2861 lines
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Plaintext
2861 lines
140 KiB
Plaintext
44 page printout.
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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FIFTH INTERVIEW.
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1882
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PARSON. You had better join the church; it is the safer way.
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SINNER. I can't live up to your doctrines, and you know it.
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PARSON. Well, you can come as near it in the church as out;
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and forgiveness will be easer if you join us.
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SINNER. What do you mean by that?
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PARSON. I will tell you. If you join the church, and happen
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to backslide now and then, Christ will say to his Father: "That man
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is a friend of mine, and you may charge his account to me."
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QUESTION. What have you to say about the fifth sermon of the
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Rev. Mr. Talmage in reply to you?
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ANSWER. The text from which he preached is: "Do men gather
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grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?" I am compelled to answer
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these questions in the negative. That is one reason why I am an
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infidel. I do not believe that anybody can gather grapes of thorns,
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or figs of thistles. That is exactly my doctrine. But the doctrine
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of the church is, that you can. The church says, that just at the
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last, no matter if you have spent your whole life in raising thorns
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and thistles, in planting and watering and hoeing and plowing
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thorns and thistles -- that just at the last, if you will repent,
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between hoeing the last thistle and taking the last breath, you can
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reach out the white and palsied hand of death and gather from every
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thorn a cluster of grapes and from every thistle an abundance of
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figs. The church insists that in this way you can gather enough
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grapes and figs to last you through all eternity.
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My doctrine is, that he who raises thorns must harvest thorns.
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If you sow thorns, you must reap thorns; and there is no way by
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which an innocent being can have the thorns you raise thrust into
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his brow, while you gather his grapes.
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But Christianity goes even further than this. It insists that
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a man can plant grapes and gather thorns Mr.Talmage insists that,
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no matter how good you are, no matter how kind, no matter how much
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you love your wife and children, no matter how many self-denying
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acts you do, you will not be allowed to eat of the grapes you
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raise; that God will step between you and the natural consequences
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of your goodness, and not allow you to reap what you sow. Mr.
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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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FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
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Talmage insists, that if you have no faith in the Lord Jesus
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Christ, although you have been good here, you will reap eternal
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pain as your harvest; that the effect of honesty and kindness will
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not be peace and Joy, but agony and pain. So that the church does
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insist not only that you can gather grapes from thorns, but thorns
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from grapes.
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I believe exactly the other way. If a man is a good man here,
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dying will not change him, and he will land on the shore of another
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world -- if there is one -- the same good man that he was when he
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left this; and I do not believe there is any God in this universe
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who can afford to damn a good man. This God will say to this man:
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You loved your wife, your children, and your friends, and I love
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you. You treated others with kindness; I will treat you in the same
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way. But Mr. Talmage steps up to his God, nudges his elbow, and
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says: Although he was a very good man, he belonged to no church; he
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was a blasphemer; he denied the whale story, and after I explained
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that Jonah was only in the whale's mouth, he still denied it; and
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thereupon Mr. Talmage expects that his infinite God will fly in a
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passion, and in a perfect rage will say: What! did he deny that
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story? Let him be eternally damned!
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Not only this, but Mr. Talmage insists that a man may have
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treated his wife like a wild beast; may have trampled his child
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beneath the feet of his rage; may have lived a life of dishonesty,
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of infamy, and yet, having repented on his dying bed, having made
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his peace with God through the intercession of his Son, he will be
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welcomed in heaven with shouts of joy, I deny it. I do not believe
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that angels can be so quickly made from rascals. I have but little
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confidence in repentance without restitution, and a husband who has
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driven a wife to insanity and death by his cruelty -- afterward
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repenting and finding himself in heaven, and missing his wife, --
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were he worthy to be an angel, would wander through all the gulfs
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of hell until he clasped her once again.
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Now, the next question is, What must be done with those who
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are sometimes good and sometimes bad? That is my condition. If
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there is another world, I expect to have the same opportunity of
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behaving myself that I have here. If, when I get there, I fail to
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act as I should, I expect to reap what I sow. If when I arrive at
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the New Jerusalem, I go into the thorn business, I expect to
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harvest what I plant. If I am wise enough to start a vineyard, I
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expect to have grapes in the early fall. But if I do there as I
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have done here -- plant some grapes and some thorns, and harvest
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them together -- I expect to fare very much as I have fared here.
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But I expect year by year to grow wiser, to plant fewer thorns
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every spring, and more grapes.
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QUESTION. Mr. Talmage charges that you have taken the ground
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that the Bible is a cruel book, and has produced cruel people?
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ANSWER. yes, I have taken that ground, and I maintain it. The
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Bible was produced by cruel people, and in its turn it has produced
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people like its authors. The extermination of the Canaanites was
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cruel. Most of the laws of Moses were bloodthirsty and cruel.
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Hundreds of offenses were punishable by death, while now, in
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civilized countries, there are only two crimes for which the
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
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punishment is capital. I charge that Moses and Joshua and David and
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Samuel and Solomon were cruel. I believe that to read and believe
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the Old Testament naturally makes a man careless of human life.
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That book has produced hundreds of religious wars, and it has
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furnished the battle-cries of bigotry for fifteen hundred years.
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The Old Testament is filled with cruelty, but its cruelty
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stops with this world, its malice ends with death; whenever its
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victim has reached the grave, revenge is satisfied. Not so with the
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New Testament. It pursues its victim forever. After death, comes
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hell; after the grave, the worm that never dies. So that, as a
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matter of fact, the New Testament is infinitely more cruel than the
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Old.
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Nothing has so tended to harden the human heart as the
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doctrine of eternal punishment, and that passage: "He that
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believeth and is baptized shall be saved, and he that believeth not
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shall be damned," has shed more blood than all the other so-called
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"sacred books" of all this world.
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I insist that the Bible is cruel. The Bible invented
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instruments of torture. The Bible laid the foundations of the
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Inquisition. The Bible furnished the fagots and the martyrs. The
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Bible forged chains not only for the hands, but for the brains of
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men. The Bible was at the bottom of the massacre of St.
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Bartholomew. Every man who has been persecuted for religion's sake
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has been persecuted by the Bible. That sacred book has been a beast
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of prey.
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The truth is, Christians have been good in spite of the Bible.
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The Bible has lived upon the reputations of good men and good
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women, -- men and women who were good notwithstanding the brutality
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they found upon the inspired page. Men have said: "My mother
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||
believed in the Bible; my mother was good; therefore, the Bible is
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good," when probably the mother never read a chapter in it.
