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2276 lines
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Plaintext
35 page printout.
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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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ORTHODOXY
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1884
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It is utterly inconceivable that any man believing in the
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truth of the Christian religion should Publicly deny it, because he
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who believes in that religion would believe that, by a public
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denial, he would peril the eternal salvation of his soul. It is
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conceivable, and without any great effort of the mind, that
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millions who do not believe in the Christian religion should openly
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say that they did. In a country where religion is supposed to be in
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power -- where it has rewards for pretence, where it pays a premium
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upon hypocrisy, where it at least is willing to purchase silence --
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it is easily conceivable that millions pretend to believe what they
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do not. And yet I believe it has been charged against myself not
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only that I was insincere, but that I took the side I am on for the
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sake of popularity; and the audience to-night goes far toward
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justifying the accusation.
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ORTHODOX RELIGION DYING OUT.
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It gives me immense pleasure to say to this audience that
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orthodox religion is dying out of the civilized world. It is a sick
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man. It has been attacked with two diseases -- softening of the
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brain and ossification of the heart. It is a religion that no
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longer satisfies the intelligence of this country; that no longer
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satisfies the brain; a religion against which the heart of every
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civilized man and woman protests. It is a religion that gives hope
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only to a few; that puts a shadow upon the cradle; that wraps the
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coffin in darkness and fills the future of mankind with flame and
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fear. It is a religion that I am going to do what little I can
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while I live to destroy. In its place I want humanity, I want good
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fellowship, I want intellectual liberty -- free lips, the
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discoveries and inventions of genius, the demonstrations of science
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-- the religion of art, music and poetry -- of good houses, good
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clothes, good wages -- that is to say, the religion of this world.
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RELIGIOUS DEATHS AND BIRTHS.
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We must remember that this is a world of progress, a world of
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perpetual change -- a succession of coffins and cradles. There is
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perpetual death, and there is perpetual birth. By the grave of the
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old, forever stand youth and joy; and when an old religion dies, a
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better one is born. When we find out that an assertion is a
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falsehood a shining truth takes its place, and we need not fear the
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destruction of the false. The more false we destroy the more room
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there will be for the true.
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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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ORTHODOXY
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There was a time when the astrologer sought to read in the
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stars the fate of men and nations. The astrologer has faded from
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the world, but the astronomer has taken his place. There was a time
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when the poor alchemist, bent and wrinkled and old, over his
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crucible endeavored to find some secret by which he could change
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the baser metals into purest gold. The alchemist has gone; the
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chemist took his place; and, although he finds nothing to change
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metals into gold, he finds something that covers the earth with
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wealth. There was a time when the soothsayer and augur flourished.
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After them came the parson and the priest; and the parson and the
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priest must go. The preacher must go, and in his place must come
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the teacher -- the real interpreter of Nature. We are done with the
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supernatural. We are through with the miraculous and the
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impossible. There was once the prophet who pretended to read the
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book of the future. His place has been taken by the philosopher,
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who reasons from cause to effect -- who finds the facts by which we
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are surrounded and endeavors to reason from these premises and to
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tell what in all Probability will happen. The prophet has gone, the
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philosopher is here. There was a time when man sought aid from
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heaven -- when he prayed to the deaf sky. There was a time when
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everything depended on the supernaturalist. That time in
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Christendom is passing away. We now depend upon the naturalist --
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not upon the believer in ancient falsehoods, but on the discoverer
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of facts -- on the demonstrator of truths. At last we are beginning
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to build on a solid foundation, and as we progress, the
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supernatural dies. The leaders of the intellectual world deny the
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existence of the supernatural. They take from all superstition its
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foundation.
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THE RELIGION OF RECIPROCITY.
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Supernatural religion will fade from this world, and in its
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place we shall have reason. In the place of the worship of
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something we know not of, will be the religion of mutual love and
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assistance -- the great religion of reciprocity. Superstition must
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go. Science will remain. The church dies hard. The brain of the
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world is not yet developed. There are intellectual diseases as well
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as physical -- there are pestilences and plagues of the mind.
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Whenever the new comes the old protests, and fights for its
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place as long as it has a particle of power. We are now having the
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same warfare between superstition and science that there was
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between the stage coach and the locomotive. But the stage coach had
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to go. It had its day of glory and power, but it is gone. It went
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West. In a little while it will be driven into the Pacific. So we
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find that there is the same conflict between the different sects
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and different schools not only of philosophy but of medicine.
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Recollect that everything except the demonstrated truth is
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liable to die. That is the order of Nature. Words die. Every
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language has a cemetery. Every now and then a word dies and a
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tombstone is erected, and across it is written "obsolete." New
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words are continually being born. There is a cradle in which a word
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is rocked. A thought is married to a sound, and a child-word is
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born. And there comes a time when the word gets old, and wrinkled,
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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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ORTHODOXY
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and expressionless, and is carried mournfully to the grave. So in
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the schools of medicine. You can remember, so can I, when the old
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allopathists, the bleeders and blisterers, reigned supreme. If
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there was anything the matter with a man they let out his blood.
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Called to the bedside, they took him on the point of a lancet to
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the edge of eternity, and then practiced all their art to bring him
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back. One can hardly imagine how perfect a constitution it took a
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||
few years ago to stand the assault of a doctor. And long after the
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old practice was found to be a mistake hundreds and thousands of
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the ancient physicians clung to it, carried around with them, in
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one pocket a bottle of jalap, and in the other a rusty lancet,
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sorry that they could not find some patient with faith enough to
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allow the experiment to be made again.
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So these schools, and these theories, and these religions die
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hard. What else can they do? Like the paintings of the old masters,
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they are kept alive because so much money has been invested in
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them. Think of the amount of money that has been invested in
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superstition! Think of the schools that have been founded for the
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more general diffusion of useless knowledge! Think of the colleges
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||
wherein men are taught that it is dangerous to think, and that they
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must never use their brains except in the act of faith! Think of
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the millions and billions of dollars that have been expended in
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churches, in temples, and in cathedrals! Think of the thousands and
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thousands of men who depend for their living upon the ignorance of
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mankind! Think of those who grow rich on credulity and who fatten
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on faith! Do you suppose they are going to die without a struggle?
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What are they to do? From the bottom of my heart I sympathize with
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the poor clergyman that has had all his common sense educated out
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of him, and is now to be thrown upon the cold and unbelieving
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world. His prayers are not answered; he gets no help from on high,
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||
and the pews are beginning to criticize the pulpit. What is the man
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to do? If he suddenly changes he is gone. If he preaches what he
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really believes he will get notice to quit. And yet, if he and the
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congregation would come together and be perfectly honest, they
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would all admit that they believe little and know nothing.
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Only a little while ago a couple of ladies were riding
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together from a revival, late at night, and one said to the other,
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||
as they rode along: "I am going to say something that will shock
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you, and I beg of you never to tell it to anybody else. I am going
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||
to tell it to you." "Well, what is it?" Said she: "I do not believe
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||
the Bible." The other replied: "Neither do I."
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I have often thought how splendid it would be if the ministers
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could but come together and say: "Now, let us be honest. Let us
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tell each other, honor bright" -- like Dr. Curry, of Chicago, did
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in the meeting the other day -- "just what we believe." They tell
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||
a story that in the old time a lot of people, about twenty, were in
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Texas in a little hotel, and one fellow got up before the fire, put
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his hands behind him, and said: "Boys, let us all tell our real
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names." If the ministers and their congregations would only tell
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their real thoughts they would find that they are nearly as bad as
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I am, and that they believe as little.
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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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ORTHODOXY
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Orthodoxy dies hard, and its defenders tell us that this fact
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shows that it is of divine origin. Judaism dies hard. It has lived
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several thousand years longer than Christianity. The religion of
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Mohammed dies hard.
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Buddhism dies hard. Why do all these religions die hard?
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Because intelligence increases slowly.
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Let me whisper in the ear of the Protestant: Catholicism dies
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hard. What does that prove? It proves that the people are ignorant
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and that the priests are cunning.
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Let me whisper in the ear of the Catholic: Protestantism dies
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hard. What does that prove? It proves that the people are
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superstitious and the preachers stupid.
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Let me whisper in all your ears: Infidelity is not dying -- it
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is growing -- it increases every day. And what does that prove? lt
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proves that the people are learning more and more -- that they are
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advancing -- that the mind is getting free, and that the race is
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being civilized.
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The clergy know that I know that they know that they do not
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know.
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THE BLOWS THAT HAVE SHATTERED THE SHIELD
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AND SHIVERED THE LANCE OF SUPERSTITION.
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Mohammed wrested from the disciples of the cross the finest
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part of Europe. It was known that he was an impostor, and that fact
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||
sowed the seeds of distrust and infidelity in the Christian world.
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Christians made an effort to rescue from the infidels the empty
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sepulchre of Christ. That commenced in the eleventh century and
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ended at the close of the thirteenth. Europe was almost
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||
depopulated. The fields were left waste, the villages were
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||
deserted, nations were impoverished. every man who owed a debt was
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||
discharged from payment if he put a cross upon his breast and
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joined the Crusades. No matter what crime he had committed, the
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doors of the prison were open for him to join the hosts of the
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cross. They believed that God would give them victory, and they
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carried in front of the first Crusade a goat and a goose, believing
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that both those animals were blessed by the indwelling of the Holy
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Ghost. And I may say that those same animals are in the lead to-day
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in the orthodox world. Until the year 1291 they endeavored to gain
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possession of that sepulchre, and finally the hosts of Christ were
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driven back, baffled and beaten, -- a poor, miserable, religious
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rabble. They were driven back, and that fact sowed the seeds of
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||
distrust in Christendom. You know that at that time the world
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believed in trial by battle -- that God would take the side of the
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right -- and there had been a trial by battle between the cross and
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the crescent, and Mohammed had been victorious. Was God at that
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time governing the world? Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel?
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THE DESTRUCTION OF ART.
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You know that when Christianity came into power it destroyed
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every statue it could lay its ignorant hands upon. It defaced and
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obliterated every painting; it destroyed every beautiful building;
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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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ORTHODOXY
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it burned the manuscripts, both Greek and Latin; it destroyed all
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the history, all the poetry, all the philosophy it could find, and
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||
reduced to ashes every library that it could reach with its torch.
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||
And the result was, that the night of the Middle Ages fell upon the
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human race. But by accident, by chance, by oversight, a few of the
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manuscripts escaped the fury of religious zeal; and these
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manuscripts became the seed, the fruit of which is our civilization
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of to-day. A few statues had been buried; a few forms of beauty
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||
were dug from the earth that had protected them, and now the
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civilized world is filled with art, the walls are covered with
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paintings, and the niches filled with statuary. A few manuscripts
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were found and deciphered. The old languages were learned, and
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||
literature was again born. A new day dawned upon mankind. Every
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||
effort at mental improvement had been opposed by the church, and
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||
yet, the few things saved from the general wreck -- a few poems, a
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few works of the ancient thinkers, a few forms wrought in stone.
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produced a new civilization destined to overthrow and destroy the
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fabric of superstition.
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THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA.
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What was the next blow that this church received? The
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discovery of America. The Holy Ghost who inspired men to write the
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Bible did not know of the existence of this continent, never
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dreamed of the Western Hemisphere. The Bible left out half the
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world. The Holy Ghost did not know that the earth is round. He did
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||
not dream that the earth is round. He believed it was flat,
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although he made it himself. At that time heaven was just beyond
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the clouds. It was there the gods lived, there the angels were, and
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it was against that heaven that Jacob's ladder leaned when the
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angels went up and down. It was to that heaven that Christ ascended
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after his resurrection. It was up there that the New Jerusalem was,
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with its streets of gold, and under this earth was perdition. There
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||
was where the devils lived; where a pit was dug for all
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unbelievers, for men who had brains. I say that for this reason:
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Just in proportion that you have brains, your chances for eternal
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joy are lessened, according to this religion. And just in
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proportion that you lack brains your chances are increased. At last
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||
they found that the earth is round. It was circumnavigated by
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Magellan. In 1519 that brave man set sail. The church told him:
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"The earth is flat, my friend; don't go, you may fall off the
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edge." Magellan said: "I have seen the shadow of the earth upon the
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moon, and I have more confidence in the shadow than I have in the
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church." The ship went round. The earth was circumnavigated.
