
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Bacchus, Apollo, Mithra and Hermes were all born in caves. Buddha
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||
was born in an inn -- according to some, under a tree.
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Tyrants sought to kill all of these gods when they were babes.
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When Chrishna was born, a tyrant killed the babes of the
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neighborhood.
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Buddha was the child of Maya, a virgin, in the kingdom of
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Madura. The king arrested Maya before the child was born;
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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6
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MYTH AND MIRACLE.
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imprisoned her in a tower. During the night when the child was
|
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born, a great wind wrecked the tower, and carried mother and child
|
||
to a place of safety. The next morning the king sent his soldiers
|
||
to kill the babes, and when they came to Buddha and his mother, the
|
||
babe appeared to be about twelve years of age, and the soldiers
|
||
passed on.
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||
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So Typhon sought in many ways to destroy the babe Horus. The
|
||
king pursued the infant Zoroaster. Cadmus tried to kill the infant
|
||
Bacchus.
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||
|
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All of these gods were born on the 25th of December.
|
||
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||
Nearly all were worshiped by "wise men."
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All of them fasted for forty days.
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All met with a violent death.
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All rose from the dead.
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||
|
||
The history of these gods is the history of our Christ. He had
|
||
a god for a father, a virgin for a mother. He was born in a manger,
|
||
or a cave -- on the 25th of December. His birth was announced by
|
||
angels. He was worshiped by wise men, guided by a star. Herod,
|
||
seeking his life, caused the death of many babes. Christ fasted for
|
||
forty days. So, it rained for forty days before the flood -- Moses
|
||
was on Mt. Sinai for forty days. The temple had forty pillars and
|
||
the Jews wandered in the wilderness for forty years. Christ met
|
||
with a violent death, and rose from the dead.
|
||
|
||
These things are not accidents -- not coincidences. Christ was
|
||
a sun-god. All religions have been born of sun-worship. To-day,
|
||
when priests pray, they shut their eyes. This is a survival of sun-
|
||
worship. When men worshiped the sun, they had to shut their eyes.
|
||
afterwards, to flatter idols, they pretended that the glory of
|
||
their faces was more than the eyes could bear.
|
||
|
||
In the religion of our day there is nothing original. All of
|
||
its doctrines, its symbols and ceremonies are but the survivals of
|
||
creeds that perished long ago. Baptism is far older than
|
||
Christianity -- than Judaism. The Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks
|
||
and Romans had holy water. The eucharist was borrowed from the
|
||
Pagans. Ceres was the goddess of the fields, Bacchus the god of the
|
||
vine. At the harvest festival they made cakes of wheat and said:
|
||
"These are the flesh of the goddess." They drank wine and cried:
|
||
"This is the blood of our god."
|
||
|
||
The cross has been a symbol for many thousands of years. It
|
||
was a symbol of immortality -- of life, of the god Agni, the form
|
||
of the grave of a man. An ancient people of Italy, who lived long
|
||
before the Romans, long before the Etruscans, so long that not one
|
||
word of their language is known, used the cross, and beneath that
|
||
emblem, carved on stone, their dead still rest. In the forests of
|
||
Central America, ruined temples have been found, and on the walls
|
||
the cross with the bleeding victim. On Babylonian cylinders is the
|
||
impression of the cross. The Trinity came from Egypt. Osiris, Isis
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
and Horus were worshiped thousands of years before our Father, Son
|
||
and Holy Ghost were thought of. So the Tree of Life grew in India,
|
||
China and among the Aztecs long before the Garden of Eden was
|
||
planted. Long before our Bible was known, other nations had their
|
||
sacred books, temples and altars, sacrifices, ceremonies and
|
||
priests. The "Fall of Man" is far older than our religion, and so
|
||
are the "Atonement" and the Scheme of Redemption.
|
||
|
||
In our blessed religion there is nothing new, nothing
|
||
original.
|
||
|
||
Among the Egyptians the cross was a symbol of the life to
|
||
come. And yet the first religion was, and all religions growing out
|
||
of that, were naturally produced. Every brain was a field in which
|
||
Nature sowed the seeds of thought. The rise and set of sun, the
|
||
birth and death of day, the dawns of silver and the dusks of gold,
|
||
the wonders of the rain and snow, the shroud of Winter and the many
|
||
colored robe of Spring, the lonely moon with nightly loss or gain,
|
||
the serpent lightning and the thunder's voice, the tempest's fury
|
||
and the zephyr's sigh, the threat of storm and promise of the bow,
|
||
cathedral clouds with dome and spire, earthquake and strange
|
||
eclipse, frost and fire, the snow-crowned mountains with their
|
||
tongues of flame, the fields of space sown thick with stars, the
|
||
wandering comets hurrying past the fixed and sleepless sentinels of
|
||
night, the marvels of the earth and air, the perfumed flower, the
|
||
painted wing, the waveless pool that held within its magic breast
|
||
the image of the startled face, the mimic echo that made a record
|
||
in the viewless air, the pathless forests and the boundless seas,
|
||
the ebb and flow of tides -- the slow, deep breathing of some vague
|
||
and monstrous life -- the miracle of birth, the mystery of dream
|
||
and death, and over all the silent and immeasurable dome. These
|
||
were the warp and woof, and at the loom sat Love and Fancy, Hope
|
||
and Fear, and wove the wondrous tapestries whereon we find pictures
|
||
of gods and fairy lands and all the legends that were told when
|
||
Nature rocked the cradle of the infant world,
|
||
|
||
IV
|
||
|
||
We must remember that there is a great difference between a
|
||
myth and a miracle. A myth is the idealization of a fact. A miracle
|
||
is the counterfeit of a fact. There is the same difference between
|
||
a myth and a miracle that there is between fiction and falsehood --
|
||
between poetry and perjury. Miracles belong to the far past and the
|
||
far future. The little line of sand, called the present, between
|
||
the seas, belongs to common sense, to the natural.
|
||
|
||
If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two
|
||
thousand years ago, he would probably say: "Yes, I know that." If
|
||
you should say that a hundred thousand years from now all the dead
|
||
will be raised, he might say: "Probably they will." But if you
|
||
should tell him that you saw a dead man raised and given life that
|
||
day, he would likely ask the name of the insane asylum from which
|
||
you had escaped.