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The Bible produced the Church of Rome, and Torquemada was a
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||
product of the Bible. Philip of Spain and the Duke of Alva were
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||
produced by the Bible. For thirty years Europe was one vast
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battlefield, and the war was produced by the Bible. The revocation
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||
of the Edict of Nantes was produced by the sacred Scriptures. The
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||
instruments of torture -- the pincers, the thumb-screws, the racks,
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||
were produced by the word of God. The Quakers of New England were
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||
whipped and burned by the Bible -- their children were stolen by
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||
the Bible. The slave-ship had for its sails the leaves of the
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||
Bible. Slavery was upheld in the United States by the Bible. The
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Bible was the auction-block. More than this, worse than this,
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infinitely beyond the computation of imagination, the despotisms of
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||
the old world all rested and still rest upon the Bible. "The powers
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that be" were supposed to have been "ordained of God;" and he who
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rose against his king periled his soul. In this connection, and in
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order to show the state of society when the church had entire
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control of civil and ecclesiastical affairs, it may be well enough
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to read the following, taken from the New York Sun of March 21,
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1882. From this little extract, it will be easy in the imagination
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to re-organize the government that then existed, and to see clearly
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the state of society at that time. This can be done upon the same
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
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principle that one scale tells of the entire fish, or one bone of
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the complete animal:
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"From records in the State archives of Hesse-Darmstadt, dating
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back to the thirteenth century it appears that the public
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executioner's fee for boiling a criminal in oil was twenty-four
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florins; for decapitating with the sword, fifteen florins
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and-a-half; for quartering, the same; for breaking on the wheel,
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five florins, thirty kreuzers; for tearing a man to pieces,
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eighteen florins. Ten florins per head was his charge for hanging,
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and he burned delinquents alive at the rate of fourteen florins
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apiece. For applying the 'Spanish boot' his fee was only two
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florins. Five florins were paid to him every time he subjected a
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refractory witness to the torture of the rack. The same amount was
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||
his due for 'branding the sign of the gallows with a red-hot iron
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upon the back, forehead, or cheek of a thief,' as well as for
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'cutting off the nose and ears of a slanderer or 'blasphemer.'
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Flogging with rods was a cheap punishment, its remuneration being
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fixed at three florins, thirty kreuzers."
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The Bible has made men cruel. It is a cruel book. And yet,
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amidst its thorns, amidst its thistles, amidst its nettles and its
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swords and pikes, there are some flowers, and these I wish, in
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common with all good men, to save.
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I do not believe that men have ever been made merciful in war
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by reading the Old Testament. I do not believe that men have ever
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been prompted to break the chain of a slave by reading the
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Pentateuch. The question is not whether Florence Nightingale and
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Miss Dix were cruel. I have said nothing about John Howard, nothing
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about Abbott Lawrence. I say nothing about people in this
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connection. The question is: Is the Bible a cruel book? not: Was
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Miss Nightingale a cruel woman? There have been thousands and
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thousands of loving, tender and charitable Mohammedans. Mohammedan
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mothers love their children as well as Christian mothers can.
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Mohammedans have died in defence of the Koran -- died for the honor
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of an impostor. There were millions of charitable people in India
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-- millions in Egypt -- and I am not sure that the world has ever
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produced people who loved one another better than the Egyptians.
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I think there are many things in the Old Testament calculated
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to make man cruel. Mr. Talmage asks: "What has been the effect upon
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your children? As they have become more and more fond of the
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Scriptures have they become more and more fond of tearing off the
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wings of flies and pinning grasshoppers and robbing birds' nests?"
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I do not believe that reading the bible would make them tender
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toward flies or grasshoppers. According to that book, God used to
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punish animals for the crimes of their owners. He drowned the
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animals in a flood. He visited cattle with disease. He bruised them
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to death with hailstones -- killed them by the thousand. Will the
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reading of these things make children kind to animals? So, the
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whole system of sacrifices in the Old Testament is calculated to
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harden the heart. The butchery of oxen and lambs, the killing of
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doves, the perpetual destruction of life, the continual shedding of
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blood -- these things, if they have any tendency, tend only to
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harden the heart of childhood.
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
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The Bible does not stop simply with the killing of animals.
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The Jews were commanded to kill their neighbors -- not only the
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men, but the women; not only the women, but the babes. In
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accordance with the command of God, the Jews killed not only their
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neighbors, but their own brothers; and according to this book,
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which is the foundation, as Mr. Talmage believes, of all mercy, men
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were commanded to kill their wives because they differed with them
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on the subject of religion.
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Nowhere in the world can be found laws more unjust and cruel
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than in the Old Testament.
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QUESTION. Mr. Talmage wants you to tell where the cruelty of
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the Bible crops out in the lives of Christians?
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ANSWER. In the first place, millions of Christians have been
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persecutors. Did they get the idea of persecution from the Bible?
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Will not every honest man admit that the early Christians, by
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reading the Old Testament, became convinced that it was not only
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their privilege, but their duty, to destroy heathen nations? Did
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they not, by reading the same book, come to the conclusion that it
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was their solemn duty to extirpate heresy and heretics? According
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to the New Testament, nobody could be saved unless he believed in
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the Lord Jesus Christ. The early Christians believed this dogma.
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They also believed that they had a right to defend themselves and
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their children from "heretics."
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We all admit that a man has a right to defend his children
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against the assaults of a would-be murderer, and he has the right
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to carry this defence to the extent of killing the assailant. If we
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have the right to kill people who are simply trying to kill the
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bodies of our children, of course we have the right to kill them
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when they are endeavoring to assassinate, not simply their bodies,
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but their souls. It was in this way Christians reasoned. If the
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Testament is right, their reasoning was correct. Whoever believes
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the New Testament literally -- whoever is satisfied that it is
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absolutely the word of God, will become a persecutor. All religious
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persecution has been, and is, in exact harmony with the teachings
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of the Old and New Testaments. Of course I mean with some of the
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teachings. I admit that there are passages in both the Old and New
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Testaments against persecution. These are passages quoted only in
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time of peace. Others are repeated to feed the flames of war.
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I find, too, that reading the Bible and believing the Bible do
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not prevent even ministers from telling falsehoods about their
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opponents. I find that the Rev. Mr. Talmage is willing even to
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slander the dead, -- that he is willing to stain the memory of a
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Christian, and that he does not hesitate to give circulation to
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what he knows to be untrue. Mr. Talmage has himself, I believe,
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been the subject of a church trial. How many of the Christian
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witnesses against him, in his judgment, told the truth? Yet they
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were all Bible readers and Bible believers. What effect, in his
|
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judgment, did the reading of the Bible have upon his enemies? Is he
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willing to admit that the testimony of a Bible reader and believer
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is true? Is he willing to accept the testimony even of ministers?
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-- of his brother ministers? Did reading the Bible make them bad
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
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people? Was it a belief in the Bible that colored their testimony?
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Or, was it a belief in the Bible that made Mr. Talmage deny the
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truth of their statements?
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QUESTION. Mr. Talmage charges you with having said that the
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Scriptures are a collection of polluted writings?
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ANSWER. I have never said such a thing. I have said, and I
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still say, that there are passages in the Bible unfit to be read --
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passages that never should have been written -- passages, whether
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inspired or uninspired, that can by no possibility do any human
|
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being any good. I have always admitted that there are good passages
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in the Bible -- many good, wise and just laws -- many things
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calculated to make men better -- many things calculated to make men
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worse. I admit that the Bible is a mixture of good and bad, of
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truth and falsehood, of history and fiction, of sense and nonsense,
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||
of virtue and vice, of aspiration and revenge, of liberty and
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tyranny.