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Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and where was the
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old heaven and where was the hell? Vanished forever! And they dwell
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now only in the religion of superstition. We found there was no
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place there for Jacob's ladder to lean against; no place there for
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||
the gods and angels to live; no place to hold the waters of the
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deluge; no place to which Christ could have ascended. The
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||
foundations of the New Jerusalem crumbled. The towers and domes
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||
fell, and in their places infinite space, sown with an infinite
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number of stars; not with New Jerusalem, but with countless
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constellations.
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Then man began to grow great, and with that came Astronomy. In
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||
1473 Copernicus was born. In 1543 his great work appeared. In 1616
|
||
the system of Copernicus was condemned by the pope, by the
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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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ORTHODOXY
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infallible Catholic Church, and the church was about as near right
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||
upon that subject as upon any other. The system of Copernicus was
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denounced. And how long do you suppose the church fought that? Let
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me tell you. It was revoked by Pius VII. in the year of grace 1821.
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For two hundred and seventy-eight years after the death of
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Copernicus the church insisted that his system was false, and that
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||
the old Bible astronomy was true. Astronomy is the first help that
|
||
we ever received from heaven. Then came Kepler in 1609, and you may
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||
almost date the birth of science from the night that Kepler
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||
discovered his first law. That was the break of the day. His first
|
||
law, that the planets do not move in circles but in ellipses; his
|
||
second law, that they describe equal spaces in equal times; his
|
||
third law, that the squares of their periodic times are
|
||
proportional to the cubes of their distances. That man gave us the
|
||
key to the heavens. He opened the infinite book, and in it read
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||
three lines.
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I have not time to speak of Galileo, of Leonardo da Vinci, of
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Bruno, and of hundreds of others who contributed to the
|
||
intellectual wealth of the world.
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SPECIAL PROVIDENCE.
|
||
|
||
The next thing that gave the church a blow was Statistics. We
|
||
found by taking statistics that we could tell the average length of
|
||
human life; that this human life did not depend upon infinite
|
||
caprice; that it depended upon conditions, circumstances, laws and
|
||
facts, and that these conditions, circumstances, and facts were
|
||
during long periods of time substantially the same. And now, the
|
||
man who depends entirely upon special providence gets his life
|
||
insured. He has more confidence even in one of these companies than
|
||
he has in the whole Trinity. We found by statistics that there were
|
||
just so many crimes on an average committed; just so many crimes of
|
||
one kind and so many of another; just so many suicides, so many
|
||
deaths by drowning, so many accidents on an average, so many men
|
||
marrying women, for instance. older than themselves; so many
|
||
murders of a particular kind; just the same number of mistakes; and
|
||
I say to-night, statistics utterly demolish the idea of special
|
||
providence.
|
||
|
||
Only the other day a gentleman was telling me of a case of
|
||
special providence. He knew it. He had been the subject of it. A
|
||
few years ago he was about to go on a ship when he was detained. He
|
||
did not go, and the ship was lost with all on board. "Yes!" I said,
|
||
"Do you think the people who were drowned believed in special
|
||
providence?" Think of the infinite egotism of such a doctrine. Here
|
||
is a man that fails to go upon a ship with five hundred passengers
|
||
and they go down to the bottom of the sea -- fathers, mothers,
|
||
children, and loving husbands and wives waiting upon the shores of
|
||
expectation. Here is one poor little wretch that did not happen to
|
||
go! And he thinks that God, the Infinite Being, interfered in his
|
||
poor little withered behalf and let the rest all go. That is
|
||
special providence. Why does special providence allow all the
|
||
crimes? Why are the wife-beaters protected, and why are the wives
|
||
and children left defenseless if the hand of God is over us all?
|
||
Who protects the insane? Why does Providence permit insanity? But
|
||
the church cannot give up special providence. If there is no such
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
thing, then no prayers, no worship, no churches, no priests. What
|
||
would become of National Thanksgiving? You know we have a custom
|
||
every year of issuing a proclamation of thanksgiving. We say to
|
||
God, "Although you have afflicted all the other countries, although
|
||
you have sent war, and desolation, and famine on everybody else, we
|
||
have been such good children that you have been kind to us, and we
|
||
hope you will keep on." It does not make a bit of difference
|
||
whether we have good times or not -- the thanksgiving is always
|
||
exactly the same. I remember a few years ago a governor of Iowa got
|
||
out a proclamation of that kind. He went on to tell how thankful
|
||
the people were and how prosperous the State had been. There was a
|
||
young fellow in that State who got out another proclamation, saying
|
||
that he feared the Lord might be misled by official correspondence;
|
||
that the governor's proclamation was entirely false; that the State
|
||
was not prosperous; that the crops had been an almost utter
|
||
failure; that nearly every farm in the State was mortgaged, and
|
||
that if the Lord did not believe him, all he asked was that he
|
||
would send some angel in whom he had confidence, to look the matter
|
||
over and report.
|
||
|
||
CHARLES DARWIN.
|
||
|
||
This century will be called Darwin's century. He was one of
|
||
the greatest men who ever touched this globe. He has explained more
|
||
of the phenomena of life than all of the religious teachers. Write
|
||
the name of Charles Darwin on the one hand and the name of every
|
||
theologian who ever lived on the other, and from that name has come
|
||
more light to the world than from all of those. His doctrine of
|
||
evolution, his doctrine of the survival of the fittest, his
|
||
doctrine of the origin of species, has removed in every thinking
|
||
mind the last vestige of orthodox Christianity. He has not only
|
||
stated, but he has demonstrated, that the inspired writer knew
|
||
nothing of this world. nothing of the origin of man. nothing of
|
||
geology, nothing of astronomy, nothing of nature; that the Bible is
|
||
a book written by ignorance -- at the instigation of fear. Think of
|
||
the men who replied to him. Only a few years ago there was no
|
||
person too ignorant to successfully answer Charles Darwin, and the
|
||
more ignorant he was the more cheerfully he undertook the task. He
|
||
was held up to the ridicule, the scorn and contempt of the
|
||
Christian world, and yet when he died, England was proud to put his
|
||
dust with that of her noblest and her grandest. Charles Darwin
|
||
conquered the intellectual world, and his doctrines are now
|
||
accepted facts. His light has broken in on some of the clergy, and
|
||
the greatest man who to-day occupies the pulpit of one of the
|
||
orthodox churches, Henry Ward Beecher, is a believer in the
|
||
theories of Charles Darwin -- a man of more genius than all the
|
||
clergy of that entire church put together.
|
||
|
||
And yet we are told in this little creed that orthodox
|
||
religion is about to conquer the world! It will be driven to the
|
||
wilds of Africa. It must go to some savage country; it has lost its
|
||
hold upon civilization. It is unfortunate to have a religion that
|
||
cannot be accepted by the intellect of a nation. It is unfortunate
|
||
to have a religion against which every good and noble heart
|
||
protests. Let us have a good religion or none. My pity has been
|
||
excited by seeing these ministers endeavor to warp and twist the
|
||
passages of Scripture to fit the demonstrations of science. Of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
course, I have not time to recount all the discoveries and events
|
||
that have assisted in the destruction of superstition. Every fact
|
||
is an enemy of the church. Every fact is a heretic. Every
|
||
demonstration is an infidel. Everything that ever really happened
|
||
testifies against the supernatural.
|
||
|
||
The church teaches that man was created perfect, and that for
|
||
six thousand years he has degenerated. Darwin demonstrated the
|
||
falsity of this dogma. He shows that man has for thousands of ages
|
||
steadily advanced; that the Garden of Eden is an ignorant myth;
|
||
that the doctrine of original sin has no foundation in fact; that
|
||
the atonement is an absurdity; that the serpent did not tempt, and
|
||
that man did not "fall."
|
||
|
||
Charles Darwin destroyed the foundation of orthodox
|
||
Christianity. There is nothing left but faith in what we know could
|
||
not and did not happen. Religion and science are enemies. One is a
|
||
superstition; the other is a fact. One rests upon the false, the
|
||
other upon the true. One is the result of fear and faith, the other
|
||
of investigation and reason.
|
||
|
||
THE CREEDS.
|
||
|
||
Often, after having delivered a lecture, I have met some good,
|
||
religious person who has said to me:
|
||
|
||
"You do not tell it as we believe it."
|
||
|
||
"Well, but I tell it as you have it written in your creed."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, we don't mind the creed any more."
|
||
|
||
"Then, why do you not change it?"
|
||
|
||
"Oh, well, we understand it as it is, and if we tried to
|
||
change it, maybe we would not agree."
|
||
|
||
Possibly the creeds are in the best condition now. There is a
|
||
tacit understanding that they do not believe them, that there is a
|
||
way to get around them, and that they can read between the lines;
|
||
that if they should meet now to form new creeds they would fail to
|
||
agree; and that now they can say as they please, except in public.
|
||
Whenever they do so in public the church, in self-defence, must try
|
||
them; and I believe in trying every minister that does not preach
|
||
the doctrine he agrees to. I have not the slightest sympathy with
|
||
a Presbyterian preacher who endeavors to preach infidelity from a
|
||
Presbyterian pulpit and receives Presbyterian money. When he
|
||
changes his views he should step down and out like a man, and say,
|
||
"I do not believe your doctrine, and I will not preach it. You must
|
||
hire some other man.
|
||
|
||
THE LATEST CREED.
|
||
|
||
But I find that I have correctly interpreted the creeds. There
|
||
was put into my hands the new Congregational creed. I have read it,
|
||
and I will call your attention to it to-night, to find whether that
|
||
church has made any advance; to find whether the sun of science has
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
risen in the heavens in vain; whether they are still the children
|
||
of intellectual darkness; whether they still consider it necessary
|
||
for you to believe something that you by no possibility can
|
||
understand, in order to be a winged angel forever. Now, let us see
|
||
what their creed is. I will read a little of it.
|
||
|
||
They commence by saying that they
|
||
|
||
"Believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and
|
||
earth, and of all things visible and invisible."
|
||
|
||
They say, now, that there is the one personal God; that he is
|
||
the maker of the universe and its ruler. I again ask the old
|
||
question; Of what did he make it? If matter has not existed through
|
||
eternity, then this God made it. Of what did he make it? What did
|
||
he use for the purpose? There was nothing in the universe except
|
||
this God. What had the God been doing for the eternity he had been
|
||
living? He had made nothing -- called nothing into existence; never
|
||
had had an idea, because it is impossible to have an idea unless
|
||
there is something to excite an idea. What had he been doing? Why
|
||
does not the Congregational Church tell us? How do they know about
|
||
this Infinite Being? And if he is infinite how can they comprehend
|
||
him? What good is it to believe in something that you know you do
|
||
not understand, and that you never can understand?
|
||
|
||
In the Episcopalian creed God is described as follows:
|
||
|
||
"There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without
|
||
body, parts or passions."
|
||
|
||
Think of that! -- without body, parts, or passions. I defy any
|
||
man in the world to write a better description of nothing. You
|
||
cannot conceive of a finer word-painting of a vacuum than "without
|
||
body, parts, or passions." And yet this God, without passions, is
|
||
angry at the wicked every day; this God, without passions, is a
|
||
jealous God, whose anger burneth to the lowest hell. This God,
|
||
without passions, loves the whole human race; and this God, without
|
||
passions, damns a large majority of mankind. This God without body,
|
||
walked in the Garden of Eden, in the cool of the day. This God,
|
||
without body, talked with Adam and Eve. This God, without body, or
|
||
parts met Moses upon Mount Sinai, appeared at the door of the
|
||
tabernacle, and talked with Moses face to face as a man speaketh to
|
||
his friend. This description of God is simply an effort of the
|
||
church to describe a something of which it has no conception.
|
||
|
||
GOD AS A GOVERNOR.
|
||
|
||
So, too, I find the following:
|
||
|
||
"We believe that the Providence of God, by which he executes
|
||
his eternal purposes in the government of the world, is in and over
|
||
all events."
|
||
|
||
Is God the governor of the world? Is this established by the
|
||
history of nations? What evidence: can you find, if you are
|
||
absolutely honest and not frightened, in the history of the world,
|
||
that this universe is presided over by an infinitely wise and good
|
||
God?