|
||
|
||
Our Bible is filled with accounts of miracles and yet they
|
||
always fail to convince.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of
|
||
miracles for the benefit of the Jews. With many miracles he rescued
|
||
them from slavery, guided them on their journey with a miraculous
|
||
cloud by day and a miraculous pillar of fire by night -- divided
|
||
the sea that they might escape from the Egyptians, fed them with
|
||
miraculous manna and supernatural quails, raised up hornets to
|
||
attack their enemies, caused water to follow them wherever they
|
||
wandered and in countless ways manifested his power, and yet the
|
||
Jews cared nothing for these wonders. Not one of them seems to have
|
||
been convinced that Jehovah had done anything for the people.
|
||
|
||
In spite of all these miracles, the Jews had more confidence
|
||
in a golden calf, made by themselves, than in Jehovah. The reason
|
||
of this is, that the miracles were never performed, and never
|
||
invented until hundreds of years after those, who had wandered over
|
||
the desert of Sinai, were dust.
|
||
|
||
The miracles attributed to Christ had no effect. No human
|
||
being seems to have been convinced by them. Those whom he raised
|
||
front the dead, cured of leprosy, or blindness, failed to become
|
||
his followers. Not one of them appeared at his trial. Not one
|
||
offered to bear witness of his miraculous power. To this there is
|
||
but one explanation: The miracles were never performed. These
|
||
stories were the growth of centuries. The casting out of devils,
|
||
the changing of water into wine, feeding the multitude with a few
|
||
loaves and fishes, resisting the devil, using a fish for a
|
||
pocketbook, curing the blind with clay and saliva, stilling the
|
||
tempest, walking on the water, the resurrection and ascension,
|
||
happened and only happened, in the imaginations of men, who were
|
||
not born until several generations after Christ was dead.
|
||
|
||
In those days the world was filled with ignorance and fear.
|
||
Miracles happened every day. The supernatural was expected. Gods
|
||
were continually interfering with the affairs of this world.
|
||
Everything was told except the truth, everything believed except
|
||
the facts. History was a circumstantial account of occurrences that
|
||
never occurred. Devils and goblins and ghosts were as plentiful as
|
||
saints. The bones of the dead were used to cure the living.
|
||
Cemeteries were hospitals and corpses were physicians. The saints
|
||
practiced magic, the pious communed with God in dreams, and the
|
||
course of events was changed by prayer. The credulous demanded the
|
||
marvelous, the miraculous, and the priests supplied the demand. The
|
||
sky was full of signs, omens of death and disaster, and the
|
||
darkness thick with devils endeavoring to mislead and enslave the
|
||
souls of men.
|
||
|
||
Our fathers thought that everything had been made for man, and
|
||
that demons and gods gave their entire attention to this world. The
|
||
people believed that they were the sport and prey, the favorites or
|
||
victims, of these phantoms. And they also believed that the
|
||
Creator, the God, could be influenced by sacrifice, by prayers and
|
||
ceremonies.
|
||
|
||
This has been the mistake of the world. All the temples have
|
||
been reared, all the altars erected, all the sacrifices offered,
|
||
all the prayers uttered in vain. No god has interfered, no prayer
|
||
has been answered, no help received from heaven. Nothing was
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
created, nothing has happened for, or with reference to man. If not
|
||
a human being lived, -- if all were in their graves, the sun would
|
||
continue to shine, the wheeling world would still pursue its
|
||
flight, violets would spread their velvet bosoms to the day, the
|
||
spendthrift roses give their perfume to the air, the climbing vines
|
||
would hide with leaf and flower the fallen and the dead, the
|
||
changing seasons would come and go, time would repeat the poem of
|
||
the year, storms would wreck and whispering rains repair, Spring
|
||
with deft and unseen hands would weave her robes of green, life
|
||
with countless lips would seek fair Summer's swelling breasts,
|
||
Autumn would reap the wealth of leaf and fruit and seed, Winter,
|
||
the artist, would etch in frost the pines and ferns, while Wind and
|
||
Wave and Fire, old architects, with ceaseless toil would still
|
||
destroy and build, still wreck and change, and from the dust of
|
||
death produce again the throb and breath of life.
|
||
|
||
V
|
||
|
||
A few years ago a few men began to think, to investigate, to
|
||
reason. They began to doubt the legends of the church, the miracles
|
||
of the past. They began to notice what happened. They found that
|
||
eclipses came at certain intervals and that their coming could be
|
||
foretold. They became satisfied that the conduct of men had nothing
|
||
to do with eclipses -- and that the stars moved in their orbits
|
||
unconscious of the sons of men. Galileo, Copernicus, and Kepler
|
||
destroyed the astronomy of the Bible, and demonstrated that the
|
||
"inspired" story of creation could not be true, and that the church
|
||
was as ignorant as the priests were dishonest.
|
||
|
||
They found that the myth-makers were mistaken, that the sun
|
||
and stars did not revolve about the earth, that the firmament was
|
||
not solid, that the earth was not flat, and that the so-called
|
||
philosophy of the theologians was absurd and idiotic.
|
||
|
||
The stars became witnesses against the creeds of superstition.
|
||
|
||
With the telescope the heavens were explored. The New
|
||
Jerusalem could not be found.
|
||
|
||
It had faded away.
|
||
|
||
The church persecuted the astronomers and denied the facts. In
|
||
February, in the year of grace sixteen hundred, the Catholic
|
||
Church, the "Triumphant Beast," having in her hands, her paws, the
|
||
keys of heaven and hell, accused Giordano Bruno of having declared
|
||
that there were other worlds than this, He was tried, convicted,
|
||
imprisoned in a dungeon for seven years. He was offered his liberty
|
||
if he would recant. Bruno, the atheist, the philosopher, refused to
|
||
stain his soul by denying what he believed to be true. He was taken
|
||
from his cell by the priests, by those who loved their enemies, led
|
||
to the place of execution. He was clad in a robe on which
|
||
representations of devils had been painted -- the devils that were
|
||
soon to claim his soul. He was chained to a stake and about his
|
||
body the wood was piled. Then priests, followers of Christ, lighted
|
||
the fagots and flames consumed the greatest, the most perfect
|
||
martyr, that ever suffered death.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
And yet the Italian agent of God, the infallible Leo XIII.,
|
||
only a few years ago, denounced Bruno, the "bravest of the brave,"
|
||
as a coward. The church murdered him, and the pope maligned his
|
||
memory. Fagot and falsehood -- two weapons of the church.