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I have never said anything against Solomon's Song. I like it
|
||
better than I do any book that precedes it, because it touches upon
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the human. In the desert of murder, wars of extermination,
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polygamy, concubinage and slavery, it is an oasis where the trees
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||
grow, where the birds sing, and where human love blossoms and fills
|
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the air with perfume. I do not regard that book as obscene. There
|
||
are many things in it that are beautiful and tender, and it is
|
||
calculated to do good rather than harm.
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Neither have I any objection to the book of Ecclesiastes --
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||
except a few interpolations in it. That book was written by a
|
||
Freethinker, by a philosopher. There is not the slightest mention
|
||
of God in it, nor of another state of existence. All portions in
|
||
which God is mentioned are interpolations. With some of this book
|
||
I agree heartily. I believe in the doctrine of enjoying yourself,
|
||
if you can, to-day. I think it foolish to spend all your years in
|
||
heaping up treasures, not knowing but he who will spend them is to
|
||
be an idiot. I believe it is far better to be happy with your wife
|
||
and child now, than to be miserable here, with angelic expectations
|
||
in some other world.
|
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|
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Mr. Talmage is mistaken when he supposes that all Bible
|
||
believers have good homes, that all Bible readers are kind in their
|
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families. As a matter of fact, nearly all the wife-whippers of the
|
||
United States are orthodox. nine-tenths of the people in the
|
||
penitentiaries are believers. Scotland is one of the most orthodox
|
||
countries in the world, and one of the most intemperate. Hundreds
|
||
and hundreds of women are arrested every year in Glasgow for
|
||
drunkenness. Visit the Christian homes in the manufacturing
|
||
districts of England. Talk with the beaters of children and
|
||
whippers of wives, and you will find them believers. Go into what
|
||
is known as the "Black Country," and you will have an idea of the
|
||
Christian civilization of England.
|
||
|
||
Let me tell you something about the "Black Country." There
|
||
women work in iron; there women do the work of men. Let me give you
|
||
an instance: A commission was appointed by Parliament to examine
|
||
into the condition of the women in the "Black Country," and a
|
||
report was made. In that report I read the following:
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
"A superintendent of a brickyard where women were engaged in
|
||
carrying bricks from the yard to the kiln, said to one of the
|
||
women: 'Eliza, you don't appear to be very uppish this morning.'
|
||
'Neither would you be very uppish, sir,' she replied, 'if you had
|
||
had a child last night.'"
|
||
|
||
This gives you an idea of the Christian civilization of
|
||
England.
|
||
|
||
England and Ireland produce most of the prize fighters. The
|
||
scientific burglar is a product of Great Britain. There is not the
|
||
great difference that Mr. Talmage supposes, between the morality of
|
||
Peking and of New York. I doubt if there is a city in the world
|
||
with more crime according to the population than New York, unless
|
||
it be London, or it may be Dublin, or Brooklyn, or possibly
|
||
Glasgow, where a man too pious to read a newspaper published on
|
||
Sunday, stole millions from the poor.
|
||
|
||
I do not believe there is a country in the world where there
|
||
is more robbery than in Christian lands -- no country where more
|
||
cashiers are defaulters, where more presidents of banks take the
|
||
money of depositors, where there is more adulteration of food,
|
||
where fewer ounces make a pound, where fewer inches make a yard,
|
||
where there is more breach of trust, more respectable larceny under
|
||
the name of embezzlement, or more slander circulated as gospel.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Mr. Talmage insists that there are no contradictions
|
||
in the Bible -- that it is a perfect harmony from Genesis to
|
||
Revelation -- a harmony as perfect as any piece of music ever
|
||
written by Beethoven or Handel?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. Of course, if God wrote it, the Bible ought to be
|
||
perfect. I do not see why a minister should be so perfectly
|
||
astonished to find that an inspired book is consistent with itself
|
||
throughout. Yet the truth is, the Bible is infinitely inconsistent.
|
||
|
||
Compare the two systems -- the system of Jehovah and that of
|
||
Jesus. In the Old Testament the doctrine of "an eye for an eye and
|
||
a tooth for a tooth" was taught. In the New Testament, "forgive
|
||
your enemies," and "pray for those who despitefully use you and
|
||
persecute you." In the Old Testament it is kill, burn, massacre,
|
||
destroy; in the New forgive. The two systems are inconsistent, and
|
||
one is just about as far wrong as the other. To live for and thirst
|
||
for revenge, to gloat over the agony of an enemy, is one extreme;
|
||
to "resist not evil" is the other extreme; and both these extremes
|
||
are equally distant from the golden mean of justice.
|
||
|
||
The four gospels do not even agree as to the terms of
|
||
salvation. And yet, Mr. Talmage tells us that there are four
|
||
cardinal doctrines taught in the Bible -- the goodness of God, the
|
||
fall of man, the sympathetic and forgiving nature of the Savior,
|
||
and two destinies -- one for believers and the other for
|
||
unbelievers. That is to say:
|
||
|
||
1. That God is good, holy and forgiving.
|
||
|
||
2. That man is a lost sinner.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
3. That Christ is "all sympathetic," and ready to take the
|
||
whole world to his heart.
|
||
|
||
4. Heaven for believers and hell for unbelievers.
|
||
|
||
First. I admit that the Bible says that God is good and holy.
|
||
But this Bible also tells what God did, and if God did what the
|
||
Bible says he did, then I insist that God is not good, and that he
|
||
is not holy, or forgiving. According to the Bible, this good God
|
||
believed in religious persecution; this good God believed in
|
||
extermination, in polygamy, in concubinage, in human slavery; this
|
||
good God commanded murder and massacre, and this good God could
|
||
only be mollified by the shedding of blood. This good God wanted a
|
||
butcher for a priest. This good God wanted husbands to kill their
|
||
wives -- wanted fathers and mothers to kill their children. This
|
||
good God persecuted animals on account of the crimes of their
|
||
owners. This good God killed the common people because the king had
|
||
displeased him. This good God killed the babe even of the maid
|
||
behind the mill, in order that he might get even with a king. This
|
||
good God committed every possible crime.
|
||
|
||
Second. The statement that man is a lost sinner is not true.
|
||
There are thousands and thousands of magnificent Pagans -- men
|
||
ready to die for wife, or child, or even for friend, and the
|
||
history of Pagan countries is filled with self-denying and heroic
|
||
acts. If man is a failure, the infinite God, if there be one, is to
|
||
blame. Is it possible that the God of Mr. Talmage could not have
|
||
made man a success? According to the Bible, his God made man
|
||
knowing that in about fifteen hundred years he would have to drown
|
||
all his descendants.
|
||
|
||
Why would a good God create a man that he knew would be a
|
||
sinner all his life, make hundreds of thousands of his fellow-men
|
||
unhappy, and who at last would be doomed to an eternity of
|
||
suffering? Can such a God be good? How could a devil have done
|
||
worse?
|
||
|
||
Third. If God is infinitely good, is he not fully as
|
||
sympathetic as Christ? Do you have to employ Christ to mollify a
|
||
being of infinite mercy? Is Christ any more willing to take to his
|
||
heart the whole world than his Father is? Personally, I have not
|
||
the slightest objection in the world to anybody believing in an
|
||
infinitely good and kind God -- not the slightest objection to any
|
||
human being worshiping an infinitely tender and merciful Christ --
|
||
not the slightest objection to people preaching about heaven, or
|
||
about the glories of the future state -- not the slightest.