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
How do you account for Russia? How do you account for Siberia?
|
||
How do you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled
|
||
beneath the master's lash for ages without recompense and without
|
||
reward? How do you account for the fact that babes were sold from
|
||
the arms of mothers -- arms that had been reached toward God in
|
||
supplication? How do you account for it? How do you account for the
|
||
existence of martyrs? How do you account for the fact that this God
|
||
allows people to be burned simply for loving him? Is justice always
|
||
done? Is innocence always acquitted? Do the good succeed? Are the
|
||
honest fed? Are the charitable clothed? Are the virtuous shielded?
|
||
How do you account for the fact that the world has been filled with
|
||
pain, and grief, and tears? How do you account for the fact that
|
||
people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmed by
|
||
volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? Is it easy to
|
||
account for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us
|
||
all a Ruler infinitely good, powerful and wise?
|
||
|
||
I do not say there is none. I do not know. As I have said
|
||
before, this is the only planet I was ever on. I live in one of the
|
||
rural districts of the universe and do not know about these things
|
||
as much as the clergy pretend to, but if they know no more about
|
||
the other world than they do about this, it is not worth
|
||
mentioning.
|
||
|
||
How do they answer all this? They say that God "permits" it.
|
||
What would you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out
|
||
the brains of a child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent
|
||
it? You would say truthfully that I was as bad as the murderer. Is
|
||
it possible for this God to prevent it? Then, if he does not he is
|
||
a fiend; he is no god. But they say he "permits" it. What for? So
|
||
that we may have freedom of choice. What for? So that God may find,
|
||
I suppose, who are good and who are bad. Did he not know that when
|
||
he made us? Did he not know exactly just what he was making? Why
|
||
should he make those whom he knew would be criminals? If I should
|
||
make a machine that would walk your streets and take the lives of
|
||
people you would hang me. And if God made a man whom he knew would
|
||
commit murder, then God is guilty of that murder. If God made a man
|
||
knowing that he would beat his wife, that he would starve his
|
||
children, that he would strew on either side of his path of life
|
||
the wrecks of ruined homes, then I say the being who knowingly
|
||
called that wretch into existence is directly responsible. And yet
|
||
we are to find the providence of God in the history of nations.
|
||
What little I have read shows me that when man has been helped, man
|
||
has done it; when the chains of slavery have been broken, they have
|
||
been broken by man; when something bad has been done in the
|
||
government of mankind, it is easy to trace it to man, and to fix
|
||
the responsibility upon human beings. You need not look to the sky;
|
||
you need throw neither praise nor blame upon gods; you can find the
|
||
efficient causes nearer home -- right here.
|
||
|
||
THE LOVE OF GOD.
|
||
|
||
What is the next thing I find in this creed?
|
||
|
||
"We believe that man was made in the image of God, that he
|
||
might know, love, and obey God, and enjoy him forever."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
I do not believe that anybody ever did love God, because
|
||
nobody ever knew anything about him. We love each other. We love
|
||
something that we know. We love something that our experience tells
|
||
us is good and great and beautiful. We cannot by any possibility
|
||
love the unknown. We can love truth, because truth adds to human
|
||
happiness. We can love justice, because it preserves human joy. We
|
||
can love charity. We can love every form of goodness that we know,
|
||
or of which we can conceive, but we cannot love the infinitely
|
||
unknown. And how can we be made in the image of something that has
|
||
neither body, parts, nor passions?
|
||
|
||
THE FALL OF MAN.
|
||
|
||
The Congregational Church has not outgrown the doctrine of
|
||
"original sin." We are told that:
|
||
|
||
"Our first parents, by disobedience, fell under the
|
||
condemnation of God, and that all men are so alienated from God
|
||
that there is no salvation from guilt and power of sin except
|
||
through God's redeeming power."
|
||
|
||
Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who
|
||
believes in the Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who
|
||
believes it, strike his forehead and you will hear an echo.
|
||
Something is for rent. Does any intelligent man now believe that
|
||
God made man of dust, and woman of a rib, and put them in a garden,
|
||
and put a tree in the midst of it? Was there not room outside of
|
||
the garden to put his tree, if he did not want people to eat his
|
||
apples?
|
||
|
||
If I did not want a man to eat my fruit, I would not put him
|
||
in my orchard.
|
||
|
||
Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity
|
||
any man or woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that
|
||
childish fable. Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were
|
||
tempted. By whom? The devil. Who made the devil? God. What did God
|
||
make him for? Why did he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent?
|
||
Why did he not watch the devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve?
|
||
Instead of turning them out, why did he not keep him from getting
|
||
in? Why did he not have his flood first, and drown the devil,
|
||
before he made a man and woman.
|
||
|
||
And yet, people who call themselves intelligent -- professors
|
||
in colleges and presidents of venerable institutions -- teach
|
||
children and young men and women that the Garden of Eden story is
|
||
an absolute historical fact. I defy any man to think of a more
|
||
childish thing. This God, waiting around Eden -- knowing all the
|
||
while what would happen -- having made them on purpose so that it
|
||
would happen, then does what? Holds all of us responsible, and we
|
||
were not there. Here is a representative before the constituency
|
||
had been born. Before I am bound by a representative I want a
|
||
chance to vote for or against him; and if I had been there, and
|
||
known all the circumstances, I should have voted "No!" And yet, I
|
||
am held responsible.
|
||
|
||
"Sin and death entered the world."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken
|
||
of the forbidden fruit, God began to contrive ways by which he
|
||
could destroy the lives of his children. He invented all the
|
||
diseases -- all the fevers and coughs and colds -- all the pains
|
||
and plagues and pestilences -- all the aches and agonies, the
|
||
malaria and spores; so that when we take a breath of air we admit
|
||
into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing that some might live
|
||
too long, even under such circumstances, God invented the
|
||
earthquake and volcano, the cyclone and lightning, animalcules to
|
||
infest the heart and brain. so small that no eye can detect -- no
|
||
instrument reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of Adam
|
||
and Eve!
|
||
|
||
In His infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and
|
||
dyspepsia, cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new
|
||
diseases. Not only this, but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and
|
||
that by the gates of love and life should crouch the dragons of
|
||
death and pain. Fearing that some might, by accident, live too
|
||
long, he planted poisonous vines and herbs that looked like food.
|
||
He caught the serpents he had made and gave them fangs and curious
|
||
organs, ingeniously devised to distill and deposit the deadly drop.
|
||
He changed the nature of the beasts, that they might feed on human
|
||
flesh. He cursed a world, and tainted every spring and source of
|
||
joy. He poisoned every breath of air; corrupted even light, that it
|
||
might bear disease on every ray; tainted every drop of blood in
|
||
human veins; touched every nerve, that it might bear the double
|
||
fruit of pain and joy; decreed all accidents and mistakes that maim
|
||
and hurt and kill, and set the snares of life-long grief, baited
|
||
with present pleasure, -- with a moment's joy. Then and there he
|
||
foreknew and foreordained all human tears. And yet all this is but
|
||
the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite revenge of the good
|
||
God. Increase and multiply all human griefs until the mind has
|
||
reached imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time,
|
||
and you may faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite
|
||
horrors of this doctrine called "The Fall of Man."
|
||
|
||
THE ATONEMENT.
|
||
|
||
We are further told that:
|
||
|
||
"All believe that the love of God to sinful man has found its
|
||
highest expression in the redemptive work of his Son, who became
|
||
man, uniting his divine nature with our human nature in one person;
|
||
who was tempted like other men and yet without sin, and by his
|
||
humiliation, his holy obedience, his sufferings, his death on the
|
||
cross, and his resurrection, became a perfect redeemer; whose
|
||
sacrifice of himself for the sins of the world declares the
|
||
righteousness of God, and is the sole and sufficient ground of
|
||
forgiveness and of reconciliation with him."
|
||
|
||
The absurdity of the doctrine known as "The Fall of Man," gave
|
||
birth to that other absurdity known as "The Atonement." So that now
|
||
it is insisted that, as we are rightfully charged with the sin of
|
||
somebody else, we can rightfully be credited with the virtues of
|
||
another. Let us leave out of our philosophy both these absurdities.
|
||
Our creed will read a great deal better with both of them out, and
|
||
will make far better sense.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
Now, in consequence of Adam's sin, everybody is alienated from
|
||
God. How? Why? Oh, we are all depraved, you know; we all do wrong.
|
||
Well, why? Is that because we are depraved? No. Why do we make so
|
||
many mistakes? Because there is only one right way, and there is an
|
||
almost infinite number of wrong ways; and as long as we are not
|
||
perfect in our intellects we must make mistakes. "There is no
|
||
darkness but ignorance," and alienation, as they call it, from God,
|
||
is simply a lack of intellect. Why were we not given better brains?
|
||
That may account for the alienation.
|
||
|
||
The church teaches that every soul that finds its way to the
|
||
shore of this world is against God -- naturally hates God; that the
|
||
little dimpled child in the cradle is simply a chunk of depravity.
|
||
Everybody against God! It is a libel upon the human race; it is a
|
||
libel upon all the men who have worked for wife and child; upon all
|
||
mothers who have suffered and labored, wept and worked; upon all
|
||
the men who have died for their country; upon all who have fought
|
||
for human liberty. Leave out the history of religion and there is
|
||
little left to prove the depravity of man.
|
||
|
||
Everybody that comes is against God! Every soul, they think,
|
||
is like the wrecked Irishman, who drifted to an unknown island, and
|
||
as he climbed the shore saw a man and said to him, "Have you a
|
||
Government here?" The man replied "We have." "Well," said he, "I'm
|
||
against it!"
|
||
|
||
The church teaches us that such is the attitude of every soul
|
||
in the universe of God. Ought a god to take any credit to himself
|
||
for making depraved people? A god that cannot make a soul that is
|
||
not totally depraved, I respectfully suggest, should retire from
|
||
the business. And if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally
|
||
depraved, why should we go to the same being to be "born again?"
|
||
|
||
THE SECOND BIRTH.
|
||
|
||
The church insists that we must be "born again," and that all
|
||
who are not the subjects of this second birth are heirs of
|
||
everlasting fire. Would it not have been much better to have made
|
||
another Adam and Eve? Would it not have been better to change Noah
|
||
and his people, so that after that a second birth would not have
|
||
been necessary? Why not purify the fountain of all human life? Why
|
||
allow the earth to he peopled with depraved and monstrous beings,
|
||
each one of whom must be re-made, re-formed, and born again?
|
||
|
||
And yet, even reformation is not enough. If the man who steals
|
||
becomes perfectly honest, that is not enough; if the man who hates
|
||
his fellow-man, changes and loves his fellow-man, that is not
|
||
enough; he must go through that mysterious thing called the second
|
||
birth; he must be born again. He must have faith; he must believe
|
||
something that he does not understand, and experience what they
|
||
call "conversion." According to the church, nothing so excites the
|
||
wrath of God -- nothing so corrugates the brows of Jehovah with
|
||
hatred -- as a man relying on his own good works. He must admit
|
||
that he ought to be damned, and that of the two he prefers it,
|
||
before God will consent to save him.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
I met a man the other day, who said to me, "I am a Unitarian
|
||
Universalist." "What do you mean by that?" I asked. "Well," said
|
||
he, "this is what I mean: the Unitarian thinks he is too good to be
|
||
damned, and the Universalist thinks God is too good to damn him,
|
||
and I believe them both."
