1496 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
1496 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
23 page printout, page 1 - 23
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom --- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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IS IT GOD'S WORD?
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AN EXPOSITION OF THE FABLES AND MYTHOLOGY OF
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THE BIBLE AND OF THE IMPOSTURES OF THEOLOGY
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BY JOSEPH WHELESS
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Lately Major, Judge Advocate, U.S.A.;
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Author of "Compendium of Laws of Mexico";
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Translator, Civil Code of Brazil; Associate Editor,
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American Bar Association Journal, in
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Section of Comparative Law:
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Member of American Law Institute, etc.
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"Behold, the false pen of the Scribes hath
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wrought falsely" -- Jeremiah VIII, 8 (R.V.)
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NEW YORK --:-- 1926
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FOREWORD TO SECOND AND REVISED EDITION
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Like Saul of Tarsus before he changed his name -- but not his
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nature -- the maker of the ensuing search of the Scriptures, born
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down in the Bible Belt, was bred "after the straightest sect of our
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religion," a Southern Methodist. Nurtured by earnestly Christian
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parents, I was heir to their faith and joint heir to salvation with
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them. Through youth and into maturer years, like Paul, "so
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worshipped I the God of my fathers, believing all things which are
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written in the law and in the prophets" of ancient Jewry, with the
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heavy increment for faith of the Wesleyan brand of Protestant
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Christianity superimposed.
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Being so born and taught, so I naturally believed. For
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religious belief is all but exclusively a matter of birth and early
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teaching, of environment. A man takes and holds, though often most
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indifferently, the religion, or brand of belief, of his fathers, of
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his family. Born a pagan, a Jew, a Buddhist, a Mohammedan, a
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Mormon, that he remains, except one time in many thousands, through
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life; though, if taken in infancy, he will as naturally fall heir
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to and believe the most contrary faith: witness the famous
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||
Janizaries, captive Christian children trained in the Moslem faith,
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and Islam's most fanatic soldiers. If born into a Christian family,
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||
Catholic or Protestant, or of one of the many sects of either, he
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||
usually remains, at least nominally, Catholic or Protestant, as he
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||
was born and taught. Children believe anything they are taught;
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Santa Claus, fairies, goblins, ghosts, and witches are as real, as
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veritably true, to a child as Jesus the Christ to a cleric -- often
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||
much more so. It is a maxim of the Master of the Christian faith:
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"Except ye ... become as little children, ye cannot enter the
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kingdom of heaven: ... for of such is the kingdom" (Matt. xviii. 3;
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xix, 14). Hence the reason of the churchly maxim: Disce primum quod
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credendum est -- "Learn first of all what is to be believed."
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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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IS IT GOD'S WORD?
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From my earliest years the Methodist Sunday school and Church
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were as a sort of home extension of religious atmosphere and
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teaching; my earliest initiation was into the "infant class" of
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||
that institution of sacred learning. There my infantile mind was
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||
fed and fired with the venerable verities of our first parents and
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||
the seductive wiles of the talking snake of Eden, of Balaam's
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loquacious jackass, the anthropophagous whale of Jonah, the heroic
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adventures of David with Goliath and with Bathsheba, of noble
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Daniel, unscathed in the lions' den and in the fiery furnace, of
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Peter's walking on the water, and the devils sent into the pigs,
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with many other like articles of holy faith necessary to salvation.
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||
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Fascinated with these ancient gems of inspiration, and deeply
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||
imbued with the sense of Christian duty to "seek first the kingdom
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of God," whereupon everything else needful would be added
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||
liberally, daily I grew in biblical wisdom as I grew in stature and
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||
in strength. And, too, I took my religion seriously, and seriously
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||
strove to live as a Christian should, comforted by the saving
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Methodist doctrine of the divine right of backsliding; if sometimes
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||
I fell, I fell upon my knees, got up, and pursued resolutely my
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||
pilgrimage through this vale of tears. My Bible was my constant
|
||
companion, guide, and friend.
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||
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Years before my majority I led all others in old "Tulip
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Street" in familiarity with Holy Writ; so when a great Sunday-
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school Bible verse-quoting bee was held, I was easily the favorite
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for winner, and as easily I won both prizes -- Heroes of the Cross
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||
and some other like classic of literature -- for number and
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||
correctness of verses quoted from memory. That Bible-quoting
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||
contest of some forty years ago struck the spark which, long
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||
smoldering, flames up now in this book of mine. In its original
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form, written some years ago, the chapters which are now headed
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"Harmony of the Gospels" and "Sacred Doctrines of Christianity"
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reproduced in substance, and yet do in effect, that memorable
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||
verse-matching contest.
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From a sense of Christian duty, as well as for its practical
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aid in linguistic studies, I read the Bible often, and in several
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modern languages, and picked a little at the ancient ones. Later,
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||
when writing this book, I learned sufficient Hebrew for the
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understanding and honest rendition of the sacred texts. In such
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||
frequent readings of the Bible, and in more languages than one, I
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||
could not but be struck with important differences of meaning given
|
||
in different versions to the same verse or text; memory, too, would
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||
go back to the same story told quite differently in other of the
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sacred texts; I would search out the parallel passage and find it
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||
at right angles or criss-cross with the one before me. Such
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||
adventures roused dangerous trains of thought, which I devoutly
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||
sought to conjure out of mind. My honest mind was struck, too, and
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||
shocked, by many things which, it seemed to me, were absurd or
|
||
abhorrent as human actions, and magnifiedly so as the alleged word
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||
or deed of my God. But "he that doubteth is damned"; so faith
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||
triumphed over reason for a long, long time, though I felt myself
|
||
ever a bit less "orthodox" as the years went by, and as I read and
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||
thought. Yet so vital was my residuary faith, and so disturbed my
|
||
conscience over my disregard of the divine ban, "Be ye not
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||
unequally yoked together with unbelievers: ... what part hath he
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||
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||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
2
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||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
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that believeth with an infidel?" (2 Cor. vi, 14, 15) that upon
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||
entering the holy bonds I purposely backslid from my native
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||
Methodism, and took the plunge -- on a cold winter night -- into
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||
the Baptist communion, in the earnest hope of leading my new life
|
||
partner (whose family were of that persuasion) into that aqueous
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||
fold of Christ with me. My faith and my chill bath were unrewarded
|
||
-- then. This book is my tribute of unalloyed admiration and
|
||
devotion to her whose beautiful character and soul shine out into
|
||
my life with no pale reflected light of storied Calvary, but in
|
||
their own native warmth and purity, untinged and untainted by any
|
||
superstition of unreality. Great now is my reward; our two minds
|
||
share cordially now the single thought -- always hers:
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||
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||
"Do good, for good is good to do;
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||
Spurn bribe of heaven and threat of hell."
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||
|
||
Faith, I read, "has for its object the unknowable." How could
|
||
the things of faith be unknowable if they were all inerrantly
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||
revealed by God in the "Holy Bible, book divine"? I determined to
|
||
know the truth, if it could be found in the Bible. I bought two
|
||
copies of that sacred book for what seemed must be the test of
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||
truth. My method was simple and looked sure: from Genesis to
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||
Revelation I reread one copy, pencil in hand; every passage that
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||
seemed meet for my purpose I marked, noting book, chapter, and
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||
verse on the margin of each copy for identification. These sacred
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||
and marked volumes I then tore apart, and with scissors cut out
|
||
every marked passage. Patiently then I sorted the great mass of
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||
clippings, putting apart into little piles all that told the same
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||
tale differently, or treated the same Christian doctrine at cross-
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||
purposes. This accomplished, I read and carefully "matched" one
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||
inspired truth with another. Then, through several years, at every
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||
opportunity which a rather active professional work and frequent
|
||
absences from the country permitted, and into the weary hours of
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||
many a night, painstakingly, conscientiously, faithfully, in my
|
||
quest for truth out of the fountain of revelation, I carried on the
|
||
work of creating order out of the chaos which almost appalled me
|
||
with its multiplicity and its inconsistency. The result is here
|
||
presented; my book speaks for itself. The wayfarer, though a fool,
|
||
cannot mistake it.
|
||
|
||
Thus it was that I took up the challenge of the Christ to
|
||
"search the Scriptures," haply to demonstrate to the seeker after
|
||
truth "whether these things were so," as in the Bible related for
|
||
belief, under the admonition of the Christ himself: "He that
|
||
believeth not shall be damned."
|
||
|
||
No man, priest, parson, or zealot for his inherited faith, can
|
||
say with truth that this book of mine falsely or wantonly "attacks
|
||
the Bible," or defames the Bible God, or ridicules the Christian
|
||
religion. If iconoclastic results follow this candid search of the
|
||
Scriptures, the fault is with the Bible, for this my book speaks
|
||
truly. This book is based wholly on the Bible; its all but every
|
||
reference is to the Bible, faithfully quoted in exact words of
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||
inspiration. The Hebrao-Christian God is depicted in plain words of
|
||
revelation for every word and deed attributed to him by the
|
||
inspired writers. This God "whom therefore ye ignorantly worship,
|
||
him declare I unto you," truly. This book is simply the Bible taken
|
||
by and large, and thus viewed in a light not shed upon it by pulpit
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
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||
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||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
expoundings of golden texts, or by private readings of isolated
|
||
choice fragments. Ye bibliologists cannot impeach or refute the
|
||
truth herein revealed out of Holy Writ --
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||
|
||
"... nor all your piety nor wit
|
||
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,
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||
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it!"
