1041 lines
51 KiB
Plaintext
1041 lines
51 KiB
Plaintext
16 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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Contents of this file page
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ERNEST RENAN. 1
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A TRIBUTE TO MRS. IDA WHITING KNOWLES. 12
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AT THE GRAVE OF BENJ. W. PARKER. 13
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A TRIBUTE TO DR. THOMAS SETON ROBERTSON. 14
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A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY. 15
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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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ERNEST RENAN.
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1892
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"Blessed are those
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Whose blood and judgment are so well co-mingled
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That they are not a pipe for fortune's finger
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To sound what stop she please."
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ERNEST RENAN is dead. Another source of light; another force
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of civilization; another charming personality; another brave soul,
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graceful in thought, generous in deed; a sculptor in speech, a
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colorist in words -- clothing all in the poetry born of a
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delightful union of heart and brain -- has passed to the realm of
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rest.
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Reared under the influences of Catholicism, educated for the
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priesthood, yet by reason of his natural genius, he began to think.
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Forces that utterly subjugate and enslave the mind of mediocrity
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sometimes rouse to thought and action the superior soul.
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Renan began to think -- a dangerous thing for a Catholic to
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do. Thought leads to doubt, doubt to investigation, investigation
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to truth -- the enemy of all superstition.
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He lifted the Catholic extinguisher from the light and flame
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of reason. He found that his mental vision was improved. He read
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the Scriptures for himself, examined them as he did other books not
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claiming to be inspired. He found the same mistakes, the same
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prejudices, the same miraculous impossibilities in the book
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attributed to God that he found in those known to have been written
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by men.
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Into the path of reason, or rather into the highway, Renan was
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led by Henriette, his sister, to whom he pays a tribute that has
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the perfume of a perfect flower.
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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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ERNEST RENAN.
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"I was," writes Renan, "brought up by women and priests, and
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therein lies the whole explanation of my good qualities and of my
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defects." In most that he wrote is the tenderness of woman, only
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now and then a little touch of the priest showing itself, mostly in
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a reluctance to spoil the ivy by tearing down some prison built by
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superstition.
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||
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In spite of the heartless "scheme" of things he still found it
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||
in his heart to say, "When God shall be complete, He will be just,"
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at the same time saying that "nothing proves to us that there
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exists in the world a central consciousness -- a soul of the
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universe -- and nothing proves the contrary." So, whatever was the
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||
verdict of his brain, his heart asked for immortality. He wanted
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||
his dream, and he was willing that others should have theirs. Such
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||
is the wish and will of all great souls.
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He knew the church thoroughly and anticipated what would
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finally be written about him by churchmen: "Having some experience
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of ecclesiastical writers I can sketch out in advance the way my
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biography will be written in Spanish in some Catholic review, of
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Santa Fe, in the year 2,000. Heavens! how black I shall be! I shall
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||
be so all the more, because the church when she feels that she has
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||
lost will end with malice. She will bite like a mad dog."
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||
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He anticipated such a biography because he had thought for
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||
himself, and because he had expressed his thoughts -- because he
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had declared that "our universe, within the reach of our
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experience, is not governed by any intelligent reason. God, as the
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||
common herd understand him, the living God, the acting God -- the
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God-Providence, does not show himself in the universe" -- because
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||
he attacked the mythical and the miraculous in the life of Christ
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||
and sought to rescue from the calumnies of ignorance and faith a
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serene and lofty soul.
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The time has arrived when Jesus must become a myth or a man.
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The idea that he was the infinite God must be abandoned by all who
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are not religiously insane. Those who have given up the claim that
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he was God, insist that be was divinely appointed and illuminated;
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that he was a perfect man -- the highest possible type of the human
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race and, consequently, a perfect example for all the world.
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As time goes on, as men get wider or grander or more complex
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ideas of life, as the intellectual horizon broadens, the idea that
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Christ was perfect may be modified.
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The New Testament seems to describe several individuals under
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the same name, or at least one individual who passed through
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several stages or phases of religious development. Christ is
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described as a devout Jew, as one who endeavored to comply in all
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respects with the old law. Many sayings are attributed to him
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||
consistent with this idea. He certainly was a Hebrew in belief and
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feeling when he said, "Swear not by Heaven, because it is God's
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throne, nor by earth, for it is his footstool; nor by Jerusalem,
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for it is his holy city." These reasons were in exact accordance
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||
with the mythology of the Jews. God was regarded simply as an
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enormous man, as one who walked in the garden in the cool of the
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evening, as one who had met man face to face, who had conversed
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||
with Moses for forty days upon Mount Sinai, as a great king, with
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
2
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|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
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a throne in the heavens, using the earth to rest his feet upon, and
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regarding Jerusalem as his holy city.
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||
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Then we find plenty of evidence that he wished to reform the
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||
religion of the Jews; to fulfill the law, not to abrogate it. Then
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||
there is still another change: he has ceased his efforts to reform
|
||
that religion and has become a destroyer. He holds the Temple in
|
||
contempt and repudiates the idea that Jerusalem is the holy city.
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||
He concludes that it is unnecessary to go to some mountain or some
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||
building to worship or to find God, and insists that the heart is
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||
the true temple, that ceremonies are useless, that all pomp and
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||
pride and show are needless, 2nd that it is enough to worship God
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||
under heaven's dome, in spirit and in truth.
|
||
|
||
It is impossible to harmonize these views unless we admit that
|
||
Christ was the subject of growth and change; that in consequence of
|
||
growth and change he modified his views; that, from wanting to
|
||
preserve Judaism as it was, he became convinced that it ought to be
|
||
reformed. That he then abandoned the idea of reformation, and made
|
||
up his mind that the only reformation of which the Jewish religion
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||
was capable was destruction. If he was in fact a man, then the
|
||
course he pursued was natural; but if he was God, it is perfectly
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||
absurd. If we give to him perfect knowledge, then it is impossible
|
||
to account for change or growth. If, on the other hand, the ground
|
||
is taken that he was a perfect man, then, it might be asked; Was he
|
||
perfect when be wished to preserve, or when he wished to reform, or
|
||
when he resolved to destroy, the religion of the Jews? If he is to
|
||
be regarded as perfect, although not divine, when did he reach
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||
perfection?