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was
|
||
acceptable to God? Will he accept the agony of innocence for the
|
||
punishment of guilt? will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ?
|
||
|
||
INSPIRATION.
|
||
|
||
What is the next thing in this great creed?
|
||
|
||
"We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments
|
||
are the record of God's revelation of Himself in the work of
|
||
redemption; that they were written by man under the special
|
||
guidance of the holy spirit; that they are able to make wise into
|
||
salvation; and that they constitute an authoritative standard by
|
||
which religious teaching and human conduct are to be regulated and
|
||
judged."
|
||
|
||
This is the creed of the Congregational Church; that is, the
|
||
result reached by a high-joint commission appointed to draw up a
|
||
creed for their churches; and there we have the statement that the
|
||
Bible was written "by men under the special guidance of the Holy
|
||
Spirit."
|
||
|
||
What part of the Bible? All of it? All of it. And yet what is
|
||
this Old Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? The
|
||
being who wrote it did not know the shape of the world he had made;
|
||
knew nothing of human nature. He commands men to love him, as if
|
||
one could love upon command. The same God upheld the institution of
|
||
human slavery; and the church says that the Bible that upholds that
|
||
institution was written by men under the guidance of the Holy
|
||
Spirit. Then I disagree with the Holy Spirit.
|
||
|
||
This church tells us that men under the guidance of the Holy
|
||
Spirit upheld the institution of polygamy -- I deny it; that under
|
||
the guidance of the Holy Spirit these men upheld wars of
|
||
extermination and conquest -- I deny it; that under the guidance of
|
||
the Holy Spirit these men wrote that it was right for a man to
|
||
destroy the life of his wife if she happened to differ with him on
|
||
the subject of religion -- I deny it. And yet that is the book now
|
||
upheld in this creed of the Congregational Church.
|
||
|
||
If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which
|
||
side would he have taken? Let every minister answer. If you knew
|
||
the devil had written a work on human slavery, in your judgment,
|
||
would he uphold slavery, or denounce it? Would you regard it as any
|
||
evidence that he ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? And yet, here
|
||
you have a work upholding slavery, and you say that it was written
|
||
by an infinitely good God! If the devil upheld polygamy, would you
|
||
be surprised? If the devil wanted to kill men for differing with
|
||
him would you be astonished? If the devil told a man to kill his
|
||
wife, would you be shocked? And yet, you say, that is exactly what
|
||
God did. If there be a God, then that creed is blasphemy. That
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
creed is a libel upon him who sits on heaven's throne. If there be
|
||
a God, I ask him to write in the book in which my account is kept,
|
||
that I denied these lies for him.
|
||
|
||
I do not believe in a slaveholding God! I do not worship a
|
||
polygamous Holy Ghost, nor a Son who threatens eternal pain; I will
|
||
not get upon my knees before any being who commands a husband to
|
||
slay his wife because she expresses her honest thought. Suppose a
|
||
book should be found old as the Old Testament in which slavery,
|
||
polygamy and war are all denounced, would Christians think that it
|
||
was written by the devil?
|
||
|
||
Did it ever occur to you that if God wrote the Old Testament,
|
||
and told the Jews to crucify or kill anybody that disagreed with
|
||
them on religion, and that this God afterward took upon himself
|
||
flesh and came to Jerusalem, and taught a different religion, and
|
||
the Jews killed him -- did it ever occur to you that he reaped
|
||
exactly what he had sown? Did it ever occur to you that he fell a
|
||
victim to his own tyranny, and was destroyed by his own hand? Of
|
||
course I do not believe that any God ever was the author of the
|
||
Bible, or that any God was ever crucified, or that any God was ever
|
||
killed, or ever will be. but I want to ask you that question.
|
||
|
||
Take this Old Testament, then, with all its stories of murder
|
||
and massacre; with all its foolish and cruel fables; with all its
|
||
infamous doctrines; with its spirit of caste; with its spirit of
|
||
hatred, and tell me whether it was written by a good God. If you
|
||
will read the maledictions and curses of that book, you will think
|
||
that God, like Lear, had divided heaven among his daughters, and
|
||
then, in the insanity of despair, had launched his curses on the
|
||
human race.
|
||
|
||
And yet, I must say -- I must admit -- that the Old Testament
|
||
is better than the New. In the Old Testament, when God had a man
|
||
dead, he let him alone. When he saw him quietly in his grave he was
|
||
satisfied. The muscles relaxed, and the frown gave place to a
|
||
smile. But in the New Testament the trouble commences at death. In
|
||
the New Testament God is to wreak his revenge forever and ever. It
|
||
was reserved for one who said, "Love your enemies," to tear asunder
|
||
the veil between time and eternity and fix the horrified gaze of
|
||
man upon the gulfs of eternal fire. The New Testament is just as
|
||
much worse than the Old, as hell is worse than sleep; just as much
|
||
worse, as infinite cruelty is worse than dreamless dust; and yet,
|
||
the New Testament is claimed to be a gospel of love and peace.
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that: "The Scriptures constitute the
|
||
authoritative standard by which religious teaching and human
|
||
conduct are to be regulated and judged"?
|
||
|
||
Are we to judge of conduct by the Old Testament, by the New,
|
||
or by both? According to the Old, the slave-holder was a just and
|
||
generous man; a polygamist was a model of virtue. According to the
|
||
New, the worst can be forgiven and the best can be lost. How can
|
||
any book be a standard, when the standard itself must be measured
|
||
by human reason? Is there a standard of a standard? Must not the
|
||
reason be convinced? and, if so, is not the reason of each man the
|
||
final arbiter of that man? If he takes a book as a standard, does
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
he so take it because it is to him reasonable? In what way is the
|
||
human reason to be ignored? Why should a book take its place,
|
||
unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the proper
|
||
standard? If this is so, the book rests upon the reason of those
|
||
who adopt it. Are they to be saved because they act in accordance
|
||
with their reason, and are others to be damned because they act by
|
||
the same standard -- their reason? No two are alike. Can we demand
|
||
of all the same result? Suppose the compasses were not constant to
|
||
the pole -- no two compasses exactly alike -- would you expect all
|
||
ships to reach the same harbor?
|
||
|
||
THE REIGN OF TRUTH AND LOVE.
|
||
|
||
I also find in this creed the following:
|
||
|
||
"We believe that Jesus Christ come to establish among men the
|
||
Kingdom of God, the reign of truth and love, of righteousness and
|
||
peace."
|
||
|
||
Well, that may have been the object of Jesus Christ. I do not
|
||
deny it. But what was the result? The Christian world has caused
|
||
more war than all the rest of the world beside. Most of the cunning
|
||
instruments of death have been devised by Christians. All the
|
||
wonderful machinery by which the life is blown from men, by which
|
||
nations are conquered and enslaved -- all these machines have been
|
||
born in Christian brains. And yet he came to bring peace, they say;
|
||
but the Testament says otherwise: "I came not to bring peace, but
|
||
a sword." And the sword was brought. What are the Christian nations
|
||
doing to-day in Europe? Is there a solitary Christian nation that
|
||
will trust any other? How many millions of Christians are in the
|
||
uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of love?
|
||
|
||
There was an old Spaniard on the bed of death, who sent for a
|
||
priest, and the priest told him that he would have to forgive his
|
||
enemies before he died. He said, "I have none." "What! no enemies?"
|
||
"Not one," said the dying man; "I killed the last one three months
|
||
ago."
|
||
|
||
How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to
|
||
destroy their fellow-Christians? Who are the men in Europe crying
|
||
against war? Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? Is it the
|
||
church? No; the men who do not believe in what they call this
|
||
religion of peace. When there is a war, and when they make a few
|
||
thousand widows and orphans; when they strew the plain with dead
|
||
patriots, Christians assemble in their churches and sing "Te Deum
|
||
Laudamus." Why? Because he has enabled a few of his children to
|
||
kill some others of his children. This is the religion of peace --
|
||
the religion that invented the Krupp gun, that will hurl a ball
|
||
weighing two thousand pounds through twenty-four inches of solid
|
||
steel. This is the religion of peace that covers the sea with men-
|
||
of-war, clad in mail, in the name of universal forgiveness. This is
|
||
the religion that drills and uniforms five millions of men to kill
|
||
their fellows.
|
||
|
||
What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the
|
||
earth? What have the nations been fighting about? What was the
|
||
Thirty Years' War in Europe for? What was the war in Holland for?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
Why was it that England persecuted Scotland? Why is it that England
|
||
persecutes Ireland even to this day? At the bottom of every one of
|
||
these conflicts you will find a religious question. The religion of
|
||
Jesus Christ, as preached by his church, causes war, bloodshed,
|
||
hatred, and all uncharitableness; and why? Because, they say, a
|
||
certain beliefs necessary to salvation. They do not say, if you
|
||
behave yourself you will get there; they do not say, if you pay
|
||
your debts and love your wife and love your children, and are good
|
||
to your friends, and your neighbors, and your country, you will get
|
||
there; that will do you no good; you have got to believe a certain
|
||
thing. No matter how bad you are, you can instantly be forgiven;
|
||
and no matter how good you are, if you fail to believe that which
|
||
you cannot understand. the moment you get to the day of judgment
|
||
nothing is left but to damn you, and all the angels will shout
|
||
"hallelujah."
|
||
|
||
What do they teach to-day? Nearly every murderer goes to
|
||
heaven; there is only one step from the gallows to God, only one
|
||
jerk between the halter and heaven. That is taught by this church.
|
||
|
||
I believe there ought to be a law to prevent the giving of the
|
||
slightest religious consolation to any man who has been found
|
||
guilty of murder. Let a Catholic understand that if he imbrues his
|
||
hands in his brother's blood, he can have no extreme unction. Let
|
||
it be understood that he can have no forgiveness through the
|
||
church; and let the Protestant understand that when he has
|
||
committed that crime the community will not pray him into heaven.
|
||
Let him go with his victim. The victim, dying in his sins, goes to
|
||
hell, and the murderer has the happiness of seeing him there. If
|
||
heaven grows dull and monotonous, the murderer can again give life
|
||
to the nerve of pleasure by watching the agony of his victim.
|
||
|
||
The truth is, Christianity has not made friends; it has made
|
||
enemies. It is not, as taught, the religion of peace, it is the
|
||
religion of war. Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that
|
||
his God is waiting to damn? Why should a Christian not destroy an
|
||
infidel who is trying to assassinate his soul? Why should a
|
||
Christian pity an unbeliever -- one who has rejected the Bible --
|
||
when he knows that God will be pitiless forever? And yet we are
|
||
told, in this creed, that "we believe in the ultimate prevalence of
|
||
the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth."
|
||
|
||
What makes you? Do you judge from the manner in which you are
|
||
getting along now? How many people are being born a year? About
|
||
fifty millions. How many are you converting a year, really,
|
||
truthfully? Five or six thousand. I think I have overstated the
|
||
number. Is orthodox Christianity on the increase? No. There are a
|
||
hundred times as many unbelievers in orthodox Christianity as there
|
||
were ten years ago. What are you doing in the missionary world? How
|
||
long is it since you converted a Chinaman? A fine missionary
|
||
religion, to send missionaries with their Bibles and tracts to
|
||
China, but if a Chinaman comes here, mob him, simply to show him
|
||
the difference between the practical and theoretical workings of
|
||
the Christian religion. How long since you have had an intelligent
|
||
convert in India? In my judgment, never; there never has been an
|
||
intelligent Hindoo converted from the time the first missionary put
|
||
his foot on that soil; and never, in my judgment, has an
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
intelligent Chinaman been converted since the first missionary
|
||
touched that shore. Where are they? We hear nothing of them, except
|
||
in the reports. They get money from poor old ladies, trembling on
|
||
the edge of the grave, and go and tell them stories, how hungry the
|
||
average Chinaman is for a copy of the New Testament and paint the
|
||
sad condition of a gentleman in the interior of africa without the
|
||
works of Dr. McCosh, longing for a copy of The Princeton Review, --
|
||
in my judgment, a pamphlet that would suit a savage. Thus money is
|
||
scared from the dying, and frightened from the old and feeble.
|
||
|
||
About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established?
|
||
No one objects to the establishment of peace and good will. Every
|
||
good man longs for the time when war shall cease. We are all hoping
|
||
for a day of universal justice -- a day of universal freedom --
|
||
when man shall control himself, when the passions shall become
|
||
obedient to the intelligent will. But the coming of that day will
|
||
not be hastened by preaching the doctrines of total depravity and
|
||
eternal revenge. That sun will not rise the quicker for preaching
|
||
salvation by faith. The star that shines above that dawn, the
|
||
herald of that day, is Science, not superstition. -- Reason, not
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
To show you how little advance has been made, how many
|
||
intellectual bats and mental owls still haunt the temple, still
|
||
roost above the altar, I call your attention to the fact that the
|
||
Congregational Church, according to this creed, still believes in
|
||
the resurrection of the dead, and in their Confession of Faith,
|
||
attached to the creed, I find that they also believe in the literal
|
||
resurrection of the body.
|
||
|
||
THE RESURRECTION.
|
||
|
||
Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for
|
||
himself? Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and
|
||
gets sick and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the
|
||
morning of the resurrection? Here is a cannibal, who eats another
|
||
man; and we know that the atoms you eat go into your body and
|
||
become a part of you. After the cannibal has eaten the missionary,
|
||
and appropriated his atoms to himself, he then dies, to whom will
|
||
the atoms belong in the morning of the resurrection? Could the
|
||
missionary maintain an action of replevin, and if so, what would
|
||
the cannibal do for a body? It has been demonstrated, in so far as
|
||
logic can demonstrate anything, that there is no creation and no
|
||
destruction in Nature. It has been demonstrated, again and again,
|
||
that the atoms in us have been in millions of other beings; have
|
||
grown in the forests and in the grass, have blossomed in flowers,
|
||
and been in the metals. In other words, there are atoms in each one
|
||
of us that have been in millions of others; and when we die, these
|
||
atoms return to the earth, again appear in grass and trees, are
|
||
again eaten by animals, and again devoured by countless vegetable
|
||
mouths and turned into wood; and yet this church, in the nineteenth
|
||
century, in a council composed of and presided over by professors
|
||
and presidents of colleges and theologians, solemnly tells us that
|
||
it believes in the literal resurrection of the body. This is almost
|
||
enough to make one despair of the future -- almost enough to
|
||
convince a man of the immortality of the absurd. They know better.