|
||
|
||
A little while ago a few men began to examine rocks and soils,
|
||
mountains, islands, reefs and seas. They noticed the valleys and
|
||
deltas that had been formed by rivers, the many strata of lava that
|
||
had been changed to soil, the vast deposits of metals and coal, the
|
||
immense reefs that the coral had formed, the work of glaciers in
|
||
the far past, the production of soil by the disintegration of rock,
|
||
by the growth and decay of vegetation and the countless evidences
|
||
of the countless ages through which the Earth has passed. The
|
||
geologists read the history of the world written by wave and flame,
|
||
attested by fossils, by the formation of rocks, by mountain ranges,
|
||
by volcanoes, by rivers, islands, continents and seas.
|
||
|
||
The geology of the Bible -- of the "divinely inspired" church,
|
||
of the "infallible" pope, was found to be utterly false and
|
||
foolish.
|
||
|
||
The Earth became a witness against the creeds of superstition.
|
||
|
||
Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and
|
||
electricity, while countless inventors created the wonderful
|
||
machines that do the work of the world. Investigation took the
|
||
place of credulity. Men became dissatisfied with huts and rags,
|
||
with crusts and creeds. They longed for the comforts, the luxuries
|
||
of life. The intellectual horizon enlarged, new truths were
|
||
discovered, old ideas were thrown aside, the brain was developed,
|
||
the heart civilized and science was born. Humboldt, Laplace and
|
||
hundreds of others explained the phenomena of nature, called
|
||
attention to the ancient and venerable mistakes of sanctified
|
||
ignorance and added to the sum of knowledge. Darwin and Haeckel
|
||
gave their conclusions to the world. Men began to really think, the
|
||
myths began to fade, the miracles to grow mean and small, and the
|
||
great structure, known as theology, fell with a crash.
|
||
|
||
Science denies the truth of myth and miracle, denies that
|
||
human testimony can substantiate the miraculous, denies the
|
||
existence of the supernatural. Science asserts the absolute, the
|
||
unvarying uniformity of nature. Science insists that the present is
|
||
the child of all the past, -- that no power can change the past,
|
||
and that nature is forever the same.
|
||
|
||
The chemist has found that just so many atoms of one kind
|
||
unite with just so many of another -- no more, no less, always the
|
||
same. No caprice in chemistry; no interference from without.
|
||
|
||
The astronomers know that the planets remain in their orbits
|
||
-- that their forces are constant. They know that light is forever
|
||
the same, always obeying the angle of incidence, traveling with the
|
||
same rapidity, -- casting the same shadow, under the same
|
||
circumstances in all worlds. They know that the eclipses will occur
|
||
at the times foretold -- neither hastening nor delaying. They know
|
||
that the attraction of gravitation is always the same. always in
|
||
perfect proportion to mass and distance, neither weaker nor
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
stronger, unvarying forever. They know that the facts in nature
|
||
cannot be changed or be destroyed, and that the qualities of all
|
||
things are eternal.
|
||
|
||
The men of science know that the atomic integrity of the
|
||
metals is always the same, that each metal is true to its nature
|
||
and that the particles cling to each other with the same tenacity,
|
||
-- the same force. They have demonstrated the persistence of force,
|
||
that it is forever active, forever the same, and that it cannot be
|
||
destroyed.
|
||
|
||
These great truths have revolutionized the thought of the
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
Every art, every employment, all study, all experiment, the
|
||
value of experience, of judgment, of hope, all rest on a belief in
|
||
the uniformity of nature, on the eternal persistence and
|
||
indestructibility of force.
|
||
|
||
Break one link in the infinite chain of cause and effect, and
|
||
the Master of Nature appears. The broken link would become the
|
||
throne of a god.
|
||
|
||
The uniformity of Nature denies the supernatural and
|
||
demonstrates that there is no interference from without. There is
|
||
no place, no office left for gods. Ghosts fade from the brain and
|
||
the shrivelled deities fall palsied from their thrones.
|
||
|
||
The uniformity of Nature renders a belief in "special
|
||
providence" impossible. Prayer becomes a useless agitation of the
|
||
air, and religious ceremonies are but motions, pantomimes, mindless
|
||
and meaningless.
|
||
|
||
The naked savage, worshiping a wooden god, is the religious
|
||
equal of the robed pope kneeling before an image of the Virgin. The
|
||
poor African who carries roots and bark to protect himself from
|
||
evil spirits is on the same intellectual plane of one who sprinkles
|
||
his body with "holy water."
|
||
|
||
All the creeds of Christendom, all the religions of the
|
||
heathen world are equally absurd. The cathedral, the mosque and the
|
||
joss house have the same foundation. Their builders do not believe
|
||
in the uniformity of Nature, and the business of all priests is to
|
||
induce a so-called infinite being to change the order of events, to
|
||
make causes barren of effects and to produce effects without, and
|
||
in spite of, natural causes. They all believe in the unthinkable
|
||
and pray for the impossible.
|
||
|
||
Science teaches us that there was no creation and that there
|
||
can be no destruction. The infinite denies creation and defies
|
||
destruction. An infinite person, an "infinite being" is an infinite
|
||
impossibility. To conceive of such a being is beyond the power of
|
||
the mind. Yet all religions rest upon the supposed existence of the
|
||
unthinkable, the inconceivable. And the priests of these religions
|
||
pretend to be perfectly familiar with the designs, will, and wishes
|
||
of this unthinkable, this inconceivable.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
Science teaches that that which really is has always been,
|
||
that behind every effect is the efficient and necessary cause, that
|
||
there is in the universe neither chance nor interference, and that
|
||
energy is eternal. Day by day the authority of the theologian grows
|
||
weaker and weaker. As the people become intelligent they care less
|
||
for preachers and more for teachers. Their confidence in knowledge,
|
||
in thought and investigation increases. They are eager to know the
|
||
discoveries, the useful truths, the important facts made,
|
||
ascertained and demonstrated by the explorers in the domain of the
|
||
natural. They are no longer satisfied with the platitudes of the
|
||
pulpit, and the assertions of theologians. They are losing
|
||
confidence in the "sacred Scriptures" and in the protecting power
|
||
and goodness of the supernatural. They are satisfied that credulity
|
||
is not a virtue and that investigation is not a crime.