|
||
|
||
Fourth. I object to the doctrine of two destinies for the
|
||
human race. I object to the infamous falsehood of eternal fire. And
|
||
yet, Mr. Talmage is endeavoring to poison the imagination of men,
|
||
women and children with the doctrine of an eternal hell. Here is
|
||
what he preaches, taken from the "Constitution of the Presbyterian
|
||
Church of the United States:"
|
||
|
||
"By the decrees of God, for the manifestation of his glory,
|
||
some men and angels are predestinated to everlasting life, and
|
||
others foreordained to everlasting death."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
That is the doctrine of Mr. Talmage. He worships a God who
|
||
damns people "for the manifestation of his glory," -- God who made
|
||
men, knowing that they would be dammed -- God who damns babes
|
||
simply to increase his reputation with the angels. This is the God
|
||
of Mr. Talmage. Such a God I abhor, despise and execrate.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. What does Mr. Talmage think of mankind? What is his
|
||
opinion of the "unconverted"? How does he regard the great and
|
||
glorious of the earth, who have not been the victims of his
|
||
particular superstition? What does he think of some of the best the
|
||
earth has produced?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. I will tell you how he looks upon all such. Read this
|
||
from his "Confession of Faith:"
|
||
|
||
"Our first parents, being seduced by the subtlety of the
|
||
tempter, sinned in eating the forbidden fruit. By this sin, they
|
||
fell from their original righteousness and communion with God, and
|
||
so became dead in sin, and wholly defiled in all the faculties and
|
||
parts of soul and body; and they being the root of all mankind, the
|
||
guilt of this sin was imputed, and the same death in sin and
|
||
corrupted nature conveyed to all their posterity. From this
|
||
original corruption -- whereby we are utterly indisposed, disabled,
|
||
and made opposite to all good, and wholly inclined to all evil, do
|
||
proceed all actual transgressions."
|
||
|
||
This is Mr. Talmage's view of humanity.
|
||
|
||
Why did his God make a devil? Why did he allow the devil to
|
||
tempt Adam and Eve? Why did he leave innocence and ignorance at the
|
||
mercy of subtlety and wickedness? Why did he put "the tree of the
|
||
knowledge of good and evil" in the garden? For what reason did he
|
||
place temptation in the way of his children? Was it kind, was it
|
||
just, was it noble, was it worthy of a good God? No wonder Christ
|
||
put into his prayer: "Lead us not into temptation."
|
||
|
||
At the time God told Adam and Eve not to eat why did he not
|
||
tell them of the existence of Satan? Why were they not put upon
|
||
their guard against the serpent? Why did not God make his
|
||
appearance just before the sin, instead of just after. Why did he
|
||
not play the role of a Savior instead of that of a detective? After
|
||
he found that Adam and Eve had sinned -- knowing as he did that
|
||
they were then totally corrupt -- Knowing that all their children
|
||
would be corrupt, knowing that in fifteen hundred years he would
|
||
have to drown millions of them, why did he not allow Adam and Eve
|
||
to perish in accordance with natural law, then kill the devil, and
|
||
make a new pair?
|
||
|
||
When the flood came, why did he not drown all? Why did he save
|
||
for seed that which was "perfectly and thoroughly corrupt in all
|
||
its parts and faculties"? If God had drowned Noah and his sons and
|
||
their families, he could have then made a new pair, and peopled the
|
||
world with men not "wholly defiled in all their faculties and parts
|
||
of soul and body."
|
||
|
||
Jehovah learned nothing by experience. He persisted in his
|
||
original mistake. What would we think of a man who finding that a
|
||
held of wheat was worthless, and that such wheat never could be
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
raised with profit, should burn all of the field with the exception
|
||
of a few sheaves, which he saved for seed? Why save such seed? Why
|
||
should God have preserved Noah, knowing that he was totally
|
||
corrupt, and that he would again fill the world with infamous
|
||
people -- people incapable of a good action? He must have known at
|
||
that time, that by preserving Noah, the Canaanites would be
|
||
produced, that these same Canaanites would have to be murdered,
|
||
that the babes in the cradles would have to be strangled. Why did
|
||
he produce them? He knew at that time, that Egypt would result from
|
||
the salvation of Noah, that the Egyptians would have to be nearly
|
||
destroyed, that he would have to kill their first-born, that he
|
||
would have to visit even their cattle with disease and hailstones.
|
||
He knew also that the Egyptians would oppress his chosen people for
|
||
two hundred and fifteen years, that they would upon the back of
|
||
toil inflict the lash. Why did he preserve Noah? He should have
|
||
drowned all, and started with a new pair. He should have warned
|
||
them against the devil, and he might have succeeded, in that way,
|
||
in covering the world with gentlemen and ladies, with real men and
|
||
real women.
|
||
|
||
We know that most of the people now in the world are not
|
||
Christians. Most who have heard the gospel of Christ have rejected
|
||
it, and the Presbyterian Church tells us what is to become of all
|
||
these people. This is the "glad tidings of great joy." Let us see:
|
||
|
||
"All mankind, by their fall, lost communion with God, are
|
||
under his wrath and curse, and so made liable to all the miseries
|
||
of this life, to death itself, and to the pains of hell forever."
|
||
|
||
According to this good Presbyterian doctrine, all that we
|
||
suffer in this world, is the result of Adam's fall. The babes of
|
||
to-day suffer for the crime of the first parents. Not only so; but
|
||
God is angry at us for what Adam did. We are under the wrath of an
|
||
infinite God, whose brows are corrugated with eternal hatred.
|
||
|
||
Why should God hate us for being what we are and necessarily
|
||
must have been? A being that God made -- the devil -- for whose
|
||
work God is responsible, according to the Bible wrought this woe.
|
||
God of his own free will must have made the devil. What did he make
|
||
him for? Was it necessary to have a devil in heaven? God, having
|
||
infinite power, can of course destroy this devil to-day. Why does
|
||
he permit him to live? Why did he allow him to thwart his plans?
|
||
Why did he permit him to pollute the innocence of Eden? Why does he
|
||
allow him now to wrest souls by the million from the redeeming hand
|
||
of Christ?
|
||
|
||
According to the Scriptures, the devil has always been
|
||
successful. He enjoys himself. He is called "the prince of the
|
||
power of the air." He has no conscientious scruples. He has
|
||
miraculous power. All miraculous power must come of God, otherwise
|
||
it is simply in accordance with nature. If the devil can work a
|
||
miracle, it is only with the consent and by the assistance of the
|
||
Almighty. Is the God of Mr. Talmage in partnership with the devil?
|
||
Do they divide profits?
|
||
|
||
We are also told by the Presbyterian Church -- I quote from
|
||
their confession of Faith -- that "there is no sin so small but it
|
||
deserves damnation." yet Mr. Talmage tells us that God is good,
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
that he is filled with mercy and loving-kindness. A child nine or
|
||
ten years of age commits a sin, and thereupon it deserves eternal
|
||
damnation. That is what Mr. Talmage calls, not simply justice, but
|
||
mercy; and the sympathetic heart of Christ is not touched. The same
|
||
being who said: "Suffer little children to come unto me," tells us
|
||
that a child, for the smallest sin, deserves to be eternally
|
||
damned. The Presbyterian Church tells us that infants, as well as
|
||
adults, in order to be saved, need redemption by the blood of
|
||
Christ, and regeneration by the Holy Ghost.