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||
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||
It is perfectly evident that Christ, or the character that
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||
bears that name, imagined that the world was about to be destroyed,
|
||
or at least purified by fire, and that, on account of this curious
|
||
belief, he became the enemy of marriage, of all earthly ambition
|
||
and of all enterprise. With that view in his mind, he said to
|
||
himself, "Why should we waste our energies in producing food for
|
||
destruction? Why should we endeavor to beautify a world that is so
|
||
soon to perish?" Filled with the thought of coming change, he
|
||
insisted that there was but one important thing, and that was for
|
||
each man to save his soul. He should care nothing for the ties of
|
||
kindred, nothing for wife or child or property, in the shadow of
|
||
the coming disaster. He should take care of himself. He endeavored,
|
||
as it is said, to induce men to desert all they had, to let the
|
||
dead, bury the dead, and follow him. He told his disciples, or
|
||
those he wished to make his disciples, according to the Testament,
|
||
that it was their duty to desert wife and child and property, and
|
||
if they would so desert kindred and wealth, he would reward them
|
||
here and hereafter.
|
||
|
||
We know now -- if we know anything -- that Jesus was mistaken
|
||
about the coming of the end, and we know now that he was greatly
|
||
controlled in his ideas of life, by that mistake. Believing that
|
||
the end was near, he said, "Take no thought for the morrow, what ye
|
||
shall eat or what ye shall drink or wherewithal ye shall be
|
||
clothed." It was in view of the destruction of the world that he
|
||
called the attention of his disciples to the lily that toiled not
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
|
||
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||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
and yet excelled Solomon in the glory of its raiment. Having made
|
||
this mistake, having acted upon it, certainly we cannot now say
|
||
that he was perfect in knowledge.
|
||
|
||
He is regarded by many millions as the impersonation of
|
||
patience, of forbearance, of meekness and mercy, and yet, according
|
||
to the account, he said many extremely bitter words, and threatened
|
||
eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
We also know, if the account be true, that he claimed to have
|
||
supernatural power, to work miracles, to cure the blind and to
|
||
raise the dead, and we know that he did nothing of the kind. So if
|
||
the writers of the New Testament tell the truth as to what Christ
|
||
claimed, it is absurd to say that he was a perfect man. If honest,
|
||
he was deceived, and those who are deceived are not perfect.
|
||
|
||
There is nothing in the New Testament, so far as we know, that
|
||
touches on the duties of nation to nation, or of nation to its
|
||
citizens; nothing of human liberty; not one word about education
|
||
not the faintest hint that there is such a thing as science;
|
||
nothing calculated to stimulate industry, commerce, or invention;
|
||
not one word in favor of art, of music or anything calculated to
|
||
feed or clothe the body, nothing to develop the brain of man.
|
||
|
||
When it is assumed that the life of Christ, as described in
|
||
the New Testament, is perfect, we at least take upon ourselves the
|
||
burden of deciding what perfection is. People who asserted that
|
||
Christ was divine, that he was actually God, reached the
|
||
conclusion, without any laborious course of reasoning, that all he
|
||
said and did was absolute perfection. They said this because they
|
||
had first been convinced that he was divine. The moment his
|
||
divinity is given up and the assertion is made that he was perfect,
|
||
we are not permitted to reason in that way. They said he was God,
|
||
therefore perfect. Now, if it is admitted that he was human, the
|
||
conclusion that he was perfect does not follow. We then take the
|
||
burden upon ourselves of deciding what perfection is. To decide
|
||
what is perfect is beyond the powers of the human mind.
|
||
|
||
Renan, in spite of his education, regarded Christ as a man,
|
||
and did the best he could to account for the miracles that had been
|
||
attributed to him, for the legends that had gathered about his
|
||
name, and the impossibilities connected with his career, and also
|
||
tried to account for the origin or birth of these miracles, of
|
||
these legends, of these myths, including the resurrection and
|
||
ascension. I am not satisfied with all the conclusions he reached
|
||
or with all the paths he traveled. The refraction of light caused
|
||
by passing through a woman's tears is hardly a sufficient
|
||
foundation for a belief in so miraculous a miracle as the bodily
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||
ascension of Jesus Christ.
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||
|
||
There is another thing attributed to Christ that seems to me
|
||
conclusive evidence against the claim of perfection. Christ is
|
||
reported to have said that all sins could be forgiven except the
|
||
sin against the Holy Ghost. This sin, however, is not defined.
|
||
Although Christ died for the whole world, that through him all
|
||
might be saved, there is this one terrible exception: There is no
|
||
salvation for those who have sinned, or who may hereafter sin,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
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||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
against the Holy Ghost. Thousands of persons are now in asylums,
|
||
having lost their reason because of their fear that they bad
|
||
committed this unknown, this undefined, this unpardonable sin.
|
||
|
||
It is said that a Roman Emperor went through a form of
|
||
publishing his laws or proclamations, posting them so high on
|
||
pillars that they could not be read, and then took the lives of
|
||
those who ignorantly violated these unknown laws. He was regarded
|
||
as a tyrant, as a murderer. And yet, what shall we say of one who
|
||
declared that the sin against the Holy Ghost was the only one that
|
||
could not be forgiven, and then left an ignorant world to guess
|
||
what that sin is? Undoubtedly this horror is an interpolation.