|
||
|
||
Science is the providence of man, the worker of true miracles,
|
||
of real wonders. Science has "read a little in Nature's infinite
|
||
book of secrecy." Science knows the circuits of the winds, the
|
||
courses of the stars. Fire is his servant, and lightning his
|
||
messenger. Science freed the slaves and gave liberty to their
|
||
masters. Science taught man to enchain, not his fellows, but the
|
||
forces of nature, forces that have no backs to be scarred, no limbs
|
||
for chains to chill and eat, forces that have no hearts to break,
|
||
forces that never know fatigue, forces that shed no tears. Science
|
||
is the great physician. His touch has given sight. He has made the
|
||
lame to leap, the deaf to hear, the dumb to speak, and in the
|
||
pallid face his hand has set the rose of health. Science has given
|
||
his beloved sleep and wrapped in happy dreams the throbbing nerves
|
||
of pain. Science is the destroyer of disease, builder of happy
|
||
homes, the preserver of life and love. Science is the teacher of
|
||
every virtue, the enemy of every vice. Science has given the true
|
||
basis of morals, the origin and office of conscience, revealed the
|
||
nature of obligation, of duty, of virtue in its highest, noblest
|
||
forms, and has demonstrated that true happiness is the only
|
||
possible good. Science has slain the monsters of superstition, and
|
||
destroyed the authority of inspired books. Science has read the
|
||
records of the rocks, records that priestcraft cannot change. and
|
||
on his wondrous scales has weighed the atom and the star.
|
||
|
||
Science has founded the only true religion. Science is the
|
||
only Savior of this world.
|
||
|
||
VI
|
||
|
||
For many ages religion has been tried. For countless centuries
|
||
man has sought for help from heaven. To soften the heart of God,
|
||
mothers sacrificed their babes! but the God did not hear, did not
|
||
see, and did not help. Naked savages were devoured by beasts,
|
||
bitten by serpents, killed by flood and frost. They prayed for
|
||
help, but their God was deaf. They built temples and altars,
|
||
employed priests and gave of their substance, but the volcano
|
||
destroyed and the famine came. For the sake of God millions
|
||
murdered their fellow-men, but the God was silent. Millions of
|
||
martyrs died for the honor of God, but the God was blind. He did
|
||
not see the flames, the scaffolds. He did not hear the prayers, the
|
||
groans. Thousands of priests in the name of God tortured their
|
||
fellow-men, stretched them on racks, crushed their feet in iron
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
boots, tore out their tongues, extinguished their eyes. The victims
|
||
implored the protection of God, but their god did not hear, did not
|
||
see. He was deaf and blind. He was willing that his enemies should
|
||
torture his friends.
|
||
|
||
Nations tried to destroy each other for the sake of God, and
|
||
the banner of the cross dripping with blood floated over a thousand
|
||
fields -- but the god was silent. He neither knew nor cared.
|
||
Pestilence covered the earth with dead, the priests prayed, the
|
||
altars were heaped with sacrifices, but the god did not see, did
|
||
not hear. The miseries of the world did not lessen the joys of
|
||
heaven. The clouds gave no rain, the famine came, withered babes
|
||
with pallid lips sought the breasts of dead mothers, while starving
|
||
fathers knelt and prayed, but the god did not hear. Through many
|
||
centuries millions were enslaved, babes were sold from mothers,
|
||
husbands from wives, backs were scarred with the lash. The poor
|
||
wretches lifted their clasped hands toward heaven and prayed for
|
||
justice, for liberty -- but their god did not hear. He cared
|
||
nothing for the sufferings of slaves, nothing for the tears of
|
||
wives and mothers, nothing for the agony of men. He answered no
|
||
prayers. He broke no chains. He freed no slaves.
|
||
|
||
The miserable wretches appealed to the priests of God, but
|
||
they were on the other side. They defended the masters. The slaves
|
||
had nothing to give.
|
||
|
||
During all these years it was claimed by the theologians that
|
||
their God was governing the world, that he was infinitely powerful,
|
||
wise and good -- and that the "powers" of the earth were "ordained"
|
||
by him. During all these years the church was the enemy of
|
||
progress. It hated all physicians and told the people to rely on
|
||
prayer, amulets and relics. It persecuted the astronomers and
|
||
geologists, denounced them as infidels and atheists, as enemies of
|
||
the human race. It poisoned the fountains of learning and insisted
|
||
that teachers should distort the facts in nature to the end that
|
||
they might harmonize with the "inspired" book. During all these
|
||
years the church misdirected the energies of man, and when it
|
||
reached the zenith of its power, darkness fell upon the world.
|
||
|
||
In all nations and in all ages, religion has failed. The gods
|
||
have never interfered. Nature has produced and destroyed without
|
||
mercy and without hatred. She has cared no more for man than for
|
||
the leaves of the forest, no more for nations than for hills of
|
||
ants, cared nothing for right or wrong, for life or death, for pain
|
||
or joy.
|
||
|
||
Man through his intelligence must protect himself. He gets no
|
||
help from any other world. The church has always claimed and still
|
||
claims that it is the only reforming power, that it makes men
|
||
honest, virtuous and merciful, that it prevents violence and war,
|
||
and that without its influence the race would return to barbarism.
|
||
|
||
Nothing can exceed the absurdity of these claims. If we wish
|
||
to improve the condition of mankind -- if we wish for nobler men
|
||
and women we must develop the brain, we must encourage thought and
|
||
investigation. We must convince the world that credulity is a vice,
|
||
-- that there is no virtue in believing without, or against
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
evidence, and that the really honest man is true to himself. We
|
||
must fill the world with intellectual light. We must applaud mental
|
||
courage. We must educate the children, rescue them from ignorance
|
||
and crime. School-houses are the real temples, and teachers are the
|
||
true priests. We must supply the wants of the mind, satisfy the
|
||
hunger of the brain. The people should be familiar with the great
|
||
poets, with the tragedies of AEschylus, the dramas of Shakespeare,
|
||
with the poetry of Homer and Virgil. Shakespeare should be taught
|
||
in every school, found in every house.