|
||
|
||
I am charged with trying to take the consolation of this
|
||
doctrine from the world. I am a criminal because I am endeavoring
|
||
to convince the mother that her child does not deserve eternal
|
||
punishment. I stand by the graves of those who "died in their
|
||
sins," by the tombs of the "unregenerate," over the ashes of men
|
||
who have spent their lives working for their wives and children,
|
||
and over the sacred dust of soldiers who died in defence of flag
|
||
and country, and I say to their friends -- I say to the living who
|
||
loved them, I say to the men and women for whom they worked, I say
|
||
to the children whom they educated, I say to the country for which
|
||
they died: These fathers, these mothers, these wives, these
|
||
husbands, these soldiers are not in hell.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Mr. Talmage insists that the Bible is scientific,
|
||
and that the real scientific man sees no contradiction between
|
||
revelation and science; that, on the contrary, they are in harmony.
|
||
What is your understanding of this matter?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. I do not believe the Bible to be a scientific book. In
|
||
fact, most of the ministers now admit that it was not written to
|
||
teach any science. They admit that the first chapter of Genesis is
|
||
not geologically true. They admit that Joshua knew nothing of
|
||
science. They admit that four-footed birds did not exist in the
|
||
days of Moses. In fact, the only way they can avoid the
|
||
unscientific statements of the Bible, is to assert that the writers
|
||
simply used the common language of their day, and used it, not with
|
||
the intention of teaching any scientific truth, but for the purpose
|
||
of teaching some moral truth. As a matter of fact, we find that
|
||
moral truths have been taught in all parts of this world. They were
|
||
taught in India long before Moses lived; in Egypt long before
|
||
Abraham was born; in China thousands of years before the flood.
|
||
They were taught by hundreds and thousands and millions before the
|
||
Garden of Eden was planted.
|
||
|
||
It would be impossible to prove the truth of a revelation
|
||
simply because it contained moral truths. If it taught immorality,
|
||
it would be absolutely certain that it was not a revelation from an
|
||
infinitely good being. If it taught morality, it would be no reason
|
||
for even suspecting that it had a divine origin. But if the Bible
|
||
had given us scientific truths; if the ignorant Jews had given us
|
||
the true theory of our solar system; if from, Moses we had learned
|
||
the nature of light and heat; if from Joshua we had learned
|
||
something of electricity; if the minor prophets had given us the
|
||
distances to other planets; if the orbits of the stars had been
|
||
marked by the barbarians of that day, we might have admitted that
|
||
they must have been inspired. If they had said anything in advance
|
||
of their day: if they had plucked from the night of ignorance one
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
star of truth, we might have admitted the claim of inspiration; but
|
||
the Scriptures did not rise above their source, did not rise above
|
||
their ignorant authors -- above the people who believed in wars of
|
||
extermination, in polygamy, in concubinage, in slavery, and who
|
||
taught these things in their "sacred Scriptures."
|
||
|
||
The greatest men in the scientific world have not been, and
|
||
are not, believers in the inspiration of the Scriptures. There has
|
||
been no greater astronomer than Laplace. There is no greater name
|
||
than Humboldt. There is no living scientist who stands higher than
|
||
Charles Darwin. All the professors in all the religious colleges in
|
||
this country rolled into one, would not equal Charles Darwin. All
|
||
the cowardly apologists for the cosmogony of Moses do not amount to
|
||
as much in the world of thought as Ernest Hackle. There is no
|
||
orthodox scientist the equal of Tyndall or Huxley. There is not one
|
||
in this country the equal of John Fiske. I insist, that the
|
||
foremost men to-day in the scientific world reject the dogma of
|
||
inspiration. They reject the science of the Bible, and hold in
|
||
utter contempt the astronomy of Joshua, and the geology of Moses.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage tells us "that Science is a boy and Revelation is
|
||
a man." Of course, like the most he says, it is substantially the
|
||
other way. Revelation, so-called, was the boy. Religion was the
|
||
lullaby of the cradle, the ghost-story told by the old woman,
|
||
Superstition. Science is the man. Science asks for demonstration.
|
||
Science impels us to investigation, and to verify everything for
|
||
ourselves. Most professors of American colleges, if they were not
|
||
afraid of losing their places, if they did not know that Christians
|
||
were bad enough now to take the bread from their mouths, would tell
|
||
their students that the Bible is not a scientific book.
|
||
|
||
I admit that I have said:
|
||
|
||
1. That the Bible is cruel.
|
||
|
||
2. That in many passages it is impure.
|
||
|
||
3. That it is contradictory.
|
||
|
||
4. That it is unscientific.
|
||
|
||
Let me now prove these propositions one by one.
|
||
|
||
First. The Bible is cruel.
|
||
|
||
I have opened it at random, and the very first chapter that
|
||
has struck my eye is the sixth of First Samuel. In the nineteenth
|
||
verse of that chapter, I find the following:
|
||
|
||
"And he smote the men of Bethshemesh, because they had looked
|
||
into the ark of the Lord; even he smote of the people fifty
|
||
thousand and three-score and ten men."
|
||
|
||
All this slaughter was because some people had looked into a
|
||
box that was carried upon a cart. Was that cruel?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
I find, also, in the twenty-fourth chapter of Second Samuel,
|
||
that David was moved by God to number Israel and Judah. God put it
|
||
into his heart to take a census of his people, and thereupon David
|
||
said to Joab, the captain of his host:
|
||
|
||
"Go now through all the tribes of Israel, from Dan even to
|
||
Beersheba, and number ye the people, that I may know the number of
|
||
the people."
|
||
|
||
At the end of nine months and twenty days, Joab gave the
|
||
number of the people to the king, and there were at that time,
|
||
according to that census, "eight hundred thousand valiant men that
|
||
drew the sword," in Israel, and in Judah, "five hundred thousand
|
||
men," making a total of thirteen hundred thousand men of war. The
|
||
moment this census was taken, the wrath of the Lord waxed hot
|
||
against David, and thereupon he sent a seer, by the name of Gad, to
|
||
David, and asked him to choose whether he would have seven years of
|
||
famine, or fly three months before his enemies, or have three days
|
||
of pestilence. David concluded that as God was so merciful as to
|
||
give him a choice, he would be more merciful than man, and he chose
|
||
the pestilence. Now, it must be remembered that the sin of taking
|
||
the census had not been committed by the people, but by David
|
||
himself, inspired by God, yet the people were to be punished for
|
||
David's sin. So, when David chose the pestilence, God immediately
|
||
killed "seventy thousand men, from Dan even to Beersheba."
|
||
|
||
"And when the angel stretched out his hand upon Jerusalem to
|
||
destroy it, the Lord repented him of the evil, and said to the
|
||
angel that destroyed the people, It is enough; stay now thine
|
||
hand." Was this cruel?
|
||
|
||
Why did a God of infinite mercy destroy seventy thousand men?