|
||
|
||
There is something like it in the Old Testament. It is
|
||
asserted by Christians that the Ten Commandments are the foundation
|
||
of all law and of all civilization, and you will find lawyers
|
||
insisting that the Mosaic Code was the first information that man
|
||
received on the subject of law; that before that time the world was
|
||
without any knowledge of justice or mercy. If this be true the Jews
|
||
had no divine laws, no real instruction on any legal subject until
|
||
the Ten Commandments were given. Consequently, before that time
|
||
there had been proclaimed or published no law against the worship
|
||
of other gods or of idols. Moses had been on Mount Sinai talking
|
||
with Jehovah. At the end of the dialogue he received the Tables of
|
||
Stone and started down the mountain for the purpose of imparting
|
||
this information to his followers. When he reached the camp he
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||
heard music. He saw people dancing, and he found that in his
|
||
absence Aaron and the rest of the people had cast a molten calf
|
||
which they were then worshiping. This so enraged Moses that he
|
||
broke the Tables of Stone and made preparations for the punishment
|
||
of the Jews. Remember that they knew nothing about this law, and,
|
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according to the modern Christian claims, could not have known that
|
||
it was wrong to melt gold and silver and mould it in the form of a
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calf. And yet Moses killed about thirty thousand of these people
|
||
for having violated a law of which they had never heard; a law
|
||
known only to one man and one God. Nothing could be more unjust,
|
||
more ferocious, than this; and yet it can hardly be said to exceed
|
||
in cruelty the announcement that a certain sin was unpardonable and
|
||
then fail to define the sin. Possibly, to inquire what the sin is,
|
||
is the sin.
|
||
|
||
Renan regards Jesus as a man, and his work gets its value from
|
||
the fact that it is written from a human standpoint. At the same
|
||
time he, consciously or unconsciously, or may-be for the purpose of
|
||
sprinkling a little holy water on the heat of religious
|
||
indignation, now and then seems to speak of him as more than human,
|
||
or as having accomplished something that man could not.
|
||
|
||
He asserts that "the Gospels are in part legendary; that they
|
||
contain many things not true; that they are full of miracles and of
|
||
the supernatural." At the same time he insists that these legends,
|
||
these miracles, these supernatural things do not affect the truth
|
||
of the probable things contained in these writings. He sees, and
|
||
sees clearly, that there is no evidence that Matthew or Mark or
|
||
Luke or John wrote the books attributed to them; that, as a matter
|
||
of fact, the mere title of "according to Matthew... "according to
|
||
Mark," shows that they were written by others who claimed them to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
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||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
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||
|
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be in accordance with the stories that had been told by Matthew or
|
||
by Mark. So Renan takes the ground that the Gospel of Luke is
|
||
founded on anterior documents and "is the work of a man who
|
||
selected, pruned and combined, and that the same man wrote the Acts
|
||
of the Apostles and in the same way."
|
||
|
||
The gospels were certainly written long after the events
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||
described, and Renan finds the reason for this in the fact that the
|
||
Christians believed that the world was about to end; that,
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||
consequently, there was no need of composing books; it was only
|
||
necessary for them to preserve in their hearts during the little
|
||
margin of time that remained a lively image of Him whom they soon
|
||
expected to meet in the clouds. For this reason the gospels
|
||
themselves had but little authority for 150 years, the Christians
|
||
relying on oral traditions. Renan shows that there was not the
|
||
slightest scruple about inserting additions in the gospels,
|
||
variously combining them, and in completing some by taking parts
|
||
from others; that the books passed from hand to hand, and that each
|
||
one transcribed in the margin of his copy the words and parables he
|
||
had found elsewhere which touched him; that it was not until human
|
||
tradition became weakened that the text bearing the names of the
|
||
apostles became authoritative.
|
||
|
||
Renan has criticized the gospels somewhat in the same spirit
|
||
that he would criticize a modern work. He saw clearly that the
|
||
metaphysics filling the discourses of John were deformities and
|
||
distortions, full of mysticism, having nothing to do really with
|
||
the character of Jesus. He shows too "that the simple idea of the
|
||
Kingdom of God, at the time the Gospel according to St. John was
|
||
written, had faded away; that the hope of the advent of Christ was
|
||
growing dim, and that from belief the disciples passed into
|
||
discussion, from discussion to dogma, from dogma to ceremony," and,
|
||
finding that the new Heaven and the new Earth were not coming as
|
||
expected, they turned their attention to governing the old Heaven
|
||
and the old Earth. The disciples were willing to be humble for a
|
||
few days, with the expectation of wearing crowns forever. They were
|
||
satisfied with poverty, believing that the wealth of the world was
|
||
to be theirs. The coming of Christ, however, being for some
|
||
unaccountable reason delayed, poverty and humility grew irksome,
|
||
and human nature began to assert itself.
|
||
|
||
In the Gospel of John you will find the metaphysics of the
|
||
church. There you find the Second Birth. There you find the
|
||
doctrine of the atonement clearly set forth. There you find that
|
||
God died for the whole world, and that whosoever believeth not in
|
||
him is to be damned. There is nothing of the kind in Matthew.
|
||
Matthew makes Christ say that, if you will forgive others, God will
|
||
forgive you. The Gospel "according to Mark" is the same. So is the
|
||
Gospel "according to Luke." There is nothing about salvation
|
||
through belief, nothing about the atonement. In Mark, in the last
|
||
chapter, the apostles are told to go into all the world and preach
|
||
the gospel, with the statement that whoever believed and was
|
||
baptized should be saved, and whoever failed to believe should be
|
||
damned. But we now know that that is an interpolation.
|
||
Consequently, Matthew, Mark and Luke never had the faintest
|
||
conception of the "Christian religion." They knew nothing of the
|
||
atonement, nothing of salvation by faith -- nothing. So that if a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
man had read only Matthew, Mark and Luke, and had strictly followed
|
||
what he found, he would have found himself, after death, in
|
||
perdition.