|
||
There is not one so ignorant but knows better.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
THE JUDGEMENT-DAY.
|
||
|
||
And what is the next thing?
|
||
|
||
"We believe in a final judgement, the issues of which are
|
||
everlasting punishment and everlasting life."
|
||
|
||
At the final judgment all of us will be there. The thousands,
|
||
and millions, and billions, and trillions, and quadrillions that
|
||
have died will he there. The books will be opened, and each case
|
||
will be called. The sheep and the goats will be divided. The
|
||
unbelievers will be sent to the left, while the faithful will
|
||
proudly walk to the right. The saved, without a tear, will bid an
|
||
eternal farewell to those who loved them here -- to those they
|
||
loved. Nearly all the human race will go away to everlasting
|
||
punishment, and the fortunate few to eternal life. This is the
|
||
consolation of the Congregational Church! This is the hope that
|
||
dispels the gloom of life!
|
||
|
||
PIOUS EVASIONS!
|
||
|
||
When the clergy are caught, they give a different meaning to
|
||
the words and say the world was not made in seven days. They say
|
||
"good whiles" -- "epochs."
|
||
|
||
And in this same Confession of Faith and in this creed they
|
||
say that the Lord's day is holy -- every seventh day. Suppose you
|
||
lived near the North Pole where the day is three months long. Then
|
||
which day would you keep? If you could get to the South Pole you
|
||
could prevent Sunday from ever overtaking you. You could walk
|
||
around the other way faster than the world could revolve. How would
|
||
you keep Sunday then? Suppose we invent something that can go one
|
||
thousand miles an hour? We can chase Sunday clear around the globe.
|
||
Is there anything that can be more perfectly absurd than that a
|
||
space of time can be holy? You might as well talk about a virtuous
|
||
vacuum. We are now told that the Bible is not a scientific book,
|
||
and that after all we cannot depend on what God said four thousand
|
||
years ago -- that his ways are not as our ways -- that we must
|
||
accept without evidence, and believe without understanding.
|
||
|
||
I heard the other night of an old man. He was not very well
|
||
educated, and he got into the notion that he must have reading of
|
||
the Bible and family worship. There was a bad boy in the family,
|
||
and they were reading the Bible by course. In the fifteenth chapter
|
||
of Corinthians is this passage: "Behold, brethren, I show you a
|
||
mystery; we shall not all die, but we shall all be changed." This
|
||
boy had rubbed out the "c" in "changed." So when the old man put on
|
||
his spectacles, and got down his Bible, he read: "Behold, brethren,
|
||
I show you a mystery, we shall not all die, but we shall all be
|
||
hanged." The old lady said, "Father, I don't think it reads that
|
||
way." He said, "Who is reading this?" "Yes mother, it says
|
||
'hanged,' and, more than that, I see the sense of it. Pride is the
|
||
besetting sin of the human heart, and if there is anything
|
||
calculated to take the pride out of a man it is hanging." It is in
|
||
this way that ministers avoid and explain the discoveries of
|
||
Science.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to
|
||
do? How can we get along without the revelation that no one
|
||
understands? What are we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel
|
||
about? What are we to do without hell? What are we going to do with
|
||
our enemies? What are we going to do with the people we love but
|
||
don't like?
|
||
|
||
"NO BIBLE, NO CIVILIZATION."
|
||
|
||
They tell me that there never would have been any civilization
|
||
if it had not been for this Bible. The Jews had a Bible; the Romans
|
||
had not. Which had the greater and the grander government? Let us
|
||
be honest. Which of those nations produced the greatest poets, the
|
||
greatest soldiers, the greatest orators, the greatest statesmen,
|
||
the greatest sculptors? Rome had no Bible. God cared nothing for
|
||
the Roman Empire. He let the men come up by chance. His time was
|
||
taken up with the Jewish people. And yet Rome conquered the world,
|
||
including the chosen people of God. The people who had the Bible
|
||
were defeated by the people who had not. How was it possible for
|
||
Lucretius to get along without the Bible? -- how did the great and
|
||
glorious of that empire? And what shall we say of Greece? No Bible.
|
||
Compare Athens with Jerusalem. From Athens come the beauty and
|
||
intellectual grace of the world. Compare the mythology of Greece
|
||
with the mythology of Judea; one covering the earth with beauty,
|
||
and the other filling heaven with hatred and injustice. The Hindoos
|
||
had no Bible; they had been forsaken by the Creator, and yet they
|
||
became the greatest metaphysicians of the world. Egypt had no
|
||
Bible. Compare Egypt with Judea. What are we to do without the
|
||
Bible? What became of the Jews who had a Bible? Their temple was
|
||
destroyed and their city was taken; and they never found real
|
||
prosperity until their God deserted them. The Turks attributed all
|
||
their victories to the Koran. The Koran gave them their victories
|
||
over the believers in the Bible. The priests of each nation have
|
||
accounted for the prosperity of that nation by its religion.
|
||
|
||
The Christians mistake an incident for a cause, and honestly
|
||
imagine that the Bible is the foundation of modern liberty and law.
|
||
They forget physical conditions, make no account of commerce, care
|
||
nothing for inventions and discoveries, and ignorantly give the
|
||
credit to their inspired book.
|
||
|
||
The foundations of our civilization were laid centuries before
|
||
Christianity was known. The intelligence of courage, of self-
|
||
government, of energy, of industry, that uniting made the
|
||
civilization of this century, did not come alone from Judea, but
|
||
from every nation of the ancient world.
|
||
|
||
MIRACLES OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
|
||
|
||
There are many things in the New Testament that I cannot
|
||
accept as true.
|
||
|
||
I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I
|
||
believe he was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had
|
||
been duly and legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring
|
||
of that union. Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been
|
||
dead at least one hundred and fifty years. Neither Matthew, Mark,
|
||
nor Luke ever dreamed that he was of divine origin. He did not say
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
to either Matthew, Mark, or Luke, or to any one in their hearing,
|
||
that he was the Son of God, or that he was miraculously conceived.
|
||
He did not say it. It may be asserted that he said it to John, but
|
||
John did not write the gospel that bears his name. The angel
|
||
Gabriel, who, they say, brought the news, never wrote a word upon
|
||
the subject. The mother of Christ never wrote a word upon the
|
||
subject. His alleged father never wrote a word upon the subject,
|
||
and Joseph never admitted the story. We are lacking in the matter
|
||
of witnesses. I would not believe such a story now. I cannot
|
||
believe that it happened then. I would not believe people I know,
|
||
much less would I believe people I do not know.
|
||
|
||
At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ was the son
|
||
of Joseph and Mary. And why? They say he descended from David, and
|
||
in order to show that he was of the blood of David, they gave the
|
||
genealogy of Joseph. And if Joseph was not his father, why did they
|
||
not give the genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? Could they,
|
||
by giving the genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of
|
||
David if Joseph was in no way related to Christ? And yet that is
|
||
the position into which the Christian world is driven. In the New
|
||
Testament we find that in giving the genealogy of Christ it says,
|
||
"who was the son of Joseph?" and the church has interpolated the
|
||
words "as was supposed." Why did they give a supposed genealogy? It
|
||
will not do. And that is a thing that cannot in any way, by any
|
||
human testimony, he established.
|
||
|
||
If it is important for us to know that he was the Son of God,
|
||
I say, then, that it devolves upon God to give us the evidence. Let
|
||
him write it across the face of the heavens, in every language of
|
||
mankind. If it is necessary for us to believe it, let it grow on
|
||
every leaf next year. No man should be damned for not believing,
|
||
unless the evidence is overwhelming. And he ought not to be made to
|
||
depend upon say so, or upon "as was supposed." He should have it
|
||
directly, for himself. A man says that God told him a certain
|
||
thing, and he tells me, and I have only his word. He may have been
|
||
deceived. If God has a message for me he ought to tell it to me,
|
||
and not to somebody that has been dead four or five thousand years,
|
||
and in another language.
|
||
|
||
Besides, God may have changed his mind on many things; he has
|
||
on slavery, and polygamy at least, according to the church; and yet
|
||
his church now wants to go and destroy polygamy in Utah with the
|
||
sword. Why do they not send missionaries there with copies of the
|
||
Old Testament? By reading the lives of Abraham and Isaac, and Lot,
|
||
and a few other patriarchs who ought to have been in the
|
||
penitentiary, maybe they can soften their hearts.
|
||
|
||
MORE MIRACLES.
|
||
|
||
There is another miracle I do not believe, -- the
|
||
resurrection. I want to speak about it as we would about any
|
||
ordinary transaction. In the first place, I do not believe that any
|
||
miracle was ever performed, and if there was, you cannot prove it.
|
||
Why? Because it is altogether more reasonable to believe that the
|
||
people were mistaken about it than that it happened. And why?
|
||
Because, according to human experience, we know that people will
|
||
not always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle ourselves,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
and we must be governed by our experience; and if we go by our
|
||
experience, we must say that the miracle never happened -- that the
|
||
witnesses were mistaken.
|
||
|
||
A man comes into Jerusalem, and the first thing he does is to
|
||
cure the blind. He lets the light of day visit the night of
|
||
blindness. The eyes are opened, and the world is again pictured
|
||
upon the brain. Another man is clothed with leprosy. He touches him
|
||
and the disease falls from him, and he stands pure, and clean, and
|
||
whole. Another man is deformed, wrinkled, and bent. He touches him,
|
||
and throws around him again the garment of youth! A man is in his
|
||
grave, and he says, "Come forth!" And the man walks in life,
|
||
feeling his heart throb and his blood going joyously through his
|
||
veins. They say that actually happened. I do not know.
|
||
|
||
There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were
|
||
raised -- we do not hear of them any more. What became of them? If
|
||
there was a man in this city who had been raised from the dead, I
|
||
would go to see him to-night. I would say, "Where were you when you
|
||
got the notice to come back? What kind of a country is it? What
|
||
kind of opening there for a young man? How did you like it? Did you
|
||
meet there the friends you had lost? Is there a world without
|
||
death, without pain, without a tear? Is there a land without a
|
||
grave, and where good-bye is never heard? Nobody ever paid the
|
||
slightest attention to the dead who had been raised. They did not
|
||
even excite interest when they died the second time. Nobody said,
|
||
"Why, that man is not afraid. He has been there once. He has walked
|
||
through the valley of the shadow." Not a word. They pass quietly
|
||
away.
|
||
|
||
I do not believe these miracles. There is something wrong
|
||
somewhere about that business. I may suffer eternal punishment for
|
||
all this, but I cannot, I do not, believe.
|
||
|
||
There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they
|
||
crucified him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city
|
||
and should meet a funeral procession, and say. "Who is dead?" and
|
||
they should reply, "The son of a widow; her only support." Suppose
|
||
he should say to the procession, "Halt!" and to the undertaker,
|
||
"Take out that coffin, unscrew that lid. Young man, I say unto
|
||
thee, arise! " and the dead should step from the coffin and in a
|
||
moment afterward hold his mother in his arms. Suppose this stranger
|
||
should go to your cemetery and find some woman holding a little
|
||
child in each hand. while the tears fell upon a new-made grave. and
|
||
he should say to her, "Who lies buried here?" and she should reply,
|
||
"My husband;" and he should cry, "I say unto thee, oh grave, give
|
||
up thy dead!" and the husband should rise, and in a moment after
|
||
have his lips upon his wife's, and the little children with their
|
||
arms around his neck; do you think that the people of this city
|
||
would kill him? Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? Do
|
||
you not rather believe that every one who had a loved one out in
|
||
that cemetery would go to him, even upon their knees, and beg him
|
||
to give back their dead. Do you believe that any man was ever
|
||
crucified who was the master of death?
|
||
|
||
Let me tell you to-night if there shall ever appear upon this
|
||
earth the master, the monarch, of death, all human knees will touch
|
||
the earth. He will not be crucified. All the living who fear death;
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
all the living who have lost a loved one, will bow to him. And yet
|
||
we are told that this worker of miracles, this man who could clothe
|
||
the dead dust in the throbbing flesh of life, was crucified. I do
|
||
not believe that he worked the miracles, I do not believe that he
|
||
raised the dead, I do not believe that he claimed to be the Son of
|
||
God. These things were told long after he was dead; told because
|
||
the ignorant multitude demanded mystery and wonder; told, because
|
||
at that time the miraculous was believed of all the illustrious
|
||
dead. Stories that made Christianity powerful then, weaken it now.