|
||
|
||
Through photography the whole world may become acquainted with
|
||
the great statues, the great paintings, the victories of art. In
|
||
this way the mind is enlarged, the sympathies quickened, the
|
||
appreciation of the beautiful intensified, the taste refined and
|
||
the character ennobled.
|
||
|
||
The great novels should be read by all. All should be
|
||
acquainted with the men and women of fiction, with the ideal world.
|
||
The imagination should be developed, trained and strengthened.
|
||
Superstition has degraded art and literature. It gave us winged
|
||
monsters, scenes from heaven and hell, representations of gods and
|
||
devils, sculptured the absurd and painted the impossible in the
|
||
name of Art. It gave us the dreams of the insane, the lives of
|
||
fanatical saints, accounts of miracles and wonders, of cures
|
||
wrought by the bones of the dead, descriptions of Paradise,
|
||
purgatory and the eternal dungeon, discourses on baptism, on
|
||
changing wine and wafers into the blood and flesh of God, on the
|
||
forgiveness of sins by priests, on fore-ordination and
|
||
accountability, predestination and free will, on devils, ghosts and
|
||
goblins, the ministrations of guardian angels, the virtue of belief
|
||
and the wickedness of doubt. And this was called "sacred
|
||
literature."
|
||
|
||
The church taught that those who believed, counted beads,
|
||
mumbled prayers, and gave their time or property for the support of
|
||
the gospel were the good and that all others were traveling the
|
||
"broad road" to eternal pain. According to the theologians, the
|
||
best people, the saints, were dead, and real beauty was to be found
|
||
only in heaven. They denounced the joys of life as husks and filthy
|
||
rags, declared that the world had been cursed, and that it brought
|
||
forth thistles and thorns because of the sins of man. They regarded
|
||
the earth as a kind of dock, running out into the sea of eternity,
|
||
-- on which the pious waited for the ship on which they were to be
|
||
transported to another world.
|
||
|
||
But the real poets and the real artists clung to this world,
|
||
to this life. They described and represented things that exist.
|
||
They expressed thoughts of the bran, emotions of the heart, the
|
||
griefs and joys, the hope and despair of men and women. They found
|
||
strength and beauty on every hand. They found their angels here.
|
||
They were true to human experience and they touched the brain and
|
||
heart of the world. In the tragedies and comedies of life, in the
|
||
smiles and tears, in the ecstasies of love, in the darkness of
|
||
death, in the dawn of hope, they found their materials for statue
|
||
and song, for poem and painting. Poetry and art are the children of
|
||
this world, born and nourished here. They are human. They have left
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
the winged monsters of heaven, the malicious deformities of hell,
|
||
and have turned their attention to men and women, to the things of
|
||
this life.
|
||
|
||
There is a poem called "The Skylark," by Shelley, graceful as
|
||
the motions of flames. Another by Robert Burns, called "The Daisy,"
|
||
exquisite, perfect as the pearl of virtue in the beautiful breast
|
||
of a loving girl. Between this lark and this daisy, neither above
|
||
nor below, you will find all the poetry of the world. Eloquence,
|
||
sublimity, poetry and art must have the foundation of fact, of
|
||
reality. Imaginary worlds and beings are nothing to us.
|
||
|
||
At last the old creeds are becoming cruel and vulgar. We now
|
||
have imagination enough to put ourselves in the place of others.
|
||
Believers in hell, in eternal pain, like murderers, lack
|
||
imagination. The murderer has not imagination enough to see his
|
||
victim dead. He does not see the sightless and pathetic eyes. He
|
||
does not see the widow's arms about the corpse, her lips upon the
|
||
dead. He does not hear the sobs of children. He does not see the
|
||
funeral. He does not hear the clods as they fall on the coffin. He
|
||
does not feel the hand of arrest, the scene of the trial is not
|
||
before him. He does not hear the awful verdict, the sentence of the
|
||
court, the last words. He does not see the scaffold, nor feel about
|
||
his throat the deadly noose.
|
||
|
||
Let us develop the brain, civilize the heart, and give wings
|
||
to the imagination.
|
||
|
||
VII
|
||
|
||
If we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural
|
||
and the scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world?
|
||
|
||
Is falsehood a reforming power? Is credulity the mother of
|
||
virtue? Is there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? Did
|
||
wisdom perish with the dead? Must the civilized accept the religion
|
||
of savages?
|
||
|
||
If we wish to reform the world we must rely on truth, on fact,
|
||
on reason. We must teach men that they are good or bad for
|
||
themselves, that others cannot be good or bad for them, that they
|
||
cannot be charged with the crimes, or credited with the virtues of
|
||
others. We must discard the doctrine of the atonement, because it
|
||
is absurd and immoral. We are not accountable for the sins of
|
||
"Adam" and the virtues of Christ cannot be transferred to us. There
|
||
can be no vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice. Why should the
|
||
sufferings of the innocent atone for the crimes of the guilty.
|
||
According to the doctrine of the atonement right and wrong do not
|
||
exist in the nature of things, but in the arbitrary will of the
|
||
Infinite. This is a subversion of all ideas of justice and mercy.
|
||
|
||
An act is good, bad, or indifferent, according to its
|
||
consequences. No power can step between an act and its natural
|
||
consequences. A governor may pardon the criminal, but the natural
|
||
consequences of the crime remain untouched. A god may forgive, but
|
||
the consequences of the act forgiven, are still the same. We must
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
teach the world that the consequences of a bad action cannot be
|
||
avoided, that they are the invisible police, the unseen avengers,
|
||
that accept no gifts, that hear no prayers, that no cunning can
|
||
deceive.
|
||
|
||
We do not need the forgiveness of gods, but of ourselves and
|
||
the ones we injure. Restitution without repentance is far better
|
||
than repentance without restitution.
|
||
|
||
We know nothing of any god who rewards, punishes or forgives.