|
||
|
||
Renan finds that certain portions of the Gospel "according to
|
||
John" were added later; that the entire twenty-first chapter is an
|
||
interpolation; also, that many places bear the traces of erasures
|
||
and corrections. So he says that it would be "impossible for any
|
||
one to compose a life of Jesus, with any meaning in it, from the
|
||
discourses which John attributes to him, and he holds that this
|
||
Gospel of John is full of preaching, Christ demonstrating himself;
|
||
full of argumentation, full of stage effect, devoid of simplicity,
|
||
with long arguments after each miracle, stiff and awkward
|
||
discourses, the tone of which is often false and unequal." He also
|
||
insists that there are evidently "artificial portions, variations
|
||
like that of a musician improvising on a given theme."
|
||
|
||
In spite of all this, Renan, willing to soothe the prejudice
|
||
of his time, takes the ground that the four canonical gospels are
|
||
authentic, that they date from the first century, that the authors
|
||
were, generally speaking, those to whom they are attributed; but he
|
||
insists that their historic value is very diverse. This is a back-
|
||
handed stroke. Admitting, first, that they are authentic; second,
|
||
that they were written about the end of the first century; third,
|
||
that they are not of equal value, disposes, so far as he is
|
||
concerned, of the dogma of inspiration.
|
||
|
||
One is at a loss to understand why four gospels should have
|
||
been written. As a matter of fact there can be only one true
|
||
account of any occurrence, or of any number of occurrences. Now, it
|
||
must be taken for granted, that an inspired account is true. Why
|
||
then should there be four inspired accounts? It may be answered
|
||
that all were not to write the entire story. To this the reply is
|
||
that all attempted to cover substantially the same ground.
|
||
|
||
Many years ago the early fathers thought it necessary to say
|
||
why there were four inspired books, and some of them said because
|
||
there were four cardinal directions and the gospels fitted the
|
||
north, south, east and west. Others said that there were four
|
||
principal winds -- a gospel for each wind. They might have added
|
||
that some animals have four legs.
|
||
|
||
Renan admits that the narrative portions have not the same
|
||
authority; "that many legends proceeded from the zeal of the second
|
||
Christian generation; that the narrative of Luke is historically
|
||
weak; that sentences attributed to Jesus have been distorted and
|
||
exaggerated; that the book was written outside of Palestine and
|
||
after the siege of Jerusalem; that Luke endeavors to make the
|
||
different narratives agree, changing them for that purpose; that he
|
||
softens the passages which had become embarrassing; that he
|
||
exaggerated the marvelous, omitted errors in chronology; that he
|
||
was a compiler, a man who had not been an eye-witness himself, and
|
||
who had not seen eye-witnesses, but who labors at texts and wrests
|
||
their sense to make them agree." This certainly is very far from
|
||
inspiration. So "Luke interprets the documents according to his own
|
||
idea; being a kind of anarchist, opposed to property, and persuaded
|
||
that the triumph of the poor was approaching; that he was
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
especially fond of the anecdotes showing the conversion of sinners,
|
||
the exaltation of the humble, and that he modified ancient
|
||
traditions to give them this meaning."
|
||
|
||
Renan reached the conclusion that the gospels are neither
|
||
biographies after the manner of Suetonius nor fictitious legends in
|
||
the style of Philostratus, but that they are legendary biographies
|
||
like the legends of the saints, the lives of Plotinus and Isidore,
|
||
in which historical truth and the desire to present models of
|
||
virtue are combined in various degrees; that they are "inexact;"
|
||
that they "contain numerous errors and discordances." So he takes
|
||
the ground that twenty or thirty years after Christ, his reputation
|
||
had greatly increased, that "legends had begun to gather about Him
|
||
like clouds," that death added to His perfection, freeing Him from
|
||
all defects in the eyes of those who had loved Him, that His
|
||
followers wrested the prophecies so that they might fit Him. They
|
||
said, 'He is the Messiah.' The Messiah was to do certain things;
|
||
therefore Jesus did certain things. Then an account would be given
|
||
of the doing." All of which of course shows that there can be
|
||
maintained no theory of inspiration.
|
||
|
||
It is admitted that where individuals are witnesses of the
|
||
same transaction, and where they agree upon the vital points and
|
||
disagree upon details, the disagreement may be consistent with
|
||
their honesty, as tending to show that they have not agreed upon a
|
||
story; but if the witnesses are inspired of God then there is no
|
||
reason for their disagreeing on anything, and if they do disagree
|
||
it is a demonstration that they were not inspired, but it is not a
|
||
demonstration that they are not honest. While perfect agreement may
|
||
be evidence of rehearsal, a failure to perfectly agree is not a
|
||
demonstration of the truth or falsity of a story; but if the
|
||
witnesses claim to be inspired, the slightest disagreement is a
|
||
demonstration that they were not inspired.
|
||
|
||
Renan reaches the conclusion, proving every step that he
|
||
takes, that the four principal documents -- that is to say, the
|
||
four gospels -- are in "flagrant contradiction one with another."