|
||
He who gains a triumph in a conflict with a devil, will be defeated
|
||
by science.
|
||
|
||
There is another thing about these foolish miracles. All could
|
||
have been imitated. Men could pretend to be blind; confederates
|
||
could feign sickness, and even death.
|
||
|
||
It is not very difficult to limp or to hold an arm as though
|
||
it were paralyzed; or to say that one is afflicted with "an issue
|
||
of blood." It is easy to say that the son of a widow was raised
|
||
from the dead, and if you fail to give the name of the son, or his
|
||
mother, or the time and place where the wonder occurred, it is
|
||
quite difficult to show that it did not happen.
|
||
|
||
No one can be called upon to disprove anything that has not
|
||
apparently been established. I say apparently, because there can he
|
||
no real evidence in support of a miracle.
|
||
|
||
How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves
|
||
and fishes? There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in
|
||
the world? Each one of the five thousand could have had a loaf and
|
||
a fish with him. We would have to show that there was no other
|
||
possible way for the people to get the bread and fish except by
|
||
miracle, and then we are only half through. We must then show that
|
||
they did, in fact, get enough to feed five thousand people, and
|
||
that more was left than was had in the beginning.
|
||
|
||
Of course this is simply impossible. And let me ask, why was
|
||
not the miracle substantiated by some of the multitude?
|
||
|
||
Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had created
|
||
instead of multiplied the loaves and fishes?
|
||
|
||
How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen
|
||
hundred years ago was possessed by seven devils?
|
||
|
||
How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that?
|
||
|
||
How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk
|
||
while others were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to
|
||
control?
|
||
|
||
If Christ wished to convince his fellow-men by miracles, why
|
||
did he not do something that could not by any means have been a
|
||
counterfeit?
|
||
|
||
Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some
|
||
man whose arm had been cut off, and make another grow?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man
|
||
of importance, some one known to all?
|
||
|
||
Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in
|
||
the darkness of the hovel? Why call back to life people so
|
||
insignificant that the public did not know of their death?
|
||
|
||
Suppose that in May, 1865, a man had pretended to raise some
|
||
person by the name of Smith from the dead, and suppose a religion
|
||
had been founded on that miracle, would it not be natural for
|
||
people, hundreds of years after the pretended miracle, to ask why
|
||
the founder of that religion did not raise from the dead Abraham
|
||
Lincoln, instead of the unknown and obscure Mr. Smith?
|
||
|
||
How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of
|
||
evidence, substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?
|
||
|
||
Must we believe anything that cannot in any way be
|
||
substantiated?
|
||
|
||
If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries
|
||
ago, are they not necessary now?
|
||
|
||
After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles?
|
||
How many walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature?
|
||
|
||
How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? I
|
||
will tell you. The miracles were never performed. No other
|
||
explanation is possible.
|
||
|
||
It is infinitely absurd to say that a man who cured the sick,
|
||
the halt and blind, raised the dead, cast out devils, controlled
|
||
the winds and waves, created food and held obedient to his will the
|
||
forces of the world, was put to death by men who knew his
|
||
superhuman power and who had seen his wondrous works. If the
|
||
crucifixion was public, the miracles were private. If the miracles
|
||
had been public, the crucifixion could not have been. Do away with
|
||
the miracles, and the superhuman character of Christ is destroyed.
|
||
He becomes what he really was -- a man. Do away with the wonders,
|
||
and the teachings of Christ cease to be authoritative. They are
|
||
then worth the reason, the truth that is in them, and nothing more.
|
||
Do away with the miracles, and then we can measure the utterances
|
||
of Christ with the standard of our reason. We are no longer
|
||
intellectual serfs, believing what is unreasonable in obedience to
|
||
the command of a supposed god. We no longer take counsel of our
|
||
fears, of our cowardice, but boldly defend what our reason
|
||
maintains.
|
||
|
||
Christ takes his appropriate place with the other teachers of
|
||
mankind. His life becomes reasonable and admirable. We have a man
|
||
who hated oppression; who despised and denounced superstition and
|
||
hypocrisy; who attacked the heartless church of his time; who
|
||
excited the hatred of bigots and priests, and who rather than be
|
||
false to his conception of truth, met and bravely suffered even
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe.
|
||
If it was the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did
|
||
he not appear to his enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate?
|
||
Why did he not call upon Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why
|
||
did he not again enter the temple and end the old dispute with
|
||
demonstration? Why did he not confront the Roman soldiers who had
|
||
taken money to falsely swear that his body had been stolen by his
|
||
friends? Why did he not make another triumphal entry into
|
||
Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude: "Here are the
|
||
wounds in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am the one
|
||
you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? Simply because the
|
||
resurrection is a myth. It makes no difference with his teachings.
|
||
They are just as good whether he wrought miracles or not. Twice two
|
||
are four: that needs no miracle. Twice two are five -- a miracle
|
||
can not help that. Christ's teachings are worth their effect upon
|
||
the human race. It makes no difference about miracle or wonder. In
|
||
that day every one believed in the impossible. Nobody had any
|
||
standing as teacher, philosopher, governor, king, general, about
|
||
whom there was not supposed to be something miraculous. The earth
|
||
was covered with the sons and daughters of gods and goddesses.
|
||
|
||
In Greece, in Rome, in Egypt, in India, every great man was
|
||
supposed to have had either a god for his father, or a goddess for
|
||
his mother. They accounted for genius by divine origin. Earth and
|
||
heaven were at that time near together. It was but a step for the
|
||
gods from the blue arch to the green earth. Every lake and valley
|
||
and mountain top was made rich with legends of the loves of gods.
|
||
How could the early Christians have made converts to a man, among
|
||
a people who believed so thoroughly in gods -- in gods that had
|
||
lived upon the earth; among a people who had erected temples to the
|
||
sons and daughters of gods? Such people could not have been induced
|
||
to worship a man -- a man born among barbarous people, citizen of
|
||
a nation weak and poor and paying tribute to the Roman power. The
|
||
early Christians therefore preached the gospel of a god.
|
||
|
||
THE ASCENSION.
|
||
|
||
I cannot believe in the miracle of the ascension, in the
|
||
bodily ascension of Jesus Christ. Where was he going? In the light
|
||
shed upon this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he
|
||
going? The New Jerusalem is not above us. The abode of the gods is
|
||
not there. Where was he going? Which way did he go? Of course that
|
||
depends upon the time of day he left. If he left in the evening, he
|
||
went exactly the opposite way from that he would have gone had he
|
||
ascended in the morning. What did he do with his body? How high did
|
||
he go? In what way did he overcome the intense cold? The nearest
|
||
station is the moon, two hundred and forty thousand miles away.
|
||
Again I ask, where did he go? He must have had a natural body, for
|
||
it was the same body that died. His body must have been material,
|
||
otherwise he would not as he rose have circled with the earth, and
|
||
he would have passed from the sight of his disciples at the rate of
|
||
more than a thousand miles per hour.
|
||
|
||
It may be said that his body was "spiritual." Then what became
|
||
of the body that died? Just before his ascension we are told that
|
||
he partook of broiled fish with his disciples. Was the fish
|
||
"spiritual?"
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
Who saw this miracle?
|
||
|
||
They say the disciples saw it. Let us see what they say.
|
||
Matthew did not think it was worth mentioning. He does not speak of
|
||
it. On the contrary, he says that the last words of Christ were:
|
||
"Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world." Is it
|
||
possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles,
|
||
and yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? Think of the little
|
||
miracles recorded by this saint, and then determine whether it is
|
||
probable that he witnessed the ascension of Jesus Christ.
|
||
|
||
Mark says: "So, then, after the Lord had spoken unto them he
|
||
was received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God." This
|
||
is all he says about the most wonderful vision that ever astonished
|
||
human eyes, a miracle great enough to have stuffed credulity to
|
||
bursting; and yet all we have is this one, poor, meager verse. We
|
||
know now that most of the last chapter of Mark is an interpolation,
|
||
and as a matter of fact, the author of Mark's gospel said nothing
|
||
about the ascension one way or the other.
|
||
|
||
Luke says: "And it came to pass while he blessed them he was
|
||
parted from them and was carried up into Heaven."
|
||
|
||
John does not mention it. He gives as Christ's last words this
|
||
address to Peter: "Follow thou Me." Of course, he did not say that
|
||
as he ascended. It seems to have made very little impression upon
|
||
him; he writes the account as though tired of the story. He
|
||
concludes with an impatient wave of the hand.
|
||
|
||
In the Acts we have another account. A conversation is given
|
||
not spoken of in any of the others, and we find there two men clad
|
||
in white apparel, who said: "Ye men of Galilee why stand ye here
|
||
gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus that was taken up into
|
||
heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go up into
|
||
heaven."
|
||
|
||
Matthew did not see the men in white apparel, did not see the
|
||
ascension. Mark forgot the entire transaction, and Luke did not
|
||
think the men in white apparel worth mentioning. John had not
|
||
confidence enough in the story to repeat it. And yet, upon such
|
||
evidence, we are bound to believe in the bodily ascension, or
|
||
suffer eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public.
|
||
|
||
CASTING OUT DEVILS.
|
||
|
||
Most of the miracles said to have been wrought by Christ were
|
||
recorded to show his power over evil spirits. On many occasions, he
|
||
is said to have "cast out devils" -- devils who could speak, and
|
||
devils who were dumb.
|
||
|
||
For many years belief in the existence of evil spirits has
|
||
been fading from the mind, and as this belief grew thin, ministers
|
||
endeavored to give new meanings to the ancient words. They are
|
||
inclined now to put "disease" in the place of "devils," and most of
|
||
them say, that the poor wretches supposed to have been the homes of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
fiends were simply suffering from epileptic fits! We must remember
|
||
that Christ and these devils often conversed together. Is it
|
||
possible that fits can talk? These devils often admitted that
|
||
Christ was God. Can epilepsy certify to divinity? On one occasion
|
||
the fits told their name, and made a contract to leave the body of
|
||
a man provided they would be permitted to take possession of a herd
|
||
of swine. Is it possible that fits carried Christ himself to the
|
||
pinnacle of a temple? Did fits pretend to be the owner of the whole
|
||
earth? Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a temptation? Is
|
||
it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and worship
|
||
them?
|
||
|
||
The church must not abandon its belief in devils. Orthodoxy
|
||
cannot afford to put out the fires of hell. Throw away a belief in
|
||
the devil, and most of the miracles of the New Testament become
|
||
impossible, even if we admit the supernatural. If there is no
|
||
devil, who was the original tempter in the garden of Eden? If there
|
||
is no hell, from what are we saved? to what purpose is the
|
||
atonement? Upon the obverse of the Christian shield is God, upon
|
||
the reverse, the devil. No devil, no hell. No hell, no atonement.
|
||
No atonement, no preaching, no gospel.
|
||
|
||
NECESSITY OF BELIEF.
|
||
|
||
Does belief depend upon evidence? I think it does somewhat in
|
||
some cases. How is it when a jury is sworn to try a case, hearing
|
||
all the evidence, hearing both sides, hearing the charge of the
|
||
judge, hearing the law, are upon their oaths equally divided. six
|
||
for the plaintiff and six for the defendant? Evidence does not have
|
||
the same effect upon all people. Why? Our brains are not alike.
|
||
They are not the same shape. We have not the same intelligence, or
|
||
the same experience, the same sense. And yet I am held accountable
|
||
for my belief. I must believe in the Trinity -- three times one is
|
||
one, once one is three, and my soul is to be eternally damned for
|
||
failing to guess an arithmetical conundrum. That is the poison part
|
||
of Christianity -- that salvation depends upon belief. That is the
|
||
accursed part, and until that dogma is discarded Christianity will
|
||
be nothing but superstition.
|
||
|
||
No man can control his belie. If I hear certain evidence I
|
||
will believe a certain thing. If I fail to hear it I may never
|
||
believe it. If it is adapted to my mind I may accept it; if it is
|
||
not, I reject it. And what am I to go by? My brain. That is the
|
||
only light I have from Nature, and if there be a God it is the only
|
||
torch that this God has given me to find my way through the
|
||
darkness and night called life. I do not depend upon hearsay for
|
||
that. I do not have to take the word of any other man nor get upon
|
||
my knees before a book. Here in the temple of the mind I consult
|
||
the God, that is to say my reason, and the oracle speaks to me and
|
||
I obey the oracle. What should I obey? Another man's oracle? Shall
|
||
I take another man's word -- not what he thinks, but what he says
|
||
some God has said to him?