|
||
|
||
The earnest hope is cherished for this book, that the simple
|
||
and sincere search here made of the Scriptures for truth's sake,
|
||
will serve to make only theology and religious intolerance vain and
|
||
ridiculous; that it shame contending Christians from an unfounded
|
||
faith in the untrue, and encourage them and all men into the
|
||
brotherhood of the only possible true and pure religion -- to
|
||
|
||
"Do good, for good is good to do."
|
||
|
||
Then will indeed be realized the burden of the herald angel's song:
|
||
|
||
"Peace on earth to men of good will."
|
||
|
||
CONTENTS
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||
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I THE GENESIS OF CHRISTIANITY
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II A SKETCH OF HEBREW SCRIPTURES
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III THE PATRIARCHS AND THE COVENANTS OF YAHWEH
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||
IV THE WONDERS OF THE EXODUS
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V THE FORTY YEARS IN THE WILDERNESS
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||
VI THE "TEN COMMANDMENTS" AND THE "LAW"
|
||
VII THE "CONQUEST" OF THE PROMISED LAND
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||
VIII THE HEBREW HEATHEN RELIGION. SEX WORSHIP AND IDOLS
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||
IX THE PAGAN GOD -- AND GODS -- OF ISRAEL
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X YAHWEH -- THE "TERRIBLE GOD" OF ISRAEL
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XI THE HOLY PRIESTS AND PROPHETS OF YAHWEH
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XII BIBLE THEOLOGY AND MODERN TRUTH
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XIII THE "PROPHECIES" OF JESUS CHRIST
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XIV THE INSPIRED "HARMONY OF THE GOSPELS"
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XV MORE: "HARMONY OF THE GOSPELS"
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XVI THE SACRED DOCTRINES OF CHRISTIANITY
|
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XVII THE CHRISTIAN "PLAN OF SALVATION"
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||
XVIII REVELATIONS OF THE HEREAFTER
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XIX CESSET SUPERSTITION AND THEN?
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||
INDEX
|
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IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
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CHAPTER I
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THE GENESIS OF CHRISTIANITY
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WHAT Is Truth?" asked the mystified Pilate of Jesus the
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Christ, as he stood before the Roman governor, accused by the
|
||
priests of the Jews of having proclaimed himself King of the Jews
|
||
and Messiah, thus "perverting the nation, and forbidding to give
|
||
tribute to Caesar, saying, That he himself is Christ a king" (Luke
|
||
xxiii, 2). Pilate asked Jesus, "Art thou the King of the Jews?" and
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||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
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||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
a second time he queried, "Art thou a king then?" After standing
|
||
some time mute, Jesus finally, and equivocally, answered: "Thou
|
||
sayest that I am a king"; and he added: "To this end was I born,
|
||
and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear
|
||
witness unto the truth"; but, he averred, "My Kingdom is not of
|
||
this world" (John xviii, 37).
|
||
|
||
Then Pilate's challenging Question, which has rung down the
|
||
nearly twenty centuries since, and yet challenges answer concerning
|
||
"this just person": Was he Christ? Was he the Son of God, Virgin-
|
||
born? Was he the heralded King of the Jews? Was he King of a
|
||
Kingdom not of this world? These things recorded of him, were they
|
||
so?
|
||
|
||
The system of Christian theology grown up around this unique
|
||
Subject, and in current acceptance bound to the concept of a true
|
||
religion of the spirit, is wrought upon the basis of an implicit
|
||
belief in a composite of two miraculous "revelations of God to
|
||
Man." Of these the one is known as the Old Testament or will of
|
||
God, revealed in olden times to the Hebrew people; the other, of
|
||
the century of Jesus Christ, and revealed through himself and his
|
||
Jewish propagandists, is known as the New Testament or will of God.
|
||
These two revelations are committed to mankind through a
|
||
compilation of sixty-six small separate brochures of "Scriptures"
|
||
or writings, together called The Bible from the Greek Ta Biblia or
|
||
"The Books." This Bible constitutes all that we have or know of the
|
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"revealed Word of God."
|
||
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Truth, without alloy of possible error, lies in the inspired
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||
and sacred pages of this wonderful "Word of God" -- if full
|
||
credence be given to its claims for itself, and to the claims made
|
||
for it by the theologians.
|
||
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||
As for its own claims of inspired and inerrant truth, they
|
||
abound: "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God" (2 Tim. iii,
|
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16); "For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but
|
||
holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost" (2
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||
Peter i, 21); though the Hebrew Deity himself, as quoted by
|
||
Jeremiah, avers: "the prophets prophesy lies in my name" (Jer.
|
||
xxiii, 25); and this prophet adds: "The false pen of the scribes
|
||
hath wrought falsely" (Jer. viii, 8, Revised Version). John the
|
||
Evangelist says: "He that saw it bare record, and his record is
|
||
true; and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe"
|
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(John xix, 35). And his Divine Subject declares: "I have greater
|
||
witness than that of John. ... Though I bear record of myself, yet
|
||
my record is true" (John v, 36; viii, 14). Paul, the chief of the
|
||
propagandists, asserts, "I speak the truth in Christ; I lie not"
|
||
(Rom. ix, 1) -- though with amazing naivete he has just admitted
|
||
that he does "lie unto the glory of God" (Rom. iii, 7), that His
|
||
truth may the more abound! The assumption of truth is usually
|
||
attached to a confession.
|
||
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||
The Scriptures Old and New, their verity thus vouched for, we
|
||
well know to be a collection of many separate pieces of writing by
|
||
many Different "inspired" Hebrew writers, through many ages of
|
||
Hebrew history. The Bible has not thus the advantage of unity of
|
||
authorship, as have the Sacred Scriptures of some other widespread
|
||
faiths of the present day.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
The Koran of Merbammed is fabled to have been brought down
|
||
from heaven to this prophet by the archangel Gabriel, full-written
|
||
on the parchment skin of the ram which was miraculously provided in
|
||
the nick of time just as Father Abraham was about to cut the throat
|
||
of his son Isaac as a sacrifice to Yahweh on Mt. Moriah; the later
|
||
Book of Mormon, miraculously written on golden plates, and hidden
|
||
in a cache on Cumorah Hill, near Palmyra, was specially revealed to
|
||
the late Prophet J. Smith, here in New York State, in the year
|
||
1823, by the angel Moroni. As these latter sacred texts were
|
||
written in an unknown hieroglyph, the angel loaned to Prophet Smith
|
||
a pair of patent spectacles called Urim and Thummim, which had the
|
||
miraculous faculty of rendering the strange script into rather
|
||
faulty English words to the eye of the seer, and so enabling him,
|
||
hidden from curious prying behind a kitchen screen, to translate
|
||
the mystic manuscript, upon the completion of which pious work the
|
||
golden plates and spectacles were taken by the angel back to
|
||
heaven.
|
||
|
||
Over 600,000 people in the United States live and die in the
|
||
faith of this "revelation"; and the sect has been considerably
|
||
persecuted and martyred for its faith by other Americans who
|
||
believed other and more ancient Hebrew revelations (though they
|
||
hate and persecute the Jews). And more millions of human beings
|
||
have for 1200 years believed the "revelations" of Mohammed than
|
||
ever did believe the Hebrao-Christian revelations. So much for
|
||
"revealed" faiths. Before forgetting Prophet J. Smith, it may be
|
||
recalled, as a bit of curious American history, that in 1829, less
|
||
than one hundred years ago, John the Baptist himself, he who
|
||
baptized the Jewish Jesus, came down from heaven to New York State
|
||
and publicly ordained Prophet Smith and his confrere Oliver Cowdery
|
||
into "the Priesthood of Aaron"; and that the immortal Saints Peter,
|
||
James the Brother of Jesus, and John (which one not specified) then
|
||
and there conferred upon the two Prophets "the Order of the
|
||
Priesthood of Melchizedek," of which Jesus Christ was himself a
|
||
perpetual member (Heb. vi, 20).
|
||
|
||
We shall examine the truth of the Christian theology,
|
||
searching the Scriptures whether the miraculous things therein
|
||
recounted for faith can possibly be so. Incidentally we shall catch
|
||
an occasional sidelight from sacred or secular history, but chiefly
|
||
we shall keep closely in our search to Holy Writ. First we shall
|
||
take a brief retrospective look at some of the secular and historic
|
||
phases of Christianity as it has prevailed unto the Christian
|
||
civilization of past and present.
|
||
|
||
THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY
|
||
|
||
Judea, the birthplace of the Christ, was a small outlying
|
||
province of the far-flung Pagan Roman Empire, its turbulent Jewish
|
||
fanaticism curbed by Roman law and legions.