|
||
He attacks, and with perfect success, the miracles of the
|
||
Scriptures, and upon this subject says: "Observation, which has
|
||
never once been falsified, teaches us that miracles never happen,
|
||
but in times and countries in which they are believed and before
|
||
persons disposed to believe them. No miracle ever occurred in the
|
||
presence. of men capable of testing its miraculous character." He
|
||
further takes the ground that no contemporary miracle will bear
|
||
inquiry, and that consequently it is probable that the miracles of
|
||
antiquity which have been performed in popular gatherings would be
|
||
shown to be simple illusion, were it possible to criticize them in
|
||
detail. In the name of universal experience he banishes miracles
|
||
from history. These were brave things to do, things that will bear
|
||
good fruit. As long as men believe in miracles, past or present,
|
||
they remain the prey of superstition. The Catholic is taught that
|
||
miracles were performed anciently not only, but that they are still
|
||
being performed. This is consistent inconsistency. Protestants
|
||
teach a double doctrine: That miracles used to be performed, that
|
||
the laws of nature used to be violated, but that no miracle is
|
||
performed now. No Protestant will admit that any miracle was
|
||
performed by the Catholic Church. Otherwise, Protestants could not
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
be justified in leaving a church with whom the God of miracles
|
||
dwelt. So every Protestant has to adopt two kinds of reasoning:
|
||
that the laws of Nature used to be violated and that miracles used
|
||
to be performed, that since the apostolic age Nature has had her
|
||
way and the Lord has allowed facts to exist and to hold the field.
|
||
A supernatural account, according to Renan, "always implies
|
||
credulity or imposture," -- probably both.
|
||
|
||
It does not seem possible to me that Christ claimed for
|
||
himself what the Testament claims for him. These claims were made
|
||
by admirers, by followers, by missionaries.
|
||
|
||
When the early Christians went to Rome they found plenty of
|
||
demigods. It was hard to set aside the religion of a demigod by
|
||
telling the story of a man from Nazareth. These missionaries, not
|
||
to be outdone in ancestry, insisted -- and this was after the
|
||
Gospel "according to St. John" had been written -- that Christ was
|
||
the Son of God. Matthew believed that he was the son of David, and
|
||
the Messiah, and gave the genealogy of Joseph, his father, to
|
||
support that claim.
|
||
|
||
In the time of Christ no one imagined that he was of divine
|
||
origin. This was an after-growth. In order to place themselves on
|
||
an equality with Pagans they started the claim of divinity, and
|
||
also took the second step requisite in that country: First, a god
|
||
for his father, and second, a virgin for his mother. This was the
|
||
Pagan combination of greatness, and the Christians added to this
|
||
that Christ was God.
|
||
|
||
It is hard to agree with the conclusion reached by Renan, that
|
||
Christ formed and intended to form a church. Such evidence, it
|
||
seems to me, is hard to find in the Testament. Christ seemed to
|
||
satisfy himself, according to the Testament, with a few statements,
|
||
some of them exceedingly wise and tender, some utterly
|
||
impracticable and some intolerant.
|
||
|
||
If we accept the conclusions reached by Renan we will throw
|
||
away the legends without foundation; the miraculous legends; and
|
||
everything inconsistent with what we know of Nature. Very little
|
||
will be left -- a few sayings to be found among those attributed to
|
||
Confucius, to Buddha, to Krishna, to Epictetus, to Zeno, and to
|
||
many others. Some of these sayings are full of wisdom, full of
|
||
kindness, and others rush to such extremes that they touch the
|
||
borders of insanity. When struck on one cheek to turn the other, is
|
||
really joining a conspiracy to secure the triumph of brutality. To
|
||
agree not to resist evil is to become an accomplice of all
|
||
injustice. We must not take from industry, from patriotism, from
|
||
virtue, the right of self-defence.
|
||
|
||
Undoubtedly Renan gave an honest transcript of his mind, the
|
||
road his thought had followed, the reasons in their order that had
|
||
occurred to him, the criticisms born of thought, and the
|
||
qualifications, softening phrases, children of old sentiments and
|
||
emotions that had not entirely passed away. He started, one might
|
||
say, from the altar and, during a considerable part of the journey,
|
||
carried the incense with him. The farther he got away, the greater
|
||
was his clearness of vision and the more thoroughly he was
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
convinced that Christ was merely a man, an idealist. But,
|
||
remembering the altar, he excused exaggeration in the "inspired"
|
||
books, not because it was from heaven, not because it was in
|
||
harmony with our ideas of veracity, but because the writers of the
|
||
gospel were imbued with the Oriental spirit of exaggeration, a
|
||
spirit perfectly understood by the people who first read the
|
||
gospels, because the readers knew the habits of the writers.
|
||
|
||
It had been contended for many years that no one could pass
|
||
judgment on the veracity of the Scriptures who did not understand
|
||
Hebrew. This position was perfectly absurd. No man needs to be a
|
||
student of Hebrew to know that the shadow on the dial did not go
|
||
back several degrees to convince a petty king that a boil was not
|
||
to be fatal. Renan, however, filled the requirement. He was an
|
||
excellent Hebrew scholar. This wag a fortunate circumstance,
|
||
because it answered a very old objection.
|
||
|
||
The founder of Christianity was, for his own sake, taken from
|
||
the divine pedestal and allowed to stand like other men on the
|
||
earth, to be judged by what he said and did, by his theories. by
|
||
his philosophy, by his spirit.
|
||
|
||
No matter whether Renan came to a correct conclusion or not,
|
||
his work did a vast deal of good. He convinced many that implicit
|
||
reliance could not be placed upon the gospels, that the gospels
|
||
themselves are of unequal worth; that they were deformed by
|
||
ignorance and falsehood, or, at least, by mistake; that if they
|
||
wished to save the reputation of Christ they must not rely wholly
|
||
on the gospels, or on what is found in the New Testament, but they
|
||
must go farther and examine all legends touching him. Not only so,
|
||
but they must throw away the miraculous, the impossible and the
|
||
absurd.
|
||
|
||
He also has shown that the early followers of Christ
|
||
endeavored to add to the reputation of their Master by attributing
|
||
to him the miraculous and the foolish; that while these stories
|
||
added to his reputation at that time, since the world has advanced
|
||
they must be cast aside or the reputation of the Master must
|
||
suffer.