|
||
|
||
I would not know a god if I should see one. I have said
|
||
before, and I say again, the brain thinks in spite of me, and I am
|
||
not responsible for my thoughts. I cannot control the beating of my
|
||
heart. I cannot stop the blood that flows through the rivers of my
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
veins. And yet I am held responsible for my belief. Then why does
|
||
not God give me the evidence? They say he has. In what? In an
|
||
inspired book. But I do not understand it as they do. Must I be
|
||
false to my understanding? They say: "When you come to die you will
|
||
be sorry if you do not." Will I be sorry when I come to die that I
|
||
did not live a hypocrite? Will I be sorry that I did not say I was
|
||
a Christian when I was not? Will the fact that I was honest put a
|
||
thorn in the pillow of death? Cannot God forgive me for being
|
||
honest? They say that when he was in Jerusalem he forgave his
|
||
murderers, but now he will not forgive an honest man for differing
|
||
from him on the subject of the Trinity.
|
||
|
||
They say that God says to me, "Forgive your enemies." I say,
|
||
"I do;" but he says. "I will damn mine." God should be consistent.
|
||
If he wants me to forgive my enemies he should forgive his. I am
|
||
asked to forgive enemies who can hurt me. God is only asked to
|
||
forgive enemies who cannot hurt him. He certainly ought to be as
|
||
generous as he asks us to be. And I want no God to forgive me
|
||
unless I am willing to forgive others, and unless I do forgive
|
||
others. All I ask, if that be true, is that this God should act
|
||
according to his own doctrine. If I am to forgive my enemies, I ask
|
||
him to forgive his. I do not believe in the religion of faith, but
|
||
of kindness, of good deeds. The idea that man is responsible for
|
||
his belief is at the bottom of religious intolerance and
|
||
persecution.
|
||
|
||
How inconsistent these Christians are! In St. Louis the other
|
||
day I read an interview with a Christian minister -- one who is now
|
||
holding a revival. They call him the boy preacher -- a name that he
|
||
has borne for fifty or sixty years. The question was whether in
|
||
these revivals, when they were trying to rescue souls from eternal
|
||
torture, they would allow colored people to occupy seats with white
|
||
people; and that revivalist, preaching the unsearchable riches of
|
||
Christ, said he would not allow the colored people to sit with
|
||
white people; they must go to the back of the church. These same
|
||
Christians tell us that in heaven there will be no distinction.
|
||
That Christ cares nothing for the color of the skin. That in
|
||
Paradise white and black will sit together, swap harps, and cry
|
||
hallelujah in chorus; yet this minister, believing as he says he
|
||
does, that all men who fail to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ
|
||
will eternally perish, was not willing that a colored man should
|
||
sit by a white man and hear the gospel of everlasting peace.
|
||
|
||
According to this revivalist, the ship of the world is going
|
||
down; Christ is the only life-boat; and yet he is not willing that
|
||
a colored man, with a soul to save, shall sit by the side of a
|
||
white brother, and be rescued from eternal death. He admits that
|
||
the white brother is totally depraved; that if the white brother
|
||
had justice done him he would be damned: that it is only through
|
||
the wonderful mercy of God that the white man is not in hell; and
|
||
yet such a being, totally depraved, is too good to sit by a colored
|
||
man! Total depravity becomes arrogant; total depravity draws the
|
||
color line in religion, and an ambassador of Christ says to the
|
||
black man, "Stand away; let your white brother hear first about the
|
||
love of God."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
I believe in the religion of humanity. It is far better to
|
||
love our fellow-men than to love God. We can help them. We cannot
|
||
help him. We had better do what we can than to be always pretending
|
||
to do what we cannot.
|
||
|
||
Virtue is of no color; kindness, justice and love, of no
|
||
complexion.
|
||
|
||
ETERNAL PUNISHMENT.
|
||
|
||
Now I come to the last part of this creed -- the doctrine of
|
||
eternal punishment. I have concluded that I will never deliver a
|
||
lecture in which I will not attack the doctrine of eternal pain.
|
||
That part of the Congregational creed would disgrace the lowest
|
||
savage that crouches and crawls in the jungles of Africa. The man
|
||
who now, in the nineteenth century, preaches the doctrine of
|
||
eternal punishment, the doctrine of an eternal hell, has lived in
|
||
vain. Think of that doctrine! The eternity of punishment! I find in
|
||
this same creed -- in this latest utterance of Congregationalism --
|
||
that Christ is finally going to triumph in this world and establish
|
||
his kingdom. This creed declares that "we believe in the ultimate
|
||
prevalence of the kingdom of God over all the earth." If their
|
||
doctrine is true he will never triumph in the other world. The
|
||
Congregational Church does not believe in the ultimate prevalence
|
||
of the kingdom of Christ in the world to come. There he is to meet
|
||
with eternal failure. He will have billions in hell forever.
|
||
|
||
In this world we never will be perfectly civilized as long as
|
||
a gallows casts its shadow upon the earth. As long as there is a
|
||
penitentiary, within the walls of which a human being is immured,
|
||
we are not a perfectly civilized people. We shall never be
|
||
perfectly civilized until we do away with crime. And yet, according
|
||
to this Christian religion, God is to have an eternal penitentiary;
|
||
he is to be an everlasting jailer an everlasting turnkey, a warden
|
||
of an infinite dungeon. and he is going to keep prisoners there
|
||
forever, not for the purpose of reforming them -- because they are
|
||
never going to get any better, only worse -- but for the purpose of
|
||
purposeless punishment. And for what? For something they failed to
|
||
believe in this world. Born in ignorance, supported by poverty,
|
||
caught in the snares of temptation, deformed by toil, stupefied by
|
||
want -- and yet held responsible through the countless ages of
|
||
eternity! No man can think of a greater horror; no man can dream of
|
||
a greater absurdity. For the growth of that doctrine ignorance was
|
||
soil and fear was rain. It came from the fanged mouths of serpents,
|
||
and yet it is called "glad tidings of great joy."
|
||
|
||
SOME WHO ARE DAMNED.
|
||
|
||
We are told "God so loved the world" that he is going to damn
|
||
almost everybody. If this orthodox religion be true, some of the
|
||
greatest, and grandest, and best who ever lived are suffering God's
|
||
torments to-night. It does not appear to make much difference with
|
||
the members of the church. They go right on enjoying themselves
|
||
about as well as ever. If this doctrine is true, Benjamin Franklin.
|
||
one of the wisest and best of men, who did so much to give us here
|
||
a free government, is suffering the tyranny of God to-night,
|
||
although he endeavored to establish freedom among men. If the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
churches were honest, their preachers would tell their hearers:
|
||
"Benjamin Franklin is in hell, and we warn all the youth not to
|
||
imitate Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Jefferson, author of the
|
||
Declaration of Independence, with its self-evident truths, has been
|
||
damned these many years." That is what all the ministers ought to
|
||
have the courage to say. Talk as you believe. Stand by your creed,
|
||
or change it. I want to impress it upon your minds, because the
|
||
thing I wish to do in this world is to put out the fires of hell.
|
||
I will keep on as long as there is one little red coal left in the
|
||
bottomless pit. As long as the ashes are warm I shall denounce this
|
||
infamous doctrine.
|
||
|
||
I want you to know that according to this creed the men who
|
||
founded this great and splendid Government are in hell to-night.
|
||
Most of the men who fought in the Revolutionary war, and wrested
|
||
from the clutch of Great Britain this continent, have been rewarded
|
||
by the eternal wrath of God. Thousands of the old Revolutionary
|
||
soldiers are in torment tonight. Let the preachers have the courage
|
||
to say so. The men who fought in 1812, and gave to the United
|
||
States the freedom of the seas, have nearly all been damned.
|
||
Thousands of heroes who served our country in the Civil war,
|
||
hundreds who starved in prisons, are now in the dungeons of God,
|
||
compared with which, Andersonville was Paradise. The greatest of
|
||
heroes are there; the greatest of poets, the greatest scientists,
|
||
the men who have made the world beautiful -- they are all among the
|
||
damned if this creed is true.
|
||
|
||
Humboldt, who shed light, and who added to the intellectual
|
||
wealth of mankind; Goethe, and Schiller, and Lessing, who almost
|
||
created the German language -- all gone -- all suffering the wrath
|
||
of God tonight, and every time an angel thinks of one of those men
|
||
he gives his harp an extra twang. Laplace, who read the heavens
|
||
like an open book -- he is there. Robert Burns, the poet of human
|
||
love -- he is there. He wrote the "Prayer of Holy Willie." He
|
||
fastened on the cross the Presbyterian creed, and there it is, a
|
||
lingering crucifixion. Robert Burns increased the tenderness of the
|
||
human heart. Dickens put a shield of pity before the flesh of
|
||
childhood -- God is getting even with him. Our own Ralph Waldo
|
||
Emerson, although he had a thousand opportunities to hear Methodist
|
||
clergymen, scorned the means of grace, lived to his highest ideal,
|
||
gave to his fellow-men his best and truest thought, and yet his
|
||
spirit is the sport and prey of fiends to-night.
|
||
|
||
Longfellow, who has refined thousands of homes, did not
|
||
believe in the miraculous origin of the Savior, doubted the report
|
||
of Gabriel, loved his fellow-men, did what he could to free the
|
||
slaves, to increase the happiness of man, yet God was waiting for
|
||
his soul -- waiting to cast him out and down forever. Thomas Paine,
|
||
author of the "Rights of Man;" offering his life in both
|
||
hemispheres for the freedom of the human race; one of the founders
|
||
of this Republic, is now among the damned; and yet it seems to me
|
||
that if he could only get God's attention long enough to point him
|
||
to the American flag he would let him out. Auguste Comte, author of
|
||
the "Positive Philosophy," who loved his fellow-men to that degree
|
||
that he made of humanity a god, who wrote his great work in
|
||
poverty, with his face covered with tears -- they are getting their
|
||
revenge on him now.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
Voltaire, who abolished torture in France; who did more for
|
||
human liberty than any other man, living or dead; who was the
|
||
assassin of superstition, and whose dagger still rusts in the heart
|
||
of Catholicism -- he is with the rest. All the priests who have
|
||
been translated have had their happiness increased by looking at
|
||
Voltaire.
|
||
|
||
Giordano Bruno, the first star of the morning after the long
|
||
night; Benedict Spinoza, the pantheist, the metaphysician, the pure
|
||
and generous man; Diderot, the encyclopedist, who endeavored to get
|
||
all knowledge in a small compass, so that he could put the peasant
|
||
on an equality intellectually with the prince; Diderot, who wished
|
||
to sow all over the world the seed of knowledge, and loved to labor
|
||
for mankind, while the priests wanted to burn; did all he could to
|
||
put out the fires -- he was lost, long, long ago. His cry for water
|
||
has become so common that his voice is now recognized through all
|
||
the realms of heaven, and the angels laughing, say to one another,
|
||
"That is Diderot."
|
||
|
||
David Hume, the Scotch philosopher, is there, with his inquiry
|
||
about the "Human Understanding" and his argument against miracles.
|
||
Beethoven, master of music, and Wagner, the Shakespeare of harmony,
|
||
who made the air of this world rich forever, they are there; and
|
||
to-night they have better music in hell than in heaven!
|
||
|
||
Shelley, whose soul, like his own "Skylark," was a winged joy,
|
||
has been damned for many, many years; and Shakespeare, the greatest
|
||
of the human race, who did more to elevate mankind than all the
|
||
priests who ever lived and died, he is there; but founders of
|
||
inquisitions, builders of dungeons, makers of chains, inventors of
|
||
instruments of torture, tearers, and burners, and branders of human
|
||
flesh, stealers of babes, and sellers of husbands and wives and
|
||
children, and they who kept the horizon lurid with the fagot's
|
||
flame for a thousand years -- are in heaven to-night. I wish heaven
|
||
joy!
|
||
|
||
That is the doctrine with which we are polluting the souls of
|
||
children. That is the doctrine that puts a fiend by the dying bed
|
||
and a prophecy of hell over every cradle. That is "glad tidings of
|
||
great joy." Only a little while ago, when the great flood came upon
|
||
the Ohio, sent by him who is ruling the world and paying particular
|
||
attention to the affairs of nations, just in the gray of the
|
||
morning they saw a house floating down and on its top a human
|
||
being. A few men went out to the rescue. They found there a woman,
|
||
a mother, and they wished to save her life. She said: "No, I am
|
||
going to stay where I am. In this house I have three dead babes; I
|
||
will not desert them." Think of a love so limitless -- stronger and
|
||
deeper than despair and death! And yet, the Christian religion
|
||
says, that if that woman, that mother, did not happen to believe in
|
||
their creed God would send her soul to eternal fire! If there is
|
||
another world, and if in heaven they wear hats, when such a woman
|
||
climbs the opposite bank of the Jordan, Christ should lift his to
|
||
her.