|
||
|
||
The new religion rose there, but met with little acceptance in
|
||
its native place, where the Jews could not recognize in the humble
|
||
Carpenter of Nazareth the tokens of the kingly "Messiah" of their
|
||
olden prophecy. It spread with readier acceptance among the
|
||
neighboring pagans, who believed all gods and had no objection to
|
||
taking on another; they were familiar with virgin births and with
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
gods coming to earth in human form. At Lystra the pagan populace
|
||
even acclaimed Paul and Barnabas as pagan deities, crying, "The
|
||
gods are come down to us in the likeness of men," Barnabas being
|
||
called Jupiter himself, and Paul the lesser divinity, Mercury,
|
||
"because be was the chief speaker" (Acts xiv, 11, 12). This greater
|
||
pagan honor to 'Barnabas seems to have offended Paul's sense of
|
||
importance; for shortly afterward they quarreled, "and the
|
||
contention was so sharp between them, that they departed asunder
|
||
one from the other" (Acts xv, 39), in a rather un-christian humor.
|
||
|
||
But the proselytizing campaigns continued, pushed with much
|
||
zeal, now almost exclusively among the pagans. Naturally the new
|
||
faith drifted toward imperial Rome, the head and heart of the
|
||
ancient Pagan world. There, too, it took root and spread among the
|
||
lowly and the slaves, its rites hidden away in the slums and in the
|
||
catacombs.
|
||
|
||
This new religion, besides being purer and simpler -- at first
|
||
-- than some of the older cults, was coupled with some very
|
||
effective inducements. Its Founder proclaimed himself as very God;
|
||
he had come to establish a kingdom on earth and in heaven. To those
|
||
who would abandon their families and their poor possessions, he
|
||
made the positive promise of immense immediate reward: "There is no
|
||
man that hath left house ... or lands for my sake, but he shall
|
||
receive a hundredfold now in this time, houses ... and lands; and
|
||
in the world to come eternal life" (Mark x, 29, 30; Matt. xix, 29;
|
||
Luke xviii, 30). He proclaimed again and again that in a very short
|
||
time the existing world should end, that he would come in glory to
|
||
establish his kingdom and a new earth, where he would reign
|
||
forever. So soon, indeed, would this great reward be realized, the
|
||
prospective king asserted, that there were some "standing here, who
|
||
shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of Man coming in
|
||
his kingdom" (Matt. xvi, 28). The new religion assured everlasting
|
||
felicity in its heaven to all who would just believe; it threatened
|
||
eternal torment in the fires of its hell for all who would not
|
||
believe and accept it.
|
||
|
||
Under the spell of these promises and threats and of the
|
||
assurance of a quick end of the earth, the propagandists of the
|
||
cult promptly established a strange new scheme of which they were
|
||
the administrators -- a scheme of pure communism. As the world
|
||
would quickly come to an end, there was no reason and no need to
|
||
take heed of temporal affairs; they must all watch and pray and
|
||
pool all their poor belongings in their leaders' hands for the
|
||
common benefit. This the trembling and zealous proselytes did,
|
||
under the sanction of supreme fear: "Neither was any among them
|
||
that lacked: for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold
|
||
them, and brought the price of the things that were sold, and they
|
||
laid them down at the Apostles' feet; and distribution was made
|
||
unto every man according as he had need" (Acts iv, 34, 35). And the
|
||
story of what befell Ananias and Sapphira (Acts v, 1-11) for
|
||
holding out a part of their substance from the common pool was
|
||
wholesome warning to any who, with a cautious eye to a possible
|
||
hitch in the "second coming," might be inclined to "lie to the Holy
|
||
Ghost," who kept the score of the contributions. The history of
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
Dowie, "Elijah II," and his New Zion, and of "Moses II," younger
|
||
brother of Jesus Christ," here in twentieth-century United States,
|
||
illustrates the truth that certain human traits are not yet
|
||
extinct.
|
||
|
||
Such was the intellectual enlightenment of the classes among
|
||
which the new faith was propagated, and for which the inspired
|
||
Gospel biographies of the Christ and the apostolic epistles were
|
||
put into circulation. The chief of the disciples and his associate
|
||
propagandists were admittedly "unlearned and ignorant men" (Acts
|
||
iv, 13) the new cult was that of fishermen and peasants, of the
|
||
ignorant, the disinherited, the slave as is proved by many of their
|
||
acts and sayings, recorded in the New Testament and in early church
|
||
history.
|
||
|
||
Naturally the new religion gained adherents and slowly spread,
|
||
as all other religions have done: Mithraism, its closest and all
|
||
but successful rival; Mohammedanism, which far outspread it;
|
||
Mormonism, Spiritualism, Mother-Eddyism and many another cult and
|
||
superstition, including "heresies" combated and persecuted by the
|
||
new faith from the very first, several of which (like some entirely
|
||
"pagan" religions) all but overthrew the struggling new "orthodox"
|
||
creed of the Christ. But by virtue of its superior moral merits,
|
||
its exceptional system of rewards and punishments, and the great
|
||
zeal of its propagandists, it grew and strengthened and finally
|
||
gained the upper hold in the centuries-long struggle with paganism.
|
||
|
||
THE NEW AND THE OLDER RELIGIONS
|
||
|
||
Christianity was not so new or so novel as we generally think
|
||
it. In its essentials it had hardly a new thought in it -- except
|
||
hell-fire and the oft-repeated and never realized dictum, "The end
|
||
of all things is at hand" (I Peter iv, 7). In lieu of the plurality
|
||
of gods of the pagan religions, it evolved the one pagan god
|
||
Yahweh, of old Hebrew mythology, into Three-in-One Christian
|
||
Godhead. The other pagan gods became, in effect, the "saints" of
|
||
the new cult; or, as the Catholic Encyclopedia has it, "the Saints
|
||
are the successors to the Gods" (Vol. XV, p. 710) -- though the
|
||
theory of the Psalmist tallies better with that of the new
|
||
theology: "All the gods of the heathen are devils" (Psalms xcvi, 5,
|
||
Vulgate). The incarnation of Gods in human form by virgin birth was
|
||
common place myth; their death, resurrection, transition to and fro
|
||
between heaven and earth, and the like, were articles of faith of
|
||
many pagan creeds and of all mythologies. Monotheism, without idol-
|
||
worship, is the single essential difference of the Christian
|
||
religion from paganism; and when one recalls the Trinity, and the
|
||
icons and sacred images of saints, even this difference seems
|
||
attenuated.
|
||
|
||
The death and resurrection of pagan gods is alluded to
|
||
specifically by Ezekiel. Yahweh had brought him in his vision to
|
||
the north door of the Temple at Jerusalem; "and, behold, there sat
|
||
women weeping for Tammuz" (Ezek. viii, 14). Tammuz was a so-called
|
||
god of vegetation, fabled to have died and been resurrected with
|
||
the returning seasons. One month of the Hebrew calendar is named
|
||
Tammuz. The fable is simply a myth of the death of vegetation in
|
||
the winter and its rebirth in the spring. It was a very prevalent
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
superstition in ancient times, in Assyria, in Egypt (the myths of
|
||
Isis and Osiris), in Palestine, Greece, and other pagan countries;
|
||
and the Tammuz myth was one of the heathenish cults followed by the
|
||
pagan Hebrews. The women referred to by Ezekiel were celebrating
|
||
the annual death of their god Tammuz by weeping for him. Now they
|
||
weep annually over the death of Jesus Christ, and rejoice each year
|
||
on the Easter of his resurrection. This so-called Tammuz-cult was
|
||
native to Babylonia; and, says the Catholic Encyclopedia, "it was
|
||
unmistakably allied with the worship of Adonis and Attis, and even
|
||
of Dionysus. Much might have been hoped for these religions with
|
||
their yearly festival of the dying and rising Gods" (Vol. XI, p.
|
||
388). But they were otherwise corrupt and moribund, and gave way
|
||
finally to the newer, purer religion, but identical cult, of the
|
||
Christ.
|
||
|
||
It would be interesting to develop the records of the adoption
|
||
by Christianity of the pagan myths and ceremonies. It is a large
|
||
subject, and we cannot go into it at length here, where our task is
|
||
limited to a study of the sacred texts for the proofs or disproofs
|
||
of their own validity which they so abundantly afford. But some
|
||
brief extracts from authoritative works may be included, for their
|
||
own significance and to point the way for further inquiry.
|
||
|
||
True, practically every tenet and ceremonial of the Christian
|
||
religion has its counterpart in, and was adapted from, the beliefs
|
||
and ceremonies of the pagan religions which preceded it and for
|
||
centuries lived alongside it. We have just noticed the "Yearly
|
||
festival of the dying and rising God" in the ceremonials of
|
||
paganism. This is very like the death and resurrection of the
|
||
Christian God, Jesus Christ; and it is the resurrection of Jesus
|
||
which is the cornerstone of the Christian religion: "If Christ be
|
||
not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain"
|
||
(I Cor. xv, 14). To be as brief as may be in outlining this very
|
||
suggestive subject, I will quote a paragraph from a well-known
|
||
recent work, 'The Next Step in Religion,' by Ray Wood Sellars,
|
||
[Ray Wood Sellers, The Next Step in Religion: An Essay toward the
|
||
Coming Renaissance. (New York: The Macmillan Co., 1918)]
|
||
supplemented by extracts from the Catholic Encyclopedia, the best
|
||
brief outlines of Christian adoptions and adaptations of paganism.