|
||
|
||
It will not do now to say that Christ himself pretended to do
|
||
miracles. This would establish the fact at least that he was
|
||
mistaken. But we are compelled to say that his disciples insisted
|
||
that he was a worker of miracles. This shows, either that they were
|
||
mistaken or untruthful.
|
||
|
||
We all know that a sleight-of-hand performer could gain a
|
||
greater reputation among savages than Darwin or Humboldt; and we
|
||
know that the world in the time of Christ was filled with
|
||
barbarians, with people who demanded the miraculous, who expected
|
||
it; with people, in fact, who had a stronger belief in the
|
||
supernatural than in the natural; people who never thought it worth
|
||
while to record facts. The hero of such people, the Christ of such
|
||
people, with his miracles, cannot be the Christ of the thoughtful
|
||
and scientific.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
Renan was a man of most excellent temper; candid; not striving
|
||
for victory, but for truth; conquering, as far as he could, the old
|
||
superstitions; not entirely free, it may be, but believing himself
|
||
to be so. He did great good. He has helped to destroy the fictions
|
||
of faith. He has helped to rescue man from the prison of
|
||
superstition, and this is the greatest benefit that man can bestow
|
||
on man.
|
||
|
||
He did another great service, not only to Jews, but to
|
||
Christendom, by writing the history of "The People of Israel."
|
||
Christians for many centuries have persecuted the Jews. They have
|
||
charged them with the greatest conceivable crime -- with having
|
||
crucified an infinite God. This absurdity has hardened the hearts
|
||
of men and poisoned the minds of children. The persecution of the
|
||
Jews is the meanest, the most senseless and cruel page in history.
|
||
Every civilized Christian should feel on his cheeks the red spots
|
||
of shame as he reads the wretched and infamous story.
|
||
|
||
The flame of this prejudice is fanned and fed in the Sunday
|
||
schools of our day, and the orthodox minister points proudly to the
|
||
atrocities perpetrated against the Jews by the barbarians of Russia
|
||
as evidences of the truth of the inspired Scriptures. In every
|
||
wound God puts a tongue to proclaim the truth of his book.
|
||
|
||
If the charge that the Jews killed God were true, it is hardly
|
||
reasonable to hold those who are now living responsible for what
|
||
their ancestors did nearly nineteen centuries ago.
|
||
|
||
But there is another point in connection with this matter: If
|
||
Christ was God, then the Jews could not have killed him without his
|
||
consent; and, according to the orthodox creed, if he had not been
|
||
sacrificed, the whole world would have suffered eternal pain.
|
||
Nothing can exceed the meanness of the prejudice of Christians
|
||
against the Jewish people. They should not be held responsible for
|
||
their savage ancestors, or for their belief that Jehovah was an
|
||
intelligent and merciful God, superior to all other gods. Even
|
||
Christians do not wish to be held responsible for the Inquisition,
|
||
for the Torquemadas and the John Calvins, for the witch-burners and
|
||
the Quaker-whippers, for the slave-traders and child-stealers, the
|
||
most of whom were believers in our "glorious gospel," and many of
|
||
whom had been born the second time.
|
||
|
||
Renan did much to civilize the Christians by telling the truth
|
||
in a charming and convincing way about the "People of Israel." Both
|
||
sides are greatly indebted to him: one he has ably defended, and
|
||
the other greatly enlightened.
|
||
|
||
Having done what good he could in giving what he believed was
|
||
light to his fellow-men, he had no fear of becoming a victim of
|
||
God's wrath, and so he laughingly said: "For my part I imagine that
|
||
if the Eternal in his severity were to send me to hell I should
|
||
succeed in escaping from it. I would send up to my Creator a
|
||
supplication that would make him smile. The course of reasoning by
|
||
which I would prove to him that it was through his fault that I was
|
||
damned would be so subtle that he would find some difficulty in
|
||
replying. The fate which would suit me best is Purgatory -- a
|
||
charming place, where many delightful romances begun on earth must
|
||
be continued."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
ERNEST RENAN.
|
||
|
||
Such cheerfulness, such good philosophy, with cap and bells,
|
||
such banter and blasphemy, such sound and solid sense drive to
|
||
madness the priest who thinks the curse of Rome can frighten the
|
||
world. How the snake of superstition writhes when he finds that his
|
||
fangs have lost their poison.
|
||
|
||
He was one of the gentlest of men -- one of the fairest in
|
||
discussion, dissenting from the views of others with modesty,
|
||
presenting his own with clearness and candor. His mental manners
|
||
were excellent. He was not positive as to the "unknowable." He said
|
||
"Perhaps." He knew that knowledge is good if it increases the
|
||
happiness of man; and he felt that superstition is the assassin of
|
||
liberty and civilization. He lived a life of cheerfulness, of
|
||
industry, devoted to the welfare of mankind.
|
||
|
||
He was a seeker of happiness by the highway of the natural, a
|
||
destroyer of the dogmas of mental deformity, a worshiper of Liberty
|
||
and the Ideal. As he lived, he died -- hopeful and serene -- and
|
||
now, standing in imagination by his grave, we ask: Will the night
|
||
be eternal? The brain says, Perhaps; while the heart hopes for the
|
||
Dawn.
|
||
|
||
North American Review, November, 1892.