|
||
Why did he fill his land with widows and orphans, because King
|
||
David had taken the census? If he wanted to kill anybody, why did
|
||
he not kill David? I will tell you why. Because at that time, the
|
||
people were considered as the property of the king. He killed the
|
||
people precisely as he killed the cattle. And yet, I am told that
|
||
the Bible is not a cruel book.
|
||
|
||
In the twenty-first chapter of Second Samuel, I find that
|
||
there were three years of famine in the days of David, and that
|
||
David inquired of the Lord the reason of the famine; and the Lord
|
||
told him that it was because Saul had slain the Gibeonites. Why did
|
||
not God punish Saul instead of the people? And David asked the
|
||
Gibeonites how he should make atonement, and the Gibeonites replied
|
||
that they wanted no silver nor gold, but they asked that seven of
|
||
the sons of Saul might be delivered unto them, so that they could
|
||
hang them before the Lord, in Gibeah. And David agreed to the
|
||
proposition, and thereupon he delivered to the Gibeonites the two
|
||
sons of Rizpah, Saul's concubine, and the five sons of Michal, the
|
||
daughter of Saul, and the Gibeonites hanged all seven of them
|
||
together. And Rizpah, more tender than them all, with a woman's
|
||
heart of love kept lonely vigil by the dead, "from the beginning of
|
||
harvest until water dropped upon them out of heaven, and suffered
|
||
neither the birds of the air to rest upon them by day, nor the
|
||
beast of the field by night."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
I want to know if the following, from the fifteenth chapter of
|
||
First Samuel, is inspired:
|
||
|
||
"Thus saith the Lord of hosts; I remember that which Amalek
|
||
did to Israel, how he laid wait for him in the way when he came up
|
||
from Egypt. Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that
|
||
they have, and spare them not, but slay both man and woman, infant
|
||
and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass."
|
||
|
||
We must remember that those he was commanded to slay had done
|
||
nothing to Israel. It was something done by their forefathers,
|
||
hundreds of years before; and yet they are commanded to slay the
|
||
women and children and even the animals, and to spare none.
|
||
|
||
It seems that Saul only partially carried into execution this
|
||
merciful command of Jehovah. He spared the life of the king -- He
|
||
"utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword," but
|
||
he kept alive the best of the sheep and oxen and of the fatlings
|
||
and lambs. Then God spake unto Samuel and told him that he was very
|
||
sorry he had made Saul king, because he had not killed all the
|
||
animals, and because he had spared Agag; and Samuel asked Saul:
|
||
"What meaneth this bleating of sheep in mine ears, and the lowing
|
||
of the oxen which I hear? Are stories like this calculated to make
|
||
soldiers merciful?
|
||
|
||
So I read in the sixth chapter of Joshua, the fate of the city
|
||
of Jericho: "And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city,
|
||
both man and woman, young and old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with
|
||
the edge of the sword. And they burnt the city with fire, and all
|
||
that was therein." But we are told that one family was saved by
|
||
Joshua, out of the general destruction: "And Joshua saved Rahab,
|
||
the harlot, alive, and her father's household, and all that she
|
||
had." Was this fearful destruction an act of mercy?
|
||
|
||
It seems that they saved the money of their victims: "the
|
||
silver and gold and the vessels of brass and of iron they put into
|
||
the treasury of the house of the Lord."
|
||
|
||
After all this pillage and carnage, it appears that there was
|
||
a suspicion in Joshua's mind that somebody was keeping back a part
|
||
of the treasure. Search was made, and a man by the name of Achan
|
||
admitted that he had sinned against the Lord, that he had seen a
|
||
Babylonish garment among the spoils, and two hundred shekels of
|
||
silver and a wedge of gold of fifty shekels' weight, and that he
|
||
took them and hid them in his tent. For this atrocious crime it
|
||
seems that the Lord denied any victories to the Jews until they
|
||
found out the wicked criminal. When they discovered poor Achan,
|
||
"they took him and his sons and his daughters, and his oxen and his
|
||
asses and his sheep, and all that he had, and brought them unto the
|
||
valley of Achor; and all Israel stoned him with stones and burned
|
||
them with fire after they had stoned them with stones."
|
||
|
||
After Achan and his sons and his daughters and his herds had
|
||
been stoned and burned to death, we are told that "the Lord turned
|
||
from the fierceness of his anger."
|
||
|
||
And yet it is insisted that this God "is merciful and that his
|
||
loving-kindness is over all his works."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
In the eighth chapter of this same book, the infinite God,
|
||
"creator of heaven and earth and all that is therein," told his
|
||
general, Joshua, to lay an ambush for a city -- to "lie in wait
|
||
against the city, even behind the city; go not very far from the
|
||
city, but be ye all ready." He told him to make an attack and then
|
||
to run, as though he had been beaten, in order that the inhabitants
|
||
of the city might follow, and thereupon his reserves that he had
|
||
ambushed might rush into the city and set it on fire. God Almighty
|
||
planned the battle. God himself laid the snare. The whole programme
|
||
was carried out. Joshua made believe that he was beaten, and fled,
|
||
and then the soldiers in ambush rose out of their places, entered
|
||
the city, and set it on fire. Then came the slaughter. They
|
||
"utterly destroyed all the inhabitants of Ai," men and maidens,
|
||
women and babes, sparing only their king till evening, when they
|
||
hanged him on a tree, then "took his carcass down from the tree and
|
||
cast it at the entering of the gate, and raised thereon a great
|
||
heap of stones which remaineth unto this day." After having done
|
||
all this, "Joshua built an altar unto the Lord God of Israel, and
|
||
offered burnt offerings unto the Lord." I ask again, was this
|
||
cruel?
|
||
|
||
Again I ask, was the treatment of the Gibeonites cruel when
|
||
they sought to make peace but were denied, and cursed instead; and
|
||
although permitted to live, were yet made slaves? Read the mandate
|
||
consigning them to bondage: "Now therefore ye are cursed, and there
|
||
shall none of you be freed from being bondmen and hewers of wood
|
||
and drawers of water for the house of my God."
|
||
|
||
Is it possible, as recorded in the tenth chapter of Joshua,
|
||
that the Lord took part in these battles, and cast down great hail-
|
||
stones from the battlements of heaven upon the enemies of the
|
||
Israelites, so that "they were more who died with hail-stones, than
|
||
they whom the children of Israel slew with the sword"?