|
||
|
||
The doctrine of eternal pain is my trouble with this Christian
|
||
religion. I reject it on account of its infinite heartlessness. I
|
||
cannot tell them too often, that during our last war Christians,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
who knew that if they were shot they would go right to heaven, went
|
||
and hired wicked men to take their places, perfectly willing that
|
||
these men should go to hell provided they could stay at home. You
|
||
see they are not honest in it, or they do not believe it, or as the
|
||
people say, "they don't sense it." They have not imagination enough
|
||
to conceive what it is they believe, and what a terrific falsehood
|
||
they assert. And I beg of every one who hears me to-night, I beg,
|
||
I implore, I beseech you, never to give another dollar to build a
|
||
church in which that lie is preached. Never give another cent to
|
||
send a missionary with his mouth stuffed with that falsehood to a
|
||
foreign land. Why, they say, the heathen will go to heaven, any
|
||
way, if you let them alone. What is the use of sending them to hell
|
||
by enlightening them? Let them alone. The idea of going and telling
|
||
a man a thing that if he does not believe, he will be damned, when
|
||
the chances are ten to one that he will not believe it, is
|
||
monstrous. Do not tell him here, and as quick as he gets to the
|
||
other world and finds it is necessary to believe, he can say "Yes."
|
||
Give him a chance.
|
||
|
||
ANOTHER OBJECTION.
|
||
|
||
My objection to orthodox religion is that it destroys human
|
||
love, and tells us that the love of this world is not necessary to
|
||
make a heaven in the next.
|
||
|
||
No matter about your wife, your children, your brother, your
|
||
sister -- no matter about all the affections of the human heart --
|
||
when you get there, you will be with the angels. I do not know
|
||
whether I would like the angels. I do not know whether the angels
|
||
would like me. I would rather stand by the ones who have loved me
|
||
and whom I know; and I can conceive of no heaven without the loved
|
||
of this earth. That is the trouble with this Christian religion.
|
||
Leave your father, leave your mother, leave your wife, leave your
|
||
children, leave everything and follow Jesus Christ. I will not. I
|
||
will stay with my people. I will not sacrifice on the altar of a
|
||
selfish fear all the grandest and noblest promptings of my heart.
|
||
|
||
Do away with human love and what are we? What would we be in
|
||
another world, and what would we be here? Can any one conceive of
|
||
music without human love? Of art, or joy? Human love builds every
|
||
home. Human love is the author of all beauty. Love paints every
|
||
picture, and chisels every statue. Love builds every fireside. What
|
||
could heaven be without human love? And yet that is what we are
|
||
promised -- a heaven with your wife lost, your mother lost, some of
|
||
your children gone. And you expect to be made happy by falling in
|
||
with some angel! Such a religion is infamous. Christianity holds
|
||
human love for naught; and yet --
|
||
|
||
Love is the only bow on Life's dark cloud. It is the morning
|
||
and the evening star. It shines upon the babe, and sheds its
|
||
radiance on the quiet tomb. It is the mother of art, inspirer of
|
||
poet, patriot and philosopher. It is the air and light of every
|
||
heart -- builder of every home, kindler of every fire on every
|
||
hearth. It was the first to dream of immortality. It fills the
|
||
world with melody -- for music is the voice of love. Love is the
|
||
magician, the enchanter, that changes worthless things to Joy, and
|
||
makes royal kings and queens of common clay. It is the perfume of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
that wondrous flower, the heart, and without that sacred passion,
|
||
that divine swoon, we are less than beasts; but with it, earth is
|
||
heaven, and we are gods.
|
||
|
||
And how are you to get to this heaven? On the efforts of
|
||
another. You are to be a perpetual heavenly pauper, and you will
|
||
have to admit through all eternity that you never would have been
|
||
there if you had not been frightened. "I am here," you will say, "I
|
||
have these wings, I have this musical instrument, because I was
|
||
scared. That's why I am here. The ones who loved me are among the
|
||
damned; the ones I loved are also there -- but I am here, that is
|
||
enough." What a glorious world heaven must be! No reformation in
|
||
that world -- not the slightest. If you die in Arkansas that is the
|
||
end of you! Think of telling a boy in the next world, who lived and
|
||
died in Delaware, that he had been fairly treated! Can anything be
|
||
more infamous?
|
||
|
||
All on an equality -- the rich and the poor, those with
|
||
parents loving them, those with every opportunity for education, on
|
||
an equality with the poor, the abject and the ignorant -- and this
|
||
little day called life, this moment with a hope, a shadow and a
|
||
tear, this little space between your mother's arms and the grave,
|
||
balances eternity.
|
||
|
||
God can do nothing for you when you get there. A Methodist
|
||
preacher can do more for the soul here than its creator can there.
|
||
The soul goes to heaven, where there is nothing but good society;
|
||
no bad examples; and they are all there, Father, Son and Holy
|
||
Ghost, and yet they can do nothing for that poor unfortunate except
|
||
to damn him. Is there any sense in that?
|
||
|
||
Why should this be a period of probation? It says in the
|
||
Bible, I believe, "Now is the accepted time." When does that mean?
|
||
That means whenever the passage is pronounced. "Now is the accepted
|
||
time." It will be the same to-morrow, will it not? And just as
|
||
appropriate then as to-day, and if appropriate at any time,
|
||
appropriate through all eternity.
|
||
|
||
What I say is this: There is no world -- there can be no world
|
||
-- in which every human being will not have the eternal opportunity
|
||
of doing right.
|
||
|
||
That is my objection to this Christian religion; and if the
|
||
love of earth is not the love of heaven, if those we love here are
|
||
to be separated from us there, then I want eternal sleep. Give me
|
||
a good cool grave rather than the furnace of Jehovah's wrath. I
|
||
pray the angel of the resurrection to let me sleep. Gabriel, do not
|
||
blow! Let me alone! If, when the grave bursts, and I am not to meet
|
||
the faces that have been my sunshine in this life, let me sleep.
|
||
Rather than that this doctrine of endless punishment should be
|
||
true, I would gladly see the fabric of our civilization crumbling
|
||
fall to unmeaning chaos and to formless dust, where oblivion broods
|
||
and even memory forgets. I would rather that the blind Samson of
|
||
some imprisoned force, released by chance, should so wreck and
|
||
strand the mighty world that man in stress and strain of want and
|
||
fear should shudderingly crawl back to savage and barbaric night.
|
||
I would rather that every planet should in its orbit wheel a barren
|
||
star!
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
WHAT I BELIEVE.
|
||
|
||
I think it is better to love your children than to love God,
|
||
a thousand times better, because you can help them, and I am
|
||
inclined to think that God can get along without you. Certainly we
|
||
cannot help a being without body, parts, or passions!
|
||
|
||
I believe in the religion of the family. I believe that the
|
||
roof-tree is sacred, from the smallest fibre that feels the soft
|
||
cool clasp of earth, to the topmost flower that spreads its bosom
|
||
to the sun, and like a spendthrift gives its perfume to the air.
|
||
The home where virtue dwells with love is like a lily with a heart
|
||
of fire -- the fairest flower in all the world. And I tell you God
|
||
cannot afford to damn a man in the next world who has made a happy
|
||
family in this. God cannot afford to cast over the battlements of
|
||
heaven the man who has a happy home upon this earth. God cannot
|
||
afford to be unpitying to a human heart capable of pity. God cannot
|
||
clothe with fire the man who has clothed the naked here; and God
|
||
cannot send to eternal pain a man who has done something toward
|
||
improving the condition of his fellow-man. If he can, I had rather
|
||
go to hell than to heaven and keep the company of such a god.
|
||
|
||
IMMORTALITY.
|
||
|
||
They tell me that the next terrible thing I do is to take away
|
||
the hope of immortality! I do not, I would not, I could not.
|
||
Immortality was first dreamed of by human love; and yet the church
|
||
is going to take human love out of immortality. We love, therefore
|
||
we wish to live. A loved one dies and we wish to meet again; and
|
||
from the affection of the human heart grew the great oak of the
|
||
hope of immortality. Around that oak has climbed the poisonous
|
||
vines of superstition. Theologians, pretenders, soothsayers,
|
||
parsons, priests, popes, bishops, have taken advantage of that.
|
||
They have stood by graves and promised heaven. They have stood by
|
||
graves and prophesied a future filled with pain. They have erected
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their toll-gates on the highway of life and have collected money
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from fear.
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Neither the Bible nor the church gave us the idea of
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||
immortality. The Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality,
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and it does not say a word about another world, from the first
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mistake in Genesis to the last curse in Malachi. There is not in
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||
the Old Testament a burial service.
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||
No man in the Old Testament stands by the dead and says, "We
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||
shall meet again." From the top of Sinai came no hope of another
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||
world.
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||
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||
And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? "They
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||
that are accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection
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||
of the dead." As though some would be counted unworthy to obtain
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||
the resurrection of the dead. And in another place. "Seek for
|
||
honor, glory, immortality." If you have it, why seek it? And in
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||
another place, "God, who alone hath immortality." Yet they tell us
|
||
that we get our idea of immortality from the Bible. I deny it.
|
||
|
||
I would not destroy the faintest ray of human hope, but I deny
|
||
that we got our idea of immortality from the Bible. It existed long
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
ORTHODOXY
|
||
|
||
before Moses. We find it symbolized through all Egypt, through all
|
||
India. Wherever man has lived and loved he has made another world
|
||
in which to meet the lost of this.
|
||
|
||
The history of this belief we find in tombs and temples
|
||
wrought and carved by those who wept and hoped. Above their dead
|
||
they laid the symbols of another life.
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||
|
||
We do not know. We do not prophesy a life of pain. We leave
|
||
the dead with Nature, the mother of us all. Under the bow of hope,
|
||
under the sevenhued arch, let the dead sleep.
|
||
|
||
If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is
|
||
another life? Why did he not tell us something about it? Why did he
|
||
not turn the tearstained hope of immortality into the glad
|
||
knowledge of another life? Why did he go dumbly to his death and
|
||
leave the world in darkness and in doubt? Why? Because he was a man
|
||
and did not know.
|
||
|
||
What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of
|
||
the unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? What can the
|
||
orthodox minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman?
|
||
What can he say to relieve the aching hearts of the orphans as they
|
||
kneel by the grave of that father, if that father did not happen to
|
||
be an orthodox Christian? What consolation have they? When a
|
||
Christian loses a friend the tears spring from his eyes as quickly
|
||
as from the eyes of others. Their tears are as bitter as ours. Why?
|
||
The echoes of the words spoken eighteen hundred years ago are so
|
||
low, and the sounds of the clods upon the coffin are so loud; the
|
||
promises are so far away, and the dead are so near.
|
||
|
||
We do not know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a
|
||
door; the beginning or end of a day; the spreading of pinions to
|
||
soar, or the folding forever of wings; the rise or the set of a
|
||
sun, or an endless life that brings the rapture of love to every
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
A FABLE.
|
||
|
||
There is the fable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice had been
|
||
captured and taken to the infernal regions, and Orpheus went after
|
||
her, taking with him his harp and playing as he went. When he came
|
||
to Pluto's realm he began to play, and Sysiphus, charmed by the
|
||
music, sat down upon the stone that he had been heaving up the
|
||
mountain's side for so many years, and which continually rolled
|
||
back upon him; Ixion paused upon his wheel of fire; Tantalus ceased
|
||
his vain efforts for water; the daughters of the Danaides left off
|
||
trying to fill their sieves with water; Pluto smiled, and for the
|
||
first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the Furies were wet
|
||
with tears. The god relented, and said, "Eurydice may go with you,
|
||
but you must not look back." So Orpheus again threaded the caverns,
|
||
playing as he went, and as he reached the light he failed to hear
|
||
the footsteps of Eurydice. He looked back, and in a moment she was
|
||
gone. Again and again Orpheus sought his love. Again and again
|
||
looked back.
|
||
|
||
This fable gives the idea of the perpetual effort made by the
|
||
human mind to rescue truth from the clutch of error.
|
||
|
||
Some time Orpheus will not look back. Some day Eurydice will
|
||
reach the blessed light, and at last there will fade from the
|
||
memory of men the monsters of superstition.
|
||
35
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