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
A TRIBUTE TO MRS. IDA WHITING KNOWLES.
|
||
|
||
New York, Dec. 16, 1887.
|
||
|
||
MY FRIENDS: Again we stand in the shadow of the great mystery
|
||
-- a shadow as deep and dark as when the tears of the first mother
|
||
fell upon the pallid face of her lifeless babe -- a mystery that
|
||
has never yet been solved.
|
||
|
||
We have met in the presence of the sacred dead, to speak a
|
||
word of praise, of hope, of consolation.
|
||
|
||
Another life of love is now a blessed memory -- a lingering
|
||
strain of music.
|
||
|
||
The loving daughter, the pure and consecrated wife, the
|
||
sincere friend, who with tender faithfulness discharged the duties
|
||
of a life, has reached her journey's end.
|
||
|
||
A braver, a more serene, a more chivalric spirit -- clasping
|
||
the loved and by them clasped -- never passed from life to enrich
|
||
the realm of death. No field of war ever witnessed greater
|
||
fortitude, more perfect, smiling courage than this poor, weak and
|
||
helpless woman displayed upon the bed of pain and death.
|
||
|
||
Her life was gentle and her death sublime. She loved the good
|
||
and all the good loved her.
|
||
|
||
There is this consolation: she can never suffer more; never
|
||
feel again the chill of death; never part again from those she
|
||
loves. Her heart can break no more. She has shed her last tear, and
|
||
upon her stainless brow has been set the wondrous seal of
|
||
everlasting peace.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
A TRIBUTE TO MRS. IDA WHITING KNOWLES.
|
||
|
||
When the Angel of Death -- the masked and voiceless -- enters
|
||
the door of home, there come with her all the daughters of
|
||
Compassion, and of these Love and Hope remain forever.
|
||
|
||
You are about to take this dear dust home to the home of her
|
||
girlhood, and to the place that was once my home. You will lay her
|
||
with neighbors whom I have loved, and who are now at rest. You will
|
||
lay her where my father sleeps.
|
||
|
||
"Lay her i' the earth,
|
||
And from her fair and unpolluted flesh
|
||
May violets spring."
|
||
|
||
I never knew, I never met, a braver spirit than the one that
|
||
once inhabited this silent form of dreamless clay.
|
||
|
||
END
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
This was the first tribute ever delivered by Colonel Ingersoll
|
||
at a grave. Mr. Parker himself was an Agnostic, was the father of
|
||
Mrs. Ingersoll, and was always a devoted friend and admirer of the
|
||
Colonel even before the latter's marriage with his daughter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
AT THE GRAVE OF BENJ. W. PARKER.
|
||
|
||
Peoria, Ill., May 24, 1876.
|
||
|
||
FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS: To fulfill a promise made many years
|
||
ago, I wish to say a word.
|
||
|
||
He whom we are about to lay in the earth, was gentle, kind and
|
||
loving in his life. He was ambitious only to live with those he
|
||
loved. He was hospitable, generous, and sincere. He loved his
|
||
friends, and the friends of his friends. He returned good for good.
|
||
He lived the life of a child, and died without leaving in the
|
||
memory of his family the record of an unkind act. Without
|
||
assurance, and without fear, we give him back to Nature, the source
|
||
and mother of us all.
|
||
|
||
With morn, with noon, with night; with changing clouds and
|
||
changeless stars; with grass and trees and birds, with leaf and
|
||
bud, with flower and blossoming vine, -- with all the sweet
|
||
influences of nature, we leave our dead.
|
||
|
||
Husband, father, friend, farewell.
|
||
|
||
END
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
A TRIBUTE TO DR. THOMAS SETON ROBERTSON.
|
||
|
||
New York September 8, 1898.
|
||
|
||
IN the pulseless hush of death, silence seems more expressive,
|
||
more appropriate -- than speech. In the presence of the Great
|
||
Mystery, the great mystery that waits to enshroud us all, we feel
|
||
the uselessness of words. But where a fellow-mortal has reached his
|
||
journey's end -- where the darkness from which he emerged has
|
||
received him again, it is but natural for his friends to mingle
|
||
with their grief, expressions of their love and loss.
|
||
|
||
He who lies before us in the sleep of death was generous to
|
||
his fellow-men. His hands were always stretched to help, to save.
|
||
He pitied the friendless, the unfortunate, the hopeless -- proud of
|
||
his skill -- of his success. He was quick to decide -- to act --
|
||
prompt, tireless, forgetful of self. He lengthened life and
|
||
conquered pain -- hundreds are well and happy now because he lived.
|
||
This is enough. This puts a star above the gloom of death.
|
||
|
||
He was sensitive to the last degree -- quick to feel a slight
|
||
-- to resent a wrong -- but in the warmth of kindness the thorn of
|
||
hatred blossomed. He was not quite fashioned for this world. The
|
||
flints and thorns on life's highway bruised and pierced his flesh,
|
||
and for his wounds he did not have the blessed balm of patience. He
|
||
felt the manacles, the limitations -- the imprisonments of life and
|
||
so within the walls and bars he wore his very soul away. He could
|
||
not bear the storms. The tides, the winds, the waves, In the
|
||
morning of his life, dashed his frail bark against the rocks.
|
||
|
||
He fought as best he could, and that he failed was not his
|
||
fault.
|
||
|
||
He was honest, generous and courageous. These three great
|
||
virtues were his. He was a true and steadfast friend, seeing only
|
||
the goodness of the ones he loved. Only a great and noble heart is
|
||
capable of this.
|
||
|
||
But he has passed beyond the reach of praise or blame --
|
||
passed to the realm of rest -- to the waveless calm of perfect
|
||
peace.
|
||
|
||
The storm is spent -- the winds are hushed -- the waves have
|
||
died along the shore -- the tides are still -- the aching heart has
|
||
ceased to beat, and within the brain all thoughts, all hopes and
|
||
fears -- ambitions, memories, rejoicings and regrets -- all images
|
||
and pictures of the world, of life, are now as though they had not
|
||
been. And yet Hope, the child of Love -- the deathless, beyond the
|
||
darkness sees the dawn. And we who knew and loved him, we, who now
|
||
perform the last sad rites -- the last that friendship can suggest
|
||
-- will keep his memory green."
|
||
|
||
Dear Friend. farewell! "If we do meet again we shall smile
|
||
indeed -- if not, this parting is well made." Farewell!
|
||
|
||
END
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY.