|
||
|
||
We must teach our fellow-men that honor comes from within, not
|
||
from without, that honor must be earned. that it is not alms, that
|
||
even an infinite God could not enrich the beggar's palm with the
|
||
gem of honor.
|
||
|
||
Teach them also that happiness is the bud, the blossom and the
|
||
fruit of good and noble actions, that it is not the gift of any
|
||
god; that it must be earned by man -- must be deserved.
|
||
|
||
In this world of ours there is no magic, no sleight-of-hand,
|
||
by which consequences can be made to punish the good and reward the
|
||
bad.
|
||
|
||
Teach men not to sacrifice this world for some other, but to
|
||
turn their attention to the natural, to the affairs of this life.
|
||
Teach them that theology has no known foundation, that it was born
|
||
of ignorance and fear, that it has hardened the heart, polluted the
|
||
imagination and made fiends of men.
|
||
|
||
Theology is not for this world. It is no part of real
|
||
religion. It has nothing to do with goodness or virtue. Religion
|
||
does not consist in worshiping gods, but in adding to the well-
|
||
being, the happiness of man. No human being knows whether any god
|
||
exists or not, and all that has been said and written about "our
|
||
god," or the gods of other people, has no known fact for a
|
||
foundation. Words without thoughts, clouds without rain.
|
||
|
||
Let us put theology out of religion.
|
||
|
||
Church and state should be absolutely divorced. Priests
|
||
pretend that they have been selected by, and that they get their
|
||
power from God. Kings occupy their thrones in accordance with the
|
||
will of God. The pope declares that he is the agent, the deputy of
|
||
God and that by right he should rule the world. All these
|
||
pretensions and assertions are perfectly absurd and yet they are
|
||
acknowledged and believed by millions. Get theology out of
|
||
government and kings will descend from their thrones. All will
|
||
admit that governments get their powers from the consent of the
|
||
governed, and that all persons in office are the servants of the
|
||
people. Get theology out of government and chaplains will be
|
||
dismissed from Legislatures, from Congress, from the army and navy.
|
||
Get theology out of government and people will be allowed to
|
||
express their honest thoughts about "inspired books" and
|
||
superstitious creeds. Get theology out of government and priests
|
||
will no longer steal a seventh of our time. Get theology out of
|
||
government and the clergy will soon take their places with augurs
|
||
and soothsayers, with necromancers and medicine-men.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
Get theology out of education. Nothing should be taught in a
|
||
school that somebody does not know. There are plenty of things to
|
||
be learned about this world, about this life. Every child should be
|
||
taught to think, and that it is dangerous not to think. Children
|
||
should not be taught the absurdities, the cruelties and
|
||
imbecilities of superstition. No church should be allowed to
|
||
control the common school, and public money should not be divided
|
||
between the hateful and warring sects. The public school should be
|
||
secular, and only the useful should be taught. Many of our colleges
|
||
are under the control of churches. Presidents and professors are
|
||
mostly ministers of the gospel and the result is that all facts
|
||
inconsistent with the creeds are either suppressed or denied. Only
|
||
those professors who are naturally stupid or mentally dishonest can
|
||
retain their places. Those who tell the truth, who teach the facts,
|
||
are discharged.
|
||
|
||
In every college truth should be a welcome guest. Every
|
||
professor should be a finder, and every student a learner, of
|
||
facts. Theology and intellectual dishonesty go together. The
|
||
teacher of children should be intelligent and perfectly sincere.
|
||
|
||
Let us get theology out of education.
|
||
|
||
The pious denounce the secular schools as godless. They should
|
||
be. The sciences are all secular, all godless. Theology bears the
|
||
same relation to science that the black art does to chemistry, that
|
||
magic does to mathematics. It is something that cannot be taught,
|
||
because it cannot be known. It has no foundation in fact. It
|
||
neither produces, nor accords with, any image in the mind. It is
|
||
not only unknowable but unthinkable. Through hundreds and thousands
|
||
of generations men have been discussing, wrangling and fighting
|
||
about theology. No advance has been made. The robed priest has only
|
||
reached the point from which the savage tried to start.
|
||
|
||
We know that theology always has and always will make enemies.
|
||
It sows the seeds of hatred in families and nations. It is selfish,
|
||
cruel, revengeful and malicious. It has heaven for the few and
|
||
perdition for the many. We now know that credulity is not a virtue
|
||
and that intellectual courage is. We must stop rewarding hypocrisy
|
||
and bigotry. We must stop persecuting the thinkers, the
|
||
investigators, the creators of light, the civilizers of the world.
|
||
|
||
VIII
|
||
|
||
Will the unknown, the mysteries of life and death, the world
|
||
that lies beyond the limitations of the mind, forever furnish food
|
||
for superstition? Will the gods and ghosts perish or simply retreat
|
||
before the advancing hosts of science, and continue to crouch and
|
||
lurk just beyond the horizon of the known? Will darkness forever be
|
||
the womb and mother of the supernatural?
|
||
|
||
A little while ago priests told peasants that the New
|
||
Jerusalem, the celestial city was just above the clouds. They said
|
||
that its walls and domes and spires were just beyond the reach of
|
||
human sight. The telescope was invented and those who looked at the
|
||
wilderness of stars, saw no city, no throne. They said to the
|
||
priests: "Where is your New Jerusalem?" The priests cheerfully and
|
||
confidently replied. "It is just beyond where you see."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
At one time it was believed that a race of men existed "with
|
||
their heads beneath their shoulders." Returning travelers from
|
||
distant lands were asked about these wonderful people and all
|
||
replied that they had not seen them. "Oh," said the believers in
|
||
the monsters, "the men with heads beneath their shoulders live in
|
||
a country that you did not visit." And so the monsters lived and
|
||
flourished until all the world was known. We cannot know the
|
||
universe. We cannot travel infinite distances, and so, somewhere in
|
||
shoreless space there will always be room for gods and ghosts, for
|
||
heavens and hells. And so it may be that superstition will live and
|
||
linger until the world becomes intelligent enough to build upon the
|
||
foundation of the known, to keep the imagination within the domain
|
||
of the probable, and to believe in the natural -- until the
|
||
supernatural shall have been demonstrated.