|
||
Says Mr. Sellars:
|
||
|
||
"The Orphic cults in Greece, the Osiris and Isis cult in
|
||
Egypt, the worship of Attis and Adonis in Syria [of which
|
||
Palestine is part], the purification and communion ceremonies
|
||
of Mithraism, all turned about the idea of a secret means of
|
||
salvation. The God dies and is resurrected; the Virgin Goddess
|
||
gives birth to a Son; the members of the religious community
|
||
eat of their God and gain strength from the sacred meal. The
|
||
Church Fathers were aware of these similarities, and sought to
|
||
explain away their resemblances by means of the theory that
|
||
the Devil had blasphemously imitated Christian rites and
|
||
doctrines." -- I may pause to point out that these pagan rites
|
||
long antedated the Christian analogies, and therefore the
|
||
theory loses force. -- "The death and resurrection of a
|
||
Savior-God was very prevalent in Tarsus, Paul's own city. The
|
||
Attis Mysteries were celebrated in a season which corresponded
|
||
to the end of our Lenten season and the beginning of Easter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
They were preceded by fasting and began with lamentations; the
|
||
votaries gathered in sorrow around the bier of the dead
|
||
divinity; then followed the resurrection; and the risen God
|
||
gave hope of salvation to the mystic brotherhood; and the
|
||
whole service closed with the feast of rejoicing, the
|
||
Hilaria." (Sellars, pp. 23-24.)
|
||
|
||
Much more comprehensive, and constituting a very notable
|
||
admission, are the following passages from the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia. By way of introductory, it says: "Speaking from the
|
||
standpoint of pure history, no one will deny that much in the
|
||
antecedent and environing aspirations and ideals of paganism
|
||
formed, to use the Church phrase, a praeparatio evangelica of high
|
||
value. 'Christo jam tum venienti, crede, parata via est.' sings the
|
||
Hymn of Prudentius. The pagan world 'saw the road,' Augustine could
|
||
say, 'from its hill-top.' 'Et ipse Pitaetus Christianus est.' said
|
||
the Priest of Attis; while, of Heraclitus and the old Philosophers,
|
||
Justin avers that 'there were Christians before Christ.' Indeed,
|
||
the earlier apologists for Christianity go far beyond anything we
|
||
should wish to say, and indeed made difficulties for their
|
||
successors" (Vol. XI, p. 393). And again: "It has indeed been said
|
||
that the 'Saints are the successors to the Gods.' Instances have
|
||
been cited of pagan feasts becoming Christian; of pagan temples
|
||
consecrated to the worship of the true God; of statues of pagan
|
||
Gods baptized and transformed into Christian Saints" (Vol. XV, p.
|
||
710).
|
||
|
||
A few instances out of the great number of these analogies
|
||
between pagan and Christian rites follow:
|
||
|
||
"The Christian ritual developed when, in the third century,
|
||
the Church left the Catacombs. Many forms of self-expression must
|
||
needs be identical, in varying times, places, cults, as long as
|
||
human nature is the same. Water, oil, light, incense, singing,
|
||
procession, prostration, decoration of altars, vestments of
|
||
priests, are naturally at the service of universal religious
|
||
instinct. Little enough, however, was directly borrowed by the
|
||
Church -- nothing, without being 'baptized,' as was the Pantheon.
|
||
In all these things the spirit is the essential: the Church
|
||
assimilates to herself what she takes, or, if she cannot adapt, she
|
||
rejects it.
|
||
|
||
"Even pagan feasts may be 'baptized': certainly our
|
||
processions of April 25th are the Robigalia; the Regation Days may
|
||
replace the Ambarualia; the date of Christmas Day may be due to the
|
||
same instinct which placed on December 25th the Natalis Invictis of
|
||
the Solar Cult (Vol. XI, p. 390).
|
||
|
||
"The Roman Virtues, Fides, Castitas, Virtus (manliness) were
|
||
canonized [p. 391]. The Mysteries had already fostered, though not
|
||
created, the conviction of immortality. It was thought that
|
||
'initiation' insured a happy after-life and atoned for sins, that
|
||
else had been punished, if not in this life, in some place of
|
||
expiation (Plato, Rep. 366; cf. Pindar, Sophocles, Plutarch). These
|
||
Mysteries usually began with the selection of Initiandi, their
|
||
preliminary baptism, fasting, and confession. After many
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
sacrifices, the Mysteries proper were celebrated, including
|
||
tableaux showing heaven, hell, purgatory, the soul's destiny, the
|
||
gods. Apuleius (in Metamorphoses) tells us his thrilling and
|
||
profoundly religious experiences.
|
||
|
||
"There was often seen the 'Passion' of the god Osiris; the
|
||
rape and return of Kore and the sorrows of Demeter (Eleusis) -- the
|
||
sacred marriage and divine births (Zeus, Brimos). Finally, there
|
||
was usually the Meal of mystic food; grains of all sorts at
|
||
Eleusis, bread and water in the cult of Mithra, wine (Dionysus),
|
||
milk and honey (Attis), raw bull's flesh in the Orphic Dionysus-
|
||
Zagreus cult. Sacred formukae were certainly imparted, of magical
|
||
value (Vol. XI, pp. 391-2). In the Tauroboliuml the Initiandi were
|
||
baptized by dipping in the bull's blood, whence the dipped emerged
|
||
renatus in aeternum ('reborn into Eternity'). In the sacred Meal
|
||
(which was not a sacrifice), the worshippers communicated in the
|
||
God and with one another.
|
||
|
||
"The sacred Fish of Atargatis have nothing to do with the
|
||
origin of the Eucharist, nor with the Ichthys Anagram of the
|
||
Catacombs. The Anagram -- (Ichthys, the Greek word for Fish), does
|
||
indeed represent 'Iesous Christos Theou Uios Soter' -- (Jesus
|
||
Christ, Son of God, Savior); the propagation of the symbol was
|
||
often facilitated owing to the popular Syrian Fish-cult (from
|
||
Dagon, Syrian Fish-god). That the terminology of the Mysteries was
|
||
largely transported into Christian use is certain (Paul, Ignatius,
|
||
Origen, Clement, etc.); that the liturgy, especially of baptism,
|
||
organization of the Catechumenate, Disciplina Arcana, etc., were
|
||
affected by them, is highly probable. Always the Church has
|
||
forcefully molded words, and even concepts (as Savior, Epiphany,
|
||
Baptism, Illumination (photismos), Mysteries (teletes), Logos, to
|
||
suit her own Dogma and its expression. Thus it was that John could
|
||
take the expression 'Logos,' mould it to his Dogma, cut short all
|
||
perilous speculation among Christians, and assert once for all that
|
||
the "Word was made Flesh' and was Jesus Christ" (Cath.
|
||
Encyclopedia, Vol. XI, p. 392).
|
||
|
||
The fish anagram above referred to was an ancient pagan symbol
|
||
of fecundity, of great vogue and veneration throughout pagandom,
|
||
and was adopted by Christendom for the double reason that the
|
||
initials acrostically formed the name and title of Jesus Christ and
|
||
that in ancient science fish were supposed to be generated in the
|
||
water without carnal copulation, and were thus peculiarly symbolic
|
||
of the virgin-born Christ. The pagan origin and Christian
|
||
significance of the symbol are attained by the authority just
|
||
quoted: "The most remarkable example of such a poem [acrostic or
|
||
anagram] is attributed by Lactantius and Eusebius to the Erythrean
|
||
Sibyl, the initial letters forming the words 'Iesous Xristos Theou
|
||
Uios Soter (stauros).' Omitting the doubtful parenthesis (cross),
|
||
these words form a minor acrostic: Ichthys, fish, the mystical
|
||
symbol of our Lord" (Cath. Encyc. Vol. I, p. 111).
|
||
|
||
The pagan origin of the two greatest Christian festivals,
|
||
Christmas and Easter, may be emphasized by brief extracts.
|
||
"Christmas was not among the earliest festivals of the Church. The
|
||
first evidence of the feast is from Egypt. ... [about 200 A.D.] ...
|
||
There is no month in the year to which respectable authorities have
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
not ascribed Christ' birth. ... At Rome, then, the Nativity was
|
||
celebrated on 25 December before 354; in the East, at
|
||
Constantinople, not before 379. ... The well-known solar feast,
|
||
however, of Natalis Invictis, celebrated on 25 December, has a
|
||
strong claim on the responsibility for our December date. ... It
|
||
would be impossible here to even outline the history of solar
|
||
symbolism and language as applied to God, the Messiah, and Christ
|
||
in Jewish or Christian canonical, patristic, or devotional works.