|
||
|
||
A FEW years ago there were many thousand miles of railroads to
|
||
be built, a great many towns and cities to be located, constructed
|
||
and filled; vast areas of uncultivated land were waiting for the
|
||
plow, vast forests the axe, and thousands of mines were longing to
|
||
be opened. In those days every young man of energy and industry had
|
||
a future. The professions were not overcrowded; there were more
|
||
patients than doctors, more litigants than lawyers, more buyers of
|
||
goods than merchants. The young man of that time who was raised on
|
||
a farm got a little education, taught school, read law or medicine
|
||
-- some of the weaker ones read theology -- and there seemed to be
|
||
plenty of room, plenty of avenues to success and distinction So,
|
||
too, a few years ago a political life was considered honorable, and
|
||
so in politics there were many great careers. So, hundreds of towns
|
||
wanted newspapers, and in each of those towns there was an opening
|
||
for some energetic young man. At that time the plant cost but
|
||
little; a few dollars purchased the press -- the young publisher
|
||
could get the paper stock on credit.
|
||
|
||
Now the railroads have all been built; the canals are
|
||
finished; the cities have been located; the outside property has
|
||
been cut into lots, and sold and mortgaged many times over. Now it
|
||
requires great capital to go into business. The individual is
|
||
counting for less and less; the corporation, the trust, for more
|
||
and more. Now a great merchant employs hundreds of clerks; a few
|
||
years ago most of those now clerks would have been merchants. And
|
||
so it seems to be in nearly every department of life. Of course, I
|
||
do not know what inventions may leap from the brains of the future;
|
||
there may be millions and millions of fortunes yet to be made in
|
||
that direction, but of that I am not speaking.
|
||
|
||
So, I think that a few years ago the chances were far more
|
||
numerous and favorable to young men who wished to make a name for
|
||
themselves, and to succeed in some department of human energy than
|
||
now.
|
||
|
||
In savage life a living is very easy to get. Most any savage
|
||
can hunt or fish; consequently there are few failures. But in
|
||
civilized life competition becomes stronger and sharper;
|
||
consequently, the percentage of failures increases, and this seems
|
||
to be the law. The individual is constantly counting for less. It
|
||
may be that, on the average, people live better than they did
|
||
formerly, that they have more to eat, drink and wear; but the
|
||
individual horizon has lessened; it is not so wide and cloudless as
|
||
formerly. So I say that the chances for great fortunes, for great
|
||
success, are growing less and less.
|
||
|
||
I think a young man should do that which is easiest for him to
|
||
do, provided there is an opportunity; if there is none, then he
|
||
should take the next. The first object of every young man should be
|
||
to be self-supporting, no matter in what direction -- be
|
||
independent. He should avoid being a clerk and he should avoid
|
||
giving his future into the hands of any one person. He should
|
||
endeavor to get a business in which the community will be his
|
||
patron, and whether he is to be a lawyer, a doctor or a day-laborer
|
||
depends on how much he has mixed mind with muscle.
|
||
|
||
If a young man imagines that he has an aptitude for public
|
||
speaking -- that is, if he has a great desire to make his ideas
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY.
|
||
|
||
known to the world -- the probability is that the desire will
|
||
choose the way, time and place for him to make the effort.
|
||
|
||
If he really has something to say, there will be plenty to
|
||
listen. If he is so carried away with his subject, is so in earnest
|
||
that he becomes an instrumentality of his thought -- so that he is
|
||
forgotten by himself; so that he cares neither for applause nor
|
||
censure -- simply caring to present his thoughts in the highest and
|
||
best and most comprehensive way, the probability is that he will be
|
||
an orator.
|
||
|
||
I think oratory is something that cannot be taught.
|
||
Undoubtedly a man can learn to be a fair talker. He can by practice
|
||
learn to present his ideas consecutively, clearly and in what you
|
||
may call "form," but there is as much difference between this and
|
||
an oration as there is between a skeleton and a living human being
|
||
clad in sensitive, throbbing flesh.
|
||
|
||
There are millions of skeleton makers, millions of people who
|
||
can express what may be called "the bones" of a discourse, but not
|
||
one in a million who can clothe these bones.
|
||
|
||
You can no more teach a man to be an orator than you can teach
|
||
him to be an artist or a poet of the first class. When you teach
|
||
him there is the same difference between the man who is taught, and
|
||
the man who is what he is by virtue of a natural aptitude, that
|
||
there is between a pump and a spring -- between a canal and a river
|
||
-- between April rain and water-works, It is a question of capacity
|
||
and feeling -- not of education. There are some things that you can
|
||
tell an orator not to do. For instance, he should never drink water
|
||
while talking, because the interest is broken and for the moment he
|
||
loses control of his audience. He should never look at his watch
|
||
for the same reason. He should never talk about himself. He should
|
||
never deal in personalities. He should never tell long stories, and
|
||
if he tells any story he should never say that it is a true story,
|
||
and that he knew the parties. This makes it a question of veracity
|
||
instead of a question of art. He should never clog his discourse
|
||
with details. He should never dwell upon particulars -- he should
|
||
touch universals, because the great truths are for all time.
|
||
|
||
If he wants to know something, if he wishes to feel something,
|
||
let him read Shakespeare. Let him listen to the music of Wagner, of
|
||
Beethoven, or Schubert. If he wishes to express himself in the
|
||
highest and most perfect form, let him become familiar with the
|
||
great paintings of the world -- with the great statues -- all these
|
||
will lend grace, will give movement and passion and rhythm to his
|
||
words. A great orator puts into his speech the perfume, the
|
||
feelings, the intensity of all the great and beautiful and
|
||
marvelous things that he has seen and heard and felt. An orator
|
||
must be a poet, a metaphysician, a logician -- and above all, must
|
||
have sympathy with all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|