|
||
|
||
Savages knew all about gods, about heavens and hells before
|
||
they knew anything about the world in which they lived. They were
|
||
perfectly familiar with evil spirits, with the invisible phantoms
|
||
of the air, long before they had any true conception of themselves.
|
||
So, they knew all about the origin and destiny of the human race.
|
||
They were absolutely certain about the problems, the solution of
|
||
which, philosophers know, is beyond the limitations of the mind.
|
||
They understood astrology, but not astronomy, knew something of
|
||
magic, but nothing about chemistry. They were wise only as to those
|
||
things about which nothing can be known.
|
||
|
||
The poor Indian believed in the "Great Spirit" and saw
|
||
"design" on every hand. -- Trees were made that he might have bows
|
||
and arrows, wood for his fire and bark for his wigwam -- rivers and
|
||
lakes to give him fish, wild beasts and corn that he might have
|
||
food, and the animals had skins that he might have clothes.
|
||
|
||
Primitive peoples all reasoned in the same way, and modern
|
||
Christians follow their example. They knew but little of the world
|
||
and thought that it had been made expressly for the use of man.
|
||
They did not know that it was mostly water, that vast regions were
|
||
locked in eternal ice and that in most countries the conditions
|
||
were unfavorable to human life. They knew nothing of the countless
|
||
enemies of man that live unseen in water, food and air. Back of the
|
||
little good they knew they put gods and back of the evil, devils.
|
||
They thought it of the greatest importance to gain the good will of
|
||
the gods, who alone could protect them from the devils. Those who
|
||
worshiped these gods, offered sacrifices, and obeyed priests, were
|
||
considered loyal members of the tribe or community, and those who
|
||
refused to worship were regarded as enemies and traitors. The
|
||
believers, in order to protect themselves from the anger of the
|
||
gods, exiled or destroyed the infidels.
|
||
|
||
Believing as they did, the course they pursued was natural.
|
||
They not only wished to protect themselves from disease and death,
|
||
from pestilence and famine in this world but the souls of their
|
||
children from eternal pain in the next. Their gods were savages who
|
||
demanded flattery and worship not only, but the acceptance of a
|
||
certain creed. As long as Christians believe in eternal punishment
|
||
they will be the enemies of those who investigate and contend for
|
||
the authority of reason, of those who demand evidence, who care
|
||
nothing for the unsupported assertions of the dead or the illogical
|
||
inferences of the living.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
Science always has been, is, and always will be modest,
|
||
thoughtful, truthful. It has but one object: The ascertainment of
|
||
truth. It has no prejudice, no hatred. It is in the realm of the
|
||
intellect and cannot be swayed or changed by passion. It does not
|
||
try to please God, to gain heaven or avoid hell. It is for this
|
||
world, for the use of man. It is perfectly candid. It does not try
|
||
to conceal, but to reveal. It is the enemy of mystery, of pretence
|
||
and cant. It does not ask people to be solemn, but sensible. It
|
||
calls for and insists on the use of all the senses, of all the
|
||
faculties of the mind. It does not pretend to be "holy" or
|
||
"inspired." It courts investigation, criticism and even denial. It
|
||
asks for the application of every test, for trial by every
|
||
standard. It knows nothing of blasphemy and does not ask for the
|
||
imprisonment of those who ignorantly or knowingly deny the truth.
|
||
The good that springs from a knowledge of the truth is the only
|
||
reward it offers, and the evil resulting from ignorance is the only
|
||
punishment it threatens. Its effort is to reform, the world through
|
||
intelligence.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand theology is, always has been, and always
|
||
will be, ignorant, arrogant, puerile and cruel. When the church had
|
||
power, hypocrisy was crowned and honesty imprisoned. Fraud wore the
|
||
tiara and truth was a convict. Liberty was in chains, Theology has
|
||
always sent the worst to heaven, the best to hell.
|
||
|
||
Let me give you a scene from the day of judgment. Christ is
|
||
upon his throne, his secretary by his side. A soul appears. This is
|
||
what happens --
|
||
|
||
"What is your name?
|
||
|
||
"Torquemada."
|
||
|
||
"Were you a Christian?"
|
||
|
||
"I was."
|
||
|
||
"Did you endeavor to convert your fellowmen?"
|
||
|
||
"I did. I tried to convert them by persuasion, by preaching
|
||
and praying and even by force."
|
||
|
||
"What did you do?"
|
||
|
||
"I put the heretics in prison, in chains. I tore out their
|
||
tongues, put out their eyes, crushed their bones, stretched them
|
||
upon racks, roasted their feet, and if they remained obdurate I
|
||
flayed them alive or burned them at the stake."
|
||
|
||
"And did you do all this for my glory?"
|
||
|
||
"Yes, all for you. I wanted to save some, I wanted to protect
|
||
the young and the weak minded.
|
||
|
||
"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles -- that I was God.
|
||
that I was born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish?"
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
"Yes, I believed it all. My reason was the slave of faith.
|
||
|
||
"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the
|
||
Joys of thy Lord. I was hungry and you gave me meat, naked and you
|
||
clothed me."
|
||
|
||
Another soul arises.
|
||
|
||
"What is your name?"
|
||
|
||
"Giordano Bruno."
|
||
|
||
"Were you a Christian?"
|
||
|
||
"At one time I was, but for many years I was a philosopher, a
|
||
seeker after truth."
|
||
|
||
"Did you seek to convert your fellow-men?"
|
||
|
||
"Not to Christianity, but to the religion of reason. I tried
|
||
to develop their minds, to free them from the slavery of ignorance
|
||
and superstition. In my day the church taught the holiness of
|
||
credulity -- the virtue of unquestioning obedience, and in your
|
||
name tortured and destroyed the intelligent and courageous. I did
|
||
what I could to civilize the world, to make men tolerant and
|
||
merciful, to soften the hearts of priests, and banish torture from
|
||
the world. I expressed my honest thoughts and walked in the light
|
||
of reason."
|
||
|
||
"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? Did you believe that
|
||
I was God, that I was born of a virgin and that I suffered myself
|
||
to be killed to appease the wrath of God -- that is, of myself --
|
||
so that God could save the souls of a few?"