|
||
Hymns and Christmas offices abound in instances. The earliest
|
||
rapprochement of the births of Christ and the Sun is in Cyprian (De
|
||
pasch. comp. xix): 'O, how wonderfully acted Providence that on
|
||
that day on which the Sun was born ... Christ should be born.' In
|
||
the fourth century Chrysostom (De Solst. et AEquin., II, p. 118)
|
||
says: 'But our Lord too is born in the month of December (25). ...
|
||
But they call it the "Birthday of the Unconquered." Who is so
|
||
unconquered as our Lord? Or, if they say that it is the birthday of
|
||
the Sun, He is the Sun of Justice.' ... Pope Leo I bitterly
|
||
reproves solar survivals -- Christians on the very door-step of the
|
||
Apostles' Basilica turn to adore the rising Sun. ... But even
|
||
should a deliberate and legitimate 'baptism? of a pagan feast be
|
||
seen here, no more than the transference of the date need be
|
||
supposed. The abundance of midwinter festivals may have helped the
|
||
choice of the December date, the same instinct which set Natalis
|
||
Invictis at the winter solstice will have sufficed, apart from
|
||
deliberate adaptation or curious calculation, to set the Christians
|
||
feast there too" (Cath. Encyc., Vol. III, pp. 724-727).
|
||
|
||
This "baptism" of the most popular pagan festival of the Sun
|
||
as the birthday of the Son of God is thus evidently admitted to be
|
||
as the secular histories clearly prove it was -- a sop to the pagan
|
||
masses to conciliate them with Christianity by permitting them to
|
||
continue to enjoy their great festivals and ceremonies the more
|
||
readily to entice them into the paganized Christian Church.
|
||
|
||
As Christmas is a "baptized" pagan festival of the solar cult,
|
||
celebrating the birth of the sun at the winter solstice, so is
|
||
Easter a pagan solar festivity, celebrated at the spring equinox in
|
||
all the Eastern pagan lands as the renewal of vegetal life and the
|
||
resurrection of nature from the long death of winter. The name
|
||
Easter, according to the Venerable Bede, "relates to Eostre, a
|
||
Teutonic goddess of the rising light of day and spring" (Cath.
|
||
Encyc., Vol. V, p. 224). It is identically the Jewish passover; "in
|
||
fact, the Jewish feast was taken over into the Christian Easter
|
||
celebration" (Id. p: 225). But it is of even more pagan origin than
|
||
Judaism, with its festivals of "new moons"; its pagan solar
|
||
character is shown by the time of its celebration: "Easter was
|
||
celebrated in Rome and Alexandria on the first Sunday after the
|
||
first full moon after the spring equinox. ... Already in the third
|
||
century 25 March, was considered the day of the crucifixion" (Id.
|
||
p. 225). "A great number of pagan customs, celebrating the return
|
||
of spring, gravitated to Easter" (Id., p. 227).
|
||
|
||
The foregoing is as comprehensive a statement of the admitted
|
||
"borrowings" or "adaptations" by Christianity from paganism as can
|
||
well be made in brief quotations. They are authoritative, and they
|
||
completely prove that there is nothing new in the Christian
|
||
religion except Hebrew monotheism, with threats of hell and
|
||
damnation, and temporal torture and death for the unbeliever.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
It may surprise and grieve many good Christians to know that
|
||
all their pious observances, prayers, hymns, baptism, communion at
|
||
the altar, redemption, salvation, the celebration of Christmas as
|
||
the birth of their God in mid-winter, and of Easter, his
|
||
resurrection as spring breaks, all, all, are pagan practices and
|
||
myths, thousands of years antedating their Jesus-religion.
|
||
|
||
The simple truth is that paganism was outworn; its myths were
|
||
too childish to be believed by the enlightened minds of those days.
|
||
Four centuries before Christ, Socrates was put to death for
|
||
disbelief in the gods of Greece. Paganism, too, had become corrupt
|
||
in many of its practices; the time was ripe for a reform in
|
||
religion, and for a purer system based on belief in one God. One of
|
||
the many pretended Messiahs of Israel served as the occasion for
|
||
this reform. His own people did not largely accept him; his
|
||
propaganda found readier acceptance among the pagans, who had a
|
||
freer form of worship and were very prone to believe in any god and
|
||
in every fable. So the new cult made its way slowly through the
|
||
pagan Roman world.
|
||
|
||
The new religion was at first tolerated throughout the Empire,
|
||
and at Rome. As it grew and spread, it interfered with the business
|
||
of many "Demetrius silversmiths," who violently opposed it as
|
||
destroying their idol-trade (Acts xix, 24). By their evil reports,
|
||
maybe, its votaries became suspected of criminal practices and
|
||
conspiracies against the Empire, and it suffered intermittent
|
||
persecutions, but it persisted. It met persecution and attempted
|
||
suppression, not as a religion, but as an interference with the
|
||
policy of the State. After three hundred years, during which
|
||
paganism flourished decadently and was the religion of "the best
|
||
peoples and best portions of the earth," the new religion gained
|
||
the adherence of the pagan Emperor Constantine, who became sole
|
||
emperor of the pagan world through a victory due, as he was made by
|
||
Christian priests superstitiously to believe, to a miraculous Sign
|
||
of the Cross, with the legend In Hoc Signo Vinces, hung out in
|
||
heaven for him during the battle at the Milvian Bridge by the
|
||
Christian's God himself. The emperor, in gratitude or as a shrewd
|
||
policy of state, adopted the new god and creed, and at the
|
||
instigation of the priests set up this creed as the state religion
|
||
and enthroned its priests in place and power in the state. In the
|
||
spirit of pagan tolerance, which one would think should be the
|
||
spirit of Christianity, Constantine decreed religious liberty
|
||
throughout the Empire. The terms of his Edict of Milan, in 313, are
|
||
worth recalling; they shame the very sect which was its intended
|
||
beneficiary.
|
||
|
||
PAGAN TOLERANCE AND CHRISTIAN INTOLERANCE
|
||
|
||
The proselytized emperor decreed: "It seems to us proper that
|
||
the Christians and all others should have liberty to follow that
|
||
mode of religion which to each of them appears best; for it befits
|
||
the well-ordered State and the tranquillity of our times that each
|
||
individual be allowed, according to his own choice, to worship the
|
||
Divinity."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
But no sooner had the priests of the new religion foisted
|
||
themselves securely into power, and by their threats of hell fire
|
||
dominated the superstitious minds of the emperors, than the old
|
||
decrees of persecution under which they themselves had previously
|
||
suffered were revamped and turned into engines of torture and
|
||
destruction of both pagans and "heretic" Christians alike, and
|
||
religious intolerance became the corner-stone of the Church
|
||
apostolic. Without mentioning earlier laws, in which the new
|
||
persecutors cautiously felt their way, it was enacted, at priestly
|
||
instigation, in the famous Codex Theodosianus, about A.D. 384: "We
|
||
desire that all the people under the rule of our clemency should
|
||
live by that religion which divine Peter the apostle is said to
|
||
hive given the Romans. ... We desire that heretics and schismatists
|
||
be subjected to various fines. ... We decree also that we shall
|
||
cease from making sacrifices to the gods. And if any one has
|
||
committed such a crime, let him be stricken with the avenging
|
||
sword" (Cod. Theod. xvi, 1, 2; 5, 1; 10, 4). What a contrast to the
|
||
Edict of Milan, granting tolerance to all! In these laws of the now
|
||
"Christian" empire priestly intolerance is made the law of the
|
||
land; and the accursed words "Inquisition of the Faith" and
|
||
"inquisitors" first appear in this code.
|
||
|
||
THE DEADLY SANCTIONS OF RELIGION
|
||
|
||
But the priests should not alone bear the infamy of these laws
|
||
of persecution and death, instigated by them. To the Devil his due!
|
||
The "Holy Ghost" itself, it is claimed by the Bible and the Church,
|
||
inspired and decreed by positive command all the bloody murders and
|
||
tortures by the priests from Moses to the last one committed; and
|
||
the spirit of them lives and is but hibernating to-day. The Holy
|
||
God of Israel, whose name is Merciful, thus decreed on Sinai: "He
|
||
that sacrificeth to any gods [elohim], save unto Yahweh only, he
|
||
shall be utterly destroyed" (Ex. xxii, 20). And hear this, which
|
||
the ancient priests attribute to their God:
|
||
|
||
"If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or
|
||
thy daughter, or the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend, which
|
||
is as thine own soul, entice thee secretly, saying, Let us go
|
||
serve other gods, and ... Thou shalt not consent unto him, nor
|
||
hearken unto him; neither shall thine eye pity him, neither
|
||
shalt thou spare, neither shalt thou conceal him: But thou
|
||
shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to
|
||
put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people.
|
||
And thou shalt stone him with stones, that he die" (Deut.
|
||
xiii, 6--10)!
|
||
|
||
Words are inadequate to comment on this murderous decree of a
|
||
barbarian God! And not only must all under penalty of a fiendish
|
||
death worship the Holy Yahweh of Israel, but listen to this other
|
||
fatal, infamous decree of the priests in the name of this God:
|
||
|
||
"The man that will do presumptuously, and will not
|
||
hearken unto the priest, even that man shall die" (Deut. xvii,
|
||
12).