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that a being of infinite power would exercise
|
||
it in that way instead of in the interest of kindness and peace?
|
||
|
||
I find, also, in this same chapter, that Joshua took Makkedah
|
||
and smote it with the edge of the sword, that he utterly destroyed
|
||
all the souls that were therein, that he allowed none to remain.
|
||
|
||
I find that he fought against Libnah, and smote it with the
|
||
edge of the sword, and utterly destroyed all the souls that were
|
||
therein, and allowed none to remain, and did unto the king as he
|
||
did unto the king of Jericho.
|
||
|
||
I find that he also encamped against Lachish, and that God
|
||
gave him that city, and that he "smote it with the edge of the
|
||
sword, and all the souls that were therein," sparing neither old
|
||
nor young, helpless women nor prattling babes.
|
||
|
||
He also vanquished Horam, King of Gezer, "and smote him and
|
||
his people until he left him none remaining."
|
||
|
||
He encamped against the city of Eglon, and killed every soul
|
||
that was in it, at the edge of the sword, just as he had done to
|
||
Lachish and all the others.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
He fought against Hebron, "and took it and smote it with the
|
||
edge of the sword, and the king thereof," -- and it appears that
|
||
several cities, their number not named, were included in this
|
||
slaughter, for Hebron "and all the cities thereof and all the souls
|
||
that were therein," were utterly destroyed.
|
||
|
||
He then waged war against Debir and took it, and more
|
||
unnumbered cities with it, and all the souls that were therein
|
||
shared the same horrible fate -- he did not leave a soul alive.
|
||
|
||
And this chapter of horrors concludes with this song of
|
||
victory:
|
||
|
||
"So Joshua smote all the country of the hills, and of the
|
||
south, and of the vale, and of the springs, and all their kings: he
|
||
left none remaining, but utterly destroyed all that breathed, as
|
||
the Lord God of Israel commanded. And Joshua smote them from
|
||
Kadeshbarnea even unto Gaza, and all the country of Goshen, even
|
||
unto Gibeon. And all these kings and their land did Joshua take at
|
||
one time, because the Lord God of Israel fought for Israel."
|
||
|
||
Was God, at that time, merciful?
|
||
|
||
I find, also, in the twenty-first chapter that many kings met,
|
||
with their armies, for the purpose of overwhelming Israel, and the
|
||
Lord said unto Joshua "Be not afraid because of them, for to-morrow
|
||
about this time I will deliver them all slain before Israel. I will
|
||
hough their horses and burn their chariots with fire." Were animals
|
||
so treated by the command of a merciful God?
|
||
|
||
Joshua captured Hazor, and smote all the souls that were
|
||
therein with the edge of the sword, there was not one left to
|
||
breathe; and he took all the cities of all the kings that took up
|
||
arms against him, and utterly destroyed all the inhabitants
|
||
thereof. He took the cattle and spoils as prey unto himself, and
|
||
smote every man with the edge of the sword; and not only so, but
|
||
left not a human being to breathe.
|
||
|
||
I find the following directions given to the Israelites who
|
||
were waging a war of conquest. They are in the twentieth chapter of
|
||
Deuteronomy, from the tenth to the eighteenth verses:
|
||
|
||
"When thou comest nigh unto a city to fight against it, then
|
||
proclaim peace unto it. And it shall be, if it make thee an answer
|
||
of peace, and open unto thee, then it shall be that all the people
|
||
that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee, and they
|
||
shall serve thee. And if it will make no peace with thee, but will
|
||
war against thee, then thou shalt besiege it. And when the Lord thy
|
||
God hath delivered it into thine hands, thou shalt smite every male
|
||
thereof with the edge of the sword; but the women, and the little
|
||
ones, and the cattle, and all that is in the city, even the spoil
|
||
thereof, shalt thou take unto thyself; and thou shalt eat the spoil
|
||
of thine enemies, which the Lord thy God hath given thee. Thus
|
||
shalt thou do unto all the cities which are very far off from thee,
|
||
which are not of the cities of these nations."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
It will be seen from this that people could take their choice
|
||
between death and slavery, provided these people lived a good ways
|
||
from the Israelites. Now, let us see how they were to treat the
|
||
inhabitants of the cities near to them:
|
||
|
||
"But of the cities of these people which the Lord thy God doth
|
||
give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing that
|
||
breatheth. But thou shalt utterly destroy them; namely, the
|
||
Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the
|
||
Hivites and the Jebusites, as the Lord thy God hath commanded
|
||
thee."
|
||
|
||
It never occurred to this merciful God to send missionaries to
|
||
these people. He built them no schoolhouses, taught them no
|
||
alphabet, gave them no book; they were not supplied even with a
|
||
copy of the Ten Commandments. He did not say "Reform," but "Kill;"
|
||
not "Educate," but "Destroy." He gave them no Bible, built them no
|
||
church, sent them no preachers. He knew when he made them that he
|
||
would have to have them murdered. When he created them he knew that
|
||
they were not fit to live and yet, this is the infinite God who is
|
||
infinitely merciful and loves his children better than an earthly
|
||
mother loves her babe.
|
||
|
||
In order to find just how merciful God is, read the
|
||
twenty-eighth chapter of Deuteronomy, and see what he promises to
|
||
do with people who do not keep all of his commandments and all of
|
||
his statutes. He curse them in their basket and store, in the fruit
|
||
of their body, in the fruit of their land, in the increase of their
|
||
cattle and sheep. He curses them in the city and in the field, in
|
||
their coming in and their going out. He curses them with
|
||
pestilence, with consumption, with fever, with inflammation, with
|
||
extreme burning, with sword. with blasting, with mildew. He tells
|
||
them that the heavens shall be as brass over their heads and the
|
||
earth as iron under their feet; that the rain shall be powder and
|
||
dust and shall come down on them and destroy them; that they shall
|
||
flee seven ways before their enemies; that their carcasses shall be
|
||
meat for the fowls of the air, and the beasts of the earth; that he
|
||
will smite them with the botch of Egypt, and with the scab, and
|
||
with the itch, and with madness and blindness and astonishment;
|
||
that he will make them grope at noonday; that they shall be
|
||
oppressed and spoiled evermore; that one shall betroth a wife and
|
||
another shall have her; that they shall build a house and not dwell
|
||
in it; plant a vineyard and others shall eat the grapes; that their
|
||
sons and daughters shall be given to their enemies; that he will
|
||
make them mad for the sight of their eyes; that he will smite them
|
||
in the knees and in the legs with a sore botch that cannot be
|
||
healed, and from the sole of the foot to the top of the head; that
|
||
they shall be a by-word among all nations; that they shall sow much
|
||
seed and gather but little; that the locusts shall consume their
|
||
crops; that they shall plant vineyards and drink no wine. -- that
|
||
they shall gather grapes, but worms shall eat them; that they shall
|
||
raise olives but have no oil: beget sons and daughters, but they
|
||
shall go into captivity; that all the trees and fruit of the land
|
||
shall be devoured by locusts, and that all these curses shall
|
||
pursue them and overtake them, until they be destroyed; that they
|
||
shall be slaves to their enemies, and be constantly in hunger and
|
||
thirst and nakedness, and in want of all things. And as though this
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
were not enough, the Lord tells them that he will bring a nation
|
||
against them swift as eagles, a nation fierce and savage, that will
|
||
show no mercy and no favor to old or young, and leave them neither
|
||
corn, nor wine, nor oil, nor flocks, nor herds; and this nation
|
||
shall besiege them in their cities until they are reduced to the
|
||
necessity of eating the flesh of their own sons and daughters; so
|
||
that the men would eat their wives and their children, and women
|
||
eat their husbands and their own sons and daughters, and their own
|
||
babes.
|
||
|
||
All these curses God pronounced upon them if they did not
|
||
observe to do all the words of the law that were written in his
|
||
book.