|
||
|
||
"No, I did not. I did not believe that God was ever born into
|
||
my world, or that God learned the trade of a carpenter, or that he
|
||
"increased in knowledge," or that he cast devils out of men, or
|
||
that his garments could cure diseases, or that he allowed himself
|
||
to be murdered, and in the hour of death "forsook" himself. These
|
||
things I did not and could not believe. But I did all the good I
|
||
could, enlightened the ignorant, comforted the afflicted, defended
|
||
the innocent, divided even my poverty with the poor, and did the
|
||
best I could to increase the happiness of my fellow-men. I was a
|
||
soldier in the army of progress. -- I was arrested, imprisoned,
|
||
tried and convicted by the church -- by the "Triumphant Beast." I
|
||
was burned at the stake by ignorant and heartless priests and my
|
||
ashes given to the winds.
|
||
|
||
Then Christ, his face growing dark, his brows contracted with
|
||
wrath, with uplifted hands, with half averted face, cries or rather
|
||
shrieks: "Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared
|
||
for the devil and his angels."
|
||
|
||
This is the justice of God -- the mercy of the compassionate
|
||
Christ. This is the belief, the dream and hope of the orthodox
|
||
theologian -- "the consummation devoutly to be wished."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
Theology makes God a monster, a tyrant, a savage; makes man a
|
||
servant, a serf, a slave; promises heaven to the obedient, the
|
||
meek, the frightened, and threatens the self-reliant with the
|
||
tortures of hell.
|
||
|
||
It denounces reason and appeals to the passions -- to hope and
|
||
fear. It does not answer the arguments of those who attack, but
|
||
resorts to sophistry, falsehood and slander. It is incapable of
|
||
advancement. It keeps its back to the sunrise, lives on myth and
|
||
miracle, and guards with a miser's care the "sacred" superstitions
|
||
of the past.
|
||
|
||
In the great struggle between the supernatural and the
|
||
natural, between gods and men, we have passed midnight. All the
|
||
forces of civilization, all the facts that have been found, all the
|
||
truths that have been discovered are the allies of science -- the
|
||
enemies of the supernatural.
|
||
|
||
We need no myths, no miracles, no gods, no devils.
|
||
|
||
IX
|
||
|
||
For thousands of generations the myths have been taught and
|
||
the miracles believed. Every mother was a missionary and told with
|
||
loving care the falsehoods of "faith" to her babe. The poison of
|
||
superstition was in the mother's milk. She was honest and
|
||
affectionate and her character, her goodness, her smiles and
|
||
kisses, entered into, mingled with, and became a part of the
|
||
superstition that she taught. Fathers, friends and priests united
|
||
with the mothers, and the children thus taught, became the teachers
|
||
of their children and so the creeds were kept alive.
|
||
|
||
Childhood loves the romantic, the mysterious, the monstrous.
|
||
It lives in a world where cause has nothing to do with effect,
|
||
where the fairy waves her hand and the prince appears. Where wish
|
||
creates the thing desired and facts become the slaves of amulet and
|
||
charm. The individual lives the life of the race, and the child is
|
||
charmed with what the race in its infancy produced.
|
||
|
||
There seems to be the same difference between mistakes and
|
||
facts that there is between weeds and corn. Mistakes seem to take
|
||
care of themselves, while the facts have to be guarded with all
|
||
possible care. Falsehoods like weeds flourish without care. Weeds
|
||
care nothing for soil or rain. They not only ask no help but they
|
||
almost defy destruction. In the minds of children, superstitions,
|
||
legends, myths and miracles find a natural, and in most instances
|
||
a lasting home. Thrown aside in manhood, forgotten or denied, in
|
||
old age they oft return and linger to the end.
|
||
|
||
This in part accounts for the longevity of religious lies.
|
||
Ministers with clasped hands and uplifted eyes ask the man who is
|
||
thinking for himself how he can be wicked and heartless enough to
|
||
attack the religion of his mother. This question is regarded by the
|
||
clergy as unanswerable. Of course it is not to be asked by the
|
||
missionaries, of the Hindus and the Chinese. The heathen are
|
||
expected to desert the religion of their mothers as Christ and his
|
||
apostles deserted the religion of their mothers. It is right for
|
||
Jews and heathen, but not for thinkers and philosophers.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
MYTH AND MIRACLE.
|
||
|
||
A cannibal was about to kill a missionary for food. The
|
||
missionary objected and asked the cannibal how he could be so cruel
|
||
and wicked.
|
||
|
||
The cannibal replied that he followed the example of his
|
||
mother. "My mother," said he, "was good enough for me. Her religion
|
||
is my religion. The last time I saw her she was sitting, propped up
|
||
against a tree, eating cold missionary."
|
||
|
||
But now the mother argument has mostly lost its force, and men
|
||
of mind are satisfied with nothing less than truth.
|
||
|
||
The phenomena of nature have been investigated and the
|
||
supernatural has not been found. The myths have faded from the
|
||
imagination, and of them nothing remains but the poetic. The
|
||
miraculous has become the absurd, the impossible. Gods and phantoms
|
||
have been driven from the earth and sky. We are living in a natural
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
Our fathers, some of them, demanded the freedom of religion.
|
||
We have taken another step. We demand the Religion of Freedom.
|
||
|
||
O Liberty, thou art the god of my idolatry! Thou art the only
|
||
deity that hateth bended knees. In thy vast and unwalled temple,
|
||
beneath the roofless dome, star-gemmed and luminous with suns, thy
|
||
worshipers stand erect! They do not cringe, or crawl, or bend their
|
||
foreheads to the earth. The dust has never borne the impress of
|
||
their lips. Upon thy altars mothers do not sacrifice their babes,
|
||
nor men their rights. Thou askest naught from man except the things
|
||
that good men hate -- the whip, the chain, the dungeon key. Thou
|
||
hast no popes, no priests, who stand between their fellow men and
|
||
thee. Thou carest not for foolish forms, or selfish prayers. At thy
|
||
sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow, virtue does not tremble,
|
||
superstition's feeble tapers do not burn, but Reason holds aloft
|
||
her inextinguishable torch whose holy light will one day flood the
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The 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.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|