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
And the tergiversant slaughter-breathing persecutor for pay of
|
||
the early Christians, now turned for profit their chief apostle of
|
||
persecution, pronounces time and again the anathema of the new
|
||
dispensation against all dissenters from his superstitious,
|
||
tortuous doctrines and dogmas, all such "whom I have delivered unto
|
||
Satan" (I Tim. i, 20), as be writes to advise his adjutant Timothy.
|
||
He flings at the scoffing Hebrews this question: "He that despised
|
||
Moses, law died without mercy ...: Of how much sorer punishment,
|
||
suppose ye shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot
|
||
the Son of God?" (Heb. x, 28, 29). All such "are set forth for an
|
||
example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire" (Jude 7); "that
|
||
they might all be damned who believed not the truth" (2 Thess. ii,
|
||
12); and even "he that doubteth is damned" (Rom. xiv, 23). This
|
||
Paul, who with such bigoted presumption "deals damnation 'round the
|
||
land on all he deems the foe" of his dogmas, is first seen
|
||
"consenting to the death" of the first martyr Stephen (Acts viii,
|
||
1); then he blusters through the country "breathing out
|
||
threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord" (Acts
|
||
ix, 1), the new converts to the new faith. Then, when he suddenly
|
||
professed miraculous "conversion" himself, his old masters turned
|
||
on him and sought to kill him, and he fled to these same disciples
|
||
for safety, to their great alarm (Acts ix, 23-26), and straightway
|
||
began to bully and threaten all who would not now believe his new
|
||
preachments. To Elymas, who "withstood them," the doughty new
|
||
dogmatist "set his eyes on him," and thus blasted him with inflated
|
||
vituperation: "O full of all subtilty and all mischief, thou child
|
||
of the devil, thou enemy of all righteousness, wilt thou not cease
|
||
to pervert the right ways of the Lord"? (Acts xiii, 8-10). Even the
|
||
"meek and loving Jesus" is quoted as giving the fateful admonition:
|
||
"Fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell"
|
||
(Matt. x, 28) -- here first invented and threatened by Jesus the
|
||
Christ himself, for added terror unto belief. Paul climaxes the
|
||
terror: "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living
|
||
God" (Heb. x, 31).
|
||
|
||
Thus "breathing out threatenings and Slaughter" against all
|
||
who would not believe their gospel of miracles and damnation, the
|
||
founders of the new faith forged and fastened the fetters of the
|
||
new superstition upon the already superstitious pagans about them,
|
||
and gradually throughout the Roman world. By fear of hell, pagan
|
||
individuals, and in later times, by the choice proffered by
|
||
"Christian" conquerors between the Cross and the sword, whole pagan
|
||
peoples fell under the domination of the new militant faith. Whole
|
||
tribes and nations were given the choice between Christianity and
|
||
death; early history abounds in instances. The Hungarians adopted
|
||
Christianity as the alternative to extermination in A.D. 1000; also
|
||
the pagan Wends when conquered in 1144, and most of the pagan
|
||
Teutonic tribes. Charlemagne required every male subject of the
|
||
Holy Roman Empire above the age of twelve to renew his oath of
|
||
allegiance and swear to be not only a good subject but also a good
|
||
Christian. To refuse baptism and to retract after baptism were
|
||
crimes punishable with death. It was indeed fearful danger and
|
||
death by torture, rack, and fire to show the faintest symptoms of
|
||
doubt of the faith of the Holy Church.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
"LIKE KING LIKE PEOPLE"
|
||
|
||
Following the truism of Isaiah, "like king like people," very
|
||
great sections of the people throughout the Empire, especially the
|
||
official and subservient classes, hastened to adopt the name and
|
||
outward indicia of Christianity, now become official and popular.
|
||
But so "joined to their idols" were the masses of pagan "converts"
|
||
for convenience, and so addicted to its showy forms and ceremonies,
|
||
that the now officially recognized Church of Christ was not slow to
|
||
popularize itself with the pagan-Christian masses by taking over
|
||
bodily and "baptizing" to itself the temples, idols, rituals,
|
||
ceremonials, the whole pomp and glorious circumstance of paganism,
|
||
as we have just seen admitted by the paragraphs of church history
|
||
quoted from the work of Sellars and the authoritative Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia. Christianity became thus scarcely more than a refined
|
||
veneer of paganism. A devout pagan becoming, either from
|
||
convenience or conviction, a Christian, no doubt felt quite
|
||
comfortable and at home in a "baptized" pagan-Christian temple,
|
||
aglow with all the trappings and ceremonials and resonant with all
|
||
the old familiar rituals and litanies of his just-recanted
|
||
paganism, with merely the name of Zeus or Jupiter replaced by that
|
||
of Jehovah, and of Adonis or Tammuz by that of Jesus, and with
|
||
"Mary, Mother of God," for Isis (with the child Horus), as the new
|
||
"Queen of Heaven." As the missionaries of Rome carried the new cult
|
||
into yet other countries, and various kings and rulers fell to the
|
||
appeal and pomp of the priests, whole tribes and nations of
|
||
heathens followed their leaders into the Church, veneering their
|
||
paganism with the name, forms, and ceremonials of Roman
|
||
Christianity. This is the testimony of early ecclesiastical and
|
||
secular history.
|
||
|
||
Later instances more generally known, but the significance of
|
||
which is as generally overlooked, further confirm Isaiah's maxim.
|
||
For a millennium the Western Empire was more or less Roman
|
||
Christian; the Eastern Empire had the Greek Church with its own
|
||
Patriarch, but, with considerable vicissitudes of constancy, it
|
||
recognized the supremacy of papal Rome, and the formulas of faith
|
||
and creed were the same, with the exception of the age-long
|
||
controversy over the "filioque" clause of the Nicene Creed, and the
|
||
bitter feuds over image-worship known as iconoclasm. The rancours
|
||
engendered from these differences of belief, together with the
|
||
bigoted pretensions of patriarch and pope, led to the final rupture
|
||
between Greek and Roman Churches in the year 1053. All the West
|
||
followed their leader the pope; the East clung with equal tenacity
|
||
to the tenets of the patriarch. So bitter were the hatreds thus
|
||
perpetuated, that the Western popes and emperorsa refused all aid
|
||
to the beleaguered emperors and Church of the East in the fatal
|
||
conflicts with the Turks, till in 1453 Constantinople and the whole
|
||
Eastern empire fell before the Crescent, and Europe became Turkish
|
||
and Mohammedan up to the very gates of Vienna.
|
||
|
||
But western and northern Europe remained of the Roman faith
|
||
until the Reformation begun by Luther in 1517. Here a most signal
|
||
vindication of "Like king like people" is witnessed. The Christian
|
||
kings and rulers who had political grievances against the pope
|
||
quickly took up the quarrel of Luther with the Roman Church; those
|
||
who were politically friendly to the pope seized arms to defend him
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
and the Church; their respective peoples flocked to their standards
|
||
and followed them in their rival faiths, and Europe was a welter of
|
||
blood and strife during the ensuing fierce wars between Catholic
|
||
and Protestant Christians. The strife of hostile Christian faiths
|
||
yet endures, abated some-what in degree.
|
||
|
||
England was wholly Romish before the Reformation; so staunch
|
||
a supporter of the True Faith was the lecherous Henry VIII that the
|
||
pope bestowed on him the title Fidei Defensor, Defender of the
|
||
Faith. Papal sanction being refused to his scandalous project of
|
||
divorce from Catharine, in order to marry Anne Boleyn, Henry broke
|
||
with the pope and became Protestant; carried England with him into
|
||
the Protestant ranks; founded the Church of England; and became its
|
||
supreme spiritual head. The old Romish practice of burning
|
||
dissenters at the stake was turned against the English Catholics to
|
||
suppress that sect entirely. Henry's Romish daughter "Bloody Mary"
|
||
succeeded him, and she was in turn succeeded by her Protestant bar-
|
||
sinister sister Elizabeth: each in turn kept the fires of
|
||
Smithfield blazing with the burning of the "heretics" of the
|
||
opposite faith. Finally, with the revolution against the Catholic
|
||
Stuarts, Protestantism won and England became what she is to-day,
|
||
the staunch bulwark of the reformed Faith and the Established
|
||
Church.
|
||
|
||
On such chances and caprices of vanity and spite in Providence
|
||
doth the religious complexion of whole nations of loyal Christians
|
||
turn and depend. It is curious to remember that the Protestant
|
||
sovereigns of England yet bear the popish title "Fidei Defensor,"
|
||
which is blazoned on the national escutcheon and stamped on the
|
||
coin of the realm to-day,
|
||
|
||
And so, through the long dark ages of faith, and so long as
|
||
the priest-prostituted State would use its civil power in
|
||
superstitious aid of the Holy Church, the Holy Church has zealously
|
||
fulfilled its Bible's commands and has murdered and tortured men,
|
||
women, and tender children by fire and sword through its special
|
||
agency of faith, the Holy Inquisition. This priest-ordained
|
||
institution was only abolished by the infidel Napoleon in Italy in
|
||
1808; but the moment his dreaded power fell, the "Scourge of God"
|
||
was eagerly re-established in the Papal States by God's Vicar Pope
|
||
Pius VII in 1814, and in Tuscany and Sardinia in 1835. It was only
|
||
finally abolished, along with the usurped "temporal power" of God's
|
||
vicars on earth, as one of the first glorious acts of the new
|
||
Kingdom of Italy, in 1870, -- just at the time when the Holy Ghost
|
||
came to the "Vatican prisoner" to reassert that the torture and
|
||
murder of dissenters from theological dogma was a God-imposed duty
|
||
and divine right of his Holy Church. We shall see how this is.
|
||
|
||
"NOT DEAD BUT SLEEPETH"
|
||
|
||
It would appear, from what is quoted below, that Holy Church
|
||
does not accept complaisantly this deprivation of power to execute
|
||
these bloody features of the divine commands committed to it. It
|
||
recognizes perforce its temporal impotence, and seems, like the
|
||
modern Hun, to bide if not to toast "The Day," as it often
|
||
suggests? "Today the temporal penalties formerly inflicted on
|
||
apostates and heretics cannot be enforced, and have fallen into
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
abeyance"; -- abeyance, temporary suspension, reluctant disuse, if
|
||
you please, as may be read in Vol. I, p. 625, of the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia, published under the imprimatur of Holy Church but a
|
||
few years ago (1907), in New York City, and as is several times
|
||
repeated in its volumes. Its whole system for suppression even to
|
||
extermination yet exists intact, ready for instant resort when and
|
||
should "changed conditions" again permit. From Vol. XIV, p. 761, et
|
||
seq., commended to very thoughtful perusal, are quoted several
|
||
precious, pregnant paragraphs (the italics are mine):
|
||
|
||
"Nearly all ecclesiastical legislation in regard to the
|
||
repression of heresy proceeds upon the assumption that
|
||
Heretics are in wilful revolt against lawful authority; that
|
||
they are, in fact, Apostates who by their own culpable act
|
||
have renounced the True Faith. ... It is easy to see that in
|
||
the Middle Ages this was not an unreasonable assumption. ...
|
||
|
||
"No one could be ignorant of the claims of the Church;
|
||
and if certain people repudiated her authority, it was by an
|
||
act of rebellion inevitably carrying with it a menace to the
|
||
sovereignty which the rest of the world accepted. ...
|
||
|
||
"The Canon Law deals very largely with the enunciation of
|
||
principles of right and wrong which are in their own nature
|
||
irreformable; the direct repeal of its provisions has never or
|
||
very rarely been resorted to; but there remain upon the
|
||
statute book a number of enactments which owing to changed
|
||
conditions are to all practical intents and purposes obsolete.
|
||
...
|
||
|
||
"The custom of burning heretics is really not a question
|
||
of justice, but a question of civilization (p. 769). ...
|
||
|
||
"'The gravest obligation,'" says Pope Leo XIII in his
|
||
Encyclical "Immortals Dei" of Nov. 1, 1885, "requires the
|
||
acceptance and practice not of the religion which one may
|
||
choose, but of that which God prescribes and which is known by
|
||
certain and indubitable marks to be the only true, one'"! (p.
|
||
764).
|
||
|
||
There we have the incubating germs of potential hell on earth
|
||
again in the name of God and the Christian religion. It is not the
|
||
Roman Church alone which is guilty; now, and throughout this book,
|
||
I make no imputations against it as Catholic, but only as
|
||
Christian; for 1500 years it was the only, as it claims yet to be
|
||
the only true, "Christian" Church, -- "fons et origo malorum," of
|
||
religious superstitions and persecutions innumerable. Its greater
|
||
guilt lies only in its being the father of all these priestly
|
||
dogmas which have been and are the blight of civilization. The
|
||
dissenters were, and well might be again, their Providence
|
||
permitting, all that this same article above quoted imputes to
|
||
them; for in a typical tu quoque conclusion (which admits its own
|
||
guilt) Holy Church thus recites history: "On the other hand, the
|
||
ferocity of the leading Reformers more than equalled that of the
|
||
most fiercely denounced Inquisitors. Even the 'gentle' Melanchthon
|
||
wrote to Calvin to congratulate him on the burning of Servetus:
|
||
'The Church, both now and in all generations, owes and will owe you
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
a debt of gratitude.' And, says Luther, 'Let there be no pity; it
|
||
is a time of wrath, not of mercy. Therefore, dear Lords, let him
|
||
who can slay, smite, destroy.' John Knox 'thought that every
|
||
Catholic in Scotland ought to be put to death.'" -- And the
|
||
authorized and authoritative Encyclopedia article just quoted
|
||
asserts solemnly that the inspired canon laws, including those
|
||
prescribing the torture and burning to death of "heretics," are in
|
||
their divine nature "irreformable," have accordingly never been
|
||
repealed and merely lie "in abeyance" or are "for practical
|
||
purposes obsolete," only because of "changed conditions"; and that
|
||
the infernal "custom of burning heretics is really not a question
|
||
of justice [i.e. of right or wrong], but a question of
|
||
civilization" -- which has gradually brought about these "changed
|
||
conditions," so that "burning heretics," while yet a divinely
|
||
sanctioned and unrepealed law of God and Church, cannot in these
|
||
days be enforced because of this secular "civilization" which
|
||
renders the burning laws of God and Church unpopular and impotent.
|
||
|
||
Revolting and truly significant as this is, it is also a
|
||
confession which suggests the truth of the assertion often made
|
||
that "Christian civilization" is a misnomer, and that such
|
||
civilization as the world to-day enjoys exists, not because of the
|
||
Christian religion, but in despite and defiance of that religion
|
||
and its ministers. Only so far as the world has broken away from
|
||
the superstition and thrall of the theological dogmas of this
|
||
religion and its Holy Church and has caught something of its better
|
||
spirit, making "obsolete" the fires of the Church on earth and in
|
||
hell, has civilization slowly and painfully progressed, and have
|
||
human liberty of thought and conscience and political and civil
|
||
liberty become possible and been slowly and painfully realized in
|
||
some parts of the "Christian" world.
|
||
|
||
FAITH FLOURISHED ON IGNORANCE
|
||
|
||
With the decline an fall of the Roman Empire the Christian
|
||
religion spread and grew, among the Barbarian destroyers of Rome.
|
||
The Dark Ages contemporaneously spread their intellectual pall over
|
||
Europe. Scarcely any but priests and monks could read. Charlemagne
|
||
learned to wield the pen only to the extent of scrawling his
|
||
signature. The barons who wrested Magna Carta from John Lackland
|
||
signed with their marks and seals. The worst criminals, provided
|
||
they were endowed with the rare and magic virtue of knowing how to
|
||
read even badly, enjoyed the "benefit of clergy" (i.e., of clerical
|
||
learning), and escaped immune or with greatly mitigated punishment.
|
||
There were no books save painfully-written manuscripts, worth the
|
||
ransom of princes, and utterly unattainable except by the very
|
||
wealthy and by the Church; not till about 1450 was the first
|
||
printed book known in Europe. The Bible existed only in Hebrew,
|
||
Greek, and Latin, and the ignorant masses were totally ignorant of
|
||
it other than what they heard from the priests, who told them that
|
||
they must believe it or be tortured and killed in life and damned
|
||
forever in the fires of hell after death. It is no wonder that
|
||
faith flourished under conditions so exceptionally favorable.
|
||
|
||
During the long dark ages of faith, the Holy Church and
|
||
benightedness were at their apogee and holy heyday. Miracles of
|
||
superstition happened every day by the conjuration of unwashed
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
saints and the exorcisms of motley priests, just as they do to-day
|
||
in the jungles of Africa and the arctic regions of America, through
|
||
the conjurings of Hottentot medicine-men and Eskimo shamans; but
|
||
never a single true miracle such as the modern ones of medicine, of
|
||
surgery, of sanitation, of the physical sciences!
|
||
|
||
Any who may question the accuracy -- or desire astonishing
|
||
details -- of this reference to the miracles and superstitions of
|
||
saints and Holy Church, is cheerfully recommended to the
|
||
exhaustless fount of authentic lore and accredited vouchers for it
|
||
all, in the sixteen volume Catholic Encyclopedia, under the names
|
||
of the myriad various saints and the articles Magic, Exorcism,
|
||
Necromancy, Sorcery, Witchcraft, and scores of other such, all
|
||
vouched for under the imprimatur of authority. And none of this,
|
||
with such sanction, can possibly be impeached of error; for the
|
||
same high source states: "Error is in one way or another the
|
||
product of ignorance." The priestly maxim of those dark ages of
|
||
faith is the accredited axiom of Hugo of St. Victor: "Disce premum
|
||
quod credendum est" -- "Learn first what is to be believed"! --
|
||
though amongst the churchmen it is said to have been a privileged
|
||
maxim for themselves, that they might "hold anything so long as
|
||
they hold their tongues."
|
||
|
||
Under the sway and dominion of such "sacred science," genius
|
||
was dead; the human intellect atrophied; credulity was rampant. All
|
||
this followed swiftly upon the grafting of the Christian religion
|
||
upon the splendid though decadent civilization of the Roman Empire
|
||
in East and West. These all are simple facts of history.
|
||
|
||
"CHRISTIAN CIVILIZATION"
|
||
|
||
Dickens's Child's History of England, in speaking of the early
|
||
pagan inhabitants of that island at the time of the Roman invasion,
|
||
55 years before the era of the so-called "Prince of peace," says:
|
||
"The ancient Britons, being divided into as many as thirty or forty
|
||
tribes, each commanded by its own little king, were constantly
|
||
fighting with each other, as savage people usually do."
|
||
|
||
That single sentence epitomizes the whole history of
|
||
"Christian-civilized" Europe from that day to this: the Christian
|
||
has been no whit different from the savage as regards the savage
|
||
pastime of "constantly fighting with each other, as savage people
|
||
usually do." Read any history of Europe as a whole, or of any
|
||
particular people of Europe: its pages are replete with next to
|
||
nothing but fighting and wars, internecine and international, in
|
||
almost every single year of its bloody annals. And wars about what?
|
||
|
||
Without an exception they have all been of one of three
|
||
inveterate classes: wars instigated by lust of conquest and power
|
||
on the part of "divine right" kings or even more popular rulers,
|
||
seeking to rob and steal each other's territories or to force their
|
||
will upon others; wars, and the most terrible and brutal of all,
|
||
incited by this Holy Christian religion before the Reformation,
|
||
with the holy purpose of exterminating unbelievers, as in the
|
||
Crusades and the Spanish butcheries of the Moors, or with the pious
|
||
object of exterminating, at Popish instigation, dissenting
|
||
"heretics," such as the Albigenses, Waldenses, Netherlanders,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
Cathari, Huguenots, Jews, and scores of others; and after the
|
||
Reformation, furious exterminating wars of one fanatical faction of
|
||
Christians against another, all blasphemously in the name of God!
|
||
Such pious infamies, for a thousand years and more, from its
|
||
earliest usurpation of power until skeptic anti-clericalism made it
|
||
impotent, have been the chief occupation of the Church Persecutrix,
|
||
-- that
|
||
|
||
"... saintly, murderous brood,
|
||
To carnage and the Bible* given,
|
||
Who think through unbelievers' blood
|
||
Lies their directest path to heaven."
|
||
*The original reads "the Koran."
|
||
|
||
A third, and redeeming, class of European wars has been those
|
||
glorious and righteous struggles for liberty by oppressed and
|
||
debased peoples, ground to misery and desperation by Holy Church
|
||
and divine right kings -- both which institutions are thoroughly
|
||
Biblical and Christian -- to throw off their galling yokes and to
|
||
win political freedom and liberty of conscience for themselves and
|
||
their posterity. But the Christian religion, while instigating and
|
||
waging many of the most cruel wars, has never once prevented a
|
||
single accursed war, of which over fifty have plunged "civilized
|
||
Christian Europe" into a welter of blood and misery in the past
|
||
century alone; while the world to-day yet staggers under the
|
||
devastation of the greatest and most destructive war of all
|
||
history, which desolated humanity and all but overthrew
|
||
civilization. And no war has been in which the name of God was not
|
||
inscribed upon the bloody banners of the aggressor; assailants and
|
||
defenders alike swamp high heaven with frantic and fatuous prayers
|
||
to God to give victory to each against the other -- prayers which
|
||
God has never heard or attended to, for God, as Napoleon cynically
|
||
and truly said, "is always on the side of the heaviest guns" -- or
|
||
of the deadliest poison-gas and most ruthless butchery of men.
|
||
|
||
Until wicked, brutal, damned war is ended on earth, there is
|
||
and can be no true civilization; for all war -- unless defensive --
|
||
is uncivilized, brutish barbarism. And to this holy consummation
|
||
the Christian religion, as such, will never lead or even
|
||
contribute. He whom the Christians fondly call "The Prince of
|
||
Peace" -- for what reason and with what reason God only knows -- is
|
||
not to be counted on to aid; for himself explicitly avers: "Think
|
||
not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send
|
||
peace, but a sword. For I am come to set a man at variance against
|
||
his father, and the daughter against her mother, And a man's foes
|
||
shall be they of his own household" (Matt. x, 34-36)! Far from
|
||
preventing war, truly has his theology, or creedal religion,
|
||
throughout his era been the prolific cause and miserable pretext of
|
||
wars and woes unnumbered: of human misery degradation, ignorance,
|
||
intolerance, persecution, pogroms, murders by fire and sword -- in
|
||
a word, of most of the ills and sorrows which humanity, subject to
|
||
its thrall, has suffered from the days of Constantine's league with
|
||
the Church, A.D., 313, to this very year of Christ and his
|
||
religion. Gainsay this no man who knows history can.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
The Christian religion has been the fearful sanction of human
|
||
slavery, of "divine right" rulers, of "God-anointed" priestly
|
||
domination of the mind and soul of man, of the imposed inferiority
|
||
of woman. The deadly dogma of divine right of kings and of the sin
|
||
of resistance to oppression is positively ordained: "The powers
|
||
that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the
|
||
power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they, that resist shall
|
||
receive to themselves damnation" (Romans xiii, 1. 2). But the
|
||
Declaration of Independence reads otherwise. As for the priestly
|
||
dominance, we will take ancient Scripture for authority -- More
|
||
modern instances may occur to some: "The prophets prophesy falsely,
|
||
and the priests bear rule by their means; and my people love to
|
||
have it so" (Jer. v, 31); apd the pertinent query follows: "What
|
||
will ye do in the end the end thereof?" That is for this age to
|
||
answer unequivocally.
|
||
|
||
THE "CHRISTIAN" PEOPLES
|
||
|
||
The best and most highly civilized portion of the human race
|
||
is within the pale of Christendom; but are these peoples so because
|
||
they profess the Christian religion? Just as well and truly say
|
||
that they are the most intelligent of mind, the fairest of
|
||
complexion, the most comely of form and face because they are
|
||
Christian.
|
||
|
||
But as pagans, before ever they heard of Christianity, they
|
||
were the same: because they were of the Caucasian race, Aryan --
|
||
which means "noble." All know the story of the youthful priest,
|
||
later Gregory the Great, seeing a group of "barbarian" captives
|
||
exposed for sale in the Christian slave-market of Rome; struck with
|
||
their personal beauty, he asked of what country they were. Being
|
||
told "They are Angles," he exclaimed: "No, they are angels," and
|
||
was thus moved to send missionaries to their Teutonic homeland to
|
||
"convert" their nation from paganism to the true faith. Deathless
|
||
in history, in song and story, are "the glory that was Greece, the
|
||
grandeur that was Rome" -- the two highest civilizations of
|
||
antiquity as well as of the early Christian era: the glory and the
|
||
power were of pagan Greece, of pagan Rome long before and long
|
||
after the Christian religion came, and that glory, that high
|
||
civilization was eclipsed, swamped, by the night of the Christian
|
||
dark ages -- which were the ages of faith.
|
||
|
||
Not only these greatest civilizations, but the greatest minds
|
||
of the ages, the best of men, were pagans: Aristotle, Plato,
|
||
Socrates, Epictetus, Demosthenes, Cicero, Seneca, the Plinys, the
|
||
Antonines, Marcus Aurelius, the philosophers, the poets, Pilate
|
||
himself -- the catalogue is long and illustrious: Justin had to
|
||
explain it thus -- "there were Christians before Christ." The
|
||
Augustan Age, just at the time of the advent of the Man of Sorrows,
|
||
was the glorious golden age of the ancient world -- and purely
|
||
pagan. And for centuries after Christ the greater part of Europe
|
||
remained pagan, and but slowly, and bloodily, gave way to
|
||
Christianity after the league of State with Church under
|
||
Constantine, as we may again notice in this sketch.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
|
||
Having given a rapid retrospect of some of the phases of
|
||
Christian history, and sought to clear away some popular
|
||
misconceptions, I shall proceed, in the following chapters, in all
|
||
conscience and truth of statement, easily verifiable by all, to
|
||
"search the Scriptures," Hebrew and Hebrao-Christian, whether these
|
||
things which they contain for our faith are worthy of faith and
|
||
credit. This search win truly "reveal" the Bible and its God in the
|
||
very words of inspiration. If they be found inspired of truth, the
|
||
first and highest duty of man is reverently to cherish and obey
|
||
them -- "for therein ye think ye have eternal life." If inspiration
|
||
and truth, divine and human, are found lacking, for God's sake and
|
||
humanity's, may intelligent people renounce forevermore the vain
|
||
priest-imposed "hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell" for
|
||
superstition's sake; let us cease wrangling and being intolerant
|
||
over moronic myths, and let us have peace from "idle tales" and
|
||
fables.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
IS IT GOD'S WORD?
|
||
by
|
||
Joseph Wheless
|
||
|
||
1926
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|