|
||
|
||
This same merciful God threatened that he would bring upon
|
||
them all the diseases of Egypt -- every sickness and every plague;
|
||
that he would scatter them from one end of the earth to the other;
|
||
that they should find no rest; that their lives should hang in
|
||
perpetual doubt; that in the morning they would say: Would God it
|
||
were evening! and in the evening, Would God it were morning! and
|
||
that he would finally take them back to Egypt where they should be
|
||
again sold for bondmen and bondwomen.
|
||
|
||
This curse, the foundation of the Anathema maranatha; this
|
||
curse, used by the pope of Rome to prevent the spread of thought;
|
||
this curse used even by the Protestant Church; this curse born of
|
||
barbarism and of infinite cruelty, is now said to have issued from
|
||
the lips of an infinitely merciful God. One would suppose that
|
||
Jehovah had gone insane; that he had divided his kingdom like Lear,
|
||
and from the darkness of insanity had launched his curses upon a
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
In order that there may be no doubt as to the mercy of
|
||
Jehovah, read the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy:
|
||
|
||
"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 and serve
|
||
other gods, which thou hast not known, thou nor thy fathers; " * *
|
||
* thou shalt not consent unto him, nor hearken unto him; neither
|
||
shall thine eyes 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,
|
||
because he hath sought to entice thee away from the Lord thy God."
|
||
|
||
This, according to Mr. Talmage, is a commandment of the
|
||
infinite God. According to him, God ordered a man to murder his own
|
||
son, his own wife, his own brother, his own daughter, if they dared
|
||
even to suggest the worship of some other God than Jehovah. For my
|
||
part, it is impossible not to despise such a God -- a God not
|
||
willing that one should worship what he must. No one can control
|
||
his admiration, and if a savage at sunrise falls upon his knees and
|
||
offers homage to the great light of the East, he cannot help it. If
|
||
he worships the moon, he cannot help it. If he worships fire, it is
|
||
because he cannot control his own spirit. A picture is beautiful to
|
||
me in spite of myself. A statue compels the applause of my brain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
The worship of the sun was an exceedingly natural religion, and why
|
||
should a man or woman be destroyed for kneeling at the fireside of
|
||
the world?
|
||
|
||
No wonder that this same God, in the very next chapter of
|
||
Deuteronomy to that quoted, says to his chosen people: "Ye shall
|
||
not eat of anything that dieth of itself: thou shalt give it unto
|
||
the stranger that is within thy gates, that he may eat it; or thou
|
||
mayest sell it unto an alien: for thou art a holy people unto the
|
||
Lord thy God."
|
||
|
||
What a mingling of heartlessness and thrift -- the religion of
|
||
sword and trade!
|
||
|
||
In the seventh chapter of Deuteronomy, Jehovah gives his own
|
||
character. He tells the Israelites that there are seven nations
|
||
greater and mightier than themselves, but that he will deliver them
|
||
to his chosen people, and that they shall smite them and utterly
|
||
destroy them; and having some fear that a drop of pity might remain
|
||
in the Jewish heart, he says: Thou shalt make no covenant with
|
||
them, nor show mercy unto them. * * * Know therefore that the Lord
|
||
thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and
|
||
mercy with them that love him and keep his commandments to a
|
||
thousand generations, and repayeth them that hate him to their
|
||
face, to destroy them: he will not be slack to him that hateth him,
|
||
he will repay him to his face." This is the description which the
|
||
merciful, long-suffering Jehovah gives of himself.
|
||
|
||
So, he promises great prosperity to the Jews if they will only
|
||
obey his commandments, and says: "And the Lord will take away from
|
||
thee all sickness, and will put none of the evil diseases of Egypt
|
||
upon thee, but will lay them upon all them that hate thee. And thou
|
||
shalt consume all the people which the Lord thy God shall deliver
|
||
thee; thine eye shall have no pity upon them."
|
||
|
||
Under the immediate government of Jehovah, mercy was a crime.
|
||
According to the law of God, pity was weakness, tenderness was
|
||
treason, kindness was blasphemy, while hatred and massacre were
|
||
virtues.
|
||
|
||
In the second chapter of Deuteronomy we find another account
|
||
tending to prove that Jehovah is a merciful God. We find that
|
||
Sihon, king of Heshbon, would not let the Hebrews pass by him, and
|
||
the reason given is, that "the Lord God hardened his spirit and
|
||
made his heart obstinate, that he might deliver him into the hand"
|
||
of the Hebrews. Sihon, his heart having been hardened by God, came
|
||
out against the chosen people, and God delivered him to them, and
|
||
"they smote him, and his sons, and all his people, and took all his
|
||
cities, and utterly destroyed the men and the women, and the little
|
||
ones of every city: they left none to remain." And in this same
|
||
chapter this same God promises that the dread and fear of his
|
||
chosen people should be "upon all the nations that are under the
|
||
whole heaven," and that they should "tremble and be in anguish
|
||
because of" the Hebrews.
|
||
|
||
Read the thirty-first chapter of Numbers, and see how the
|
||
Midianites were slain. You will find that "the children of Israel
|
||
took all the women of Midian captives, and their little ones," that
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
they took "all their cattle, and all their flocks, and all their
|
||
goods," that they slew all the males, and burnt all their cities
|
||
and castles with fire, that they brought the captives and the prey
|
||
and the spoil unto Moses and Eleazar the priest; that Moses was
|
||
wroth with the officers of his host because they had saved all the
|
||
women alive, and thereupon this order was given: "Kill every male
|
||
among the little ones, and kill every woman, * * * but all the
|
||
women children keep alive for yourselves."
|
||
|
||
After this, God himself spake unto Moses, and said: "Take the
|
||
sum of the prey that was taken, both of man and of beast, thou and
|
||
Eleazar the priest * * * and divide the prey into two parts,
|
||
between those who went to war, and between all the congregation,
|
||
and levy a tribute unto the Lord, one soul of five hundred of the
|
||
persons, and the cattle; take it of their half and give it to the
|
||
priest for an offering * * * and of the children of Israel's half,
|
||
take one portion of fifty of the persons and the animals and give
|
||
them unto the Levites. * * * And Moses and the priest; did as the
|
||
Lord had commanded." It seems that they had taken six hundred and
|
||
seventy-five thousand sheep, seventy-two thousand beeves, sixty-one
|
||
thousand asses, and thirty-two thousand women children and maidens.
|
||
And it seems, by the fortieth verse, that the Lord's tribute of the
|
||
maidens was thirty two, -- the rest were given to the soldiers and
|
||
to the congregation of the Lord.
|
||
|
||
Was anything more infamous ever recorded in the annals of
|
||
barbarism? And yet we are told that the Bible is an inspired book,
|
||
that it is not a cruel book, and that Jehovah is a being of
|
||
infinite mercy.
|
||
|
||
In the twenty-fifth chapter of Numbers we find that the
|
||
Israelites had joined themselves unto Baal-peor, and thereupon the
|
||
anger of the Lord was kindled against them, as usual. No being ever
|
||
lost his temper more frequently than this Jehovah. Upon this
|
||
particular occasion, "the Lord said unto Moses. "Take all the heads
|
||
of the people, and hang them up before the Lord against the sun,
|
||
that the fierce anger of the Lord may he turned away from Israel."
|
||
And thereupon "Moses said unto the judges of Israel, Slay ye every
|
||
one his men that were Joined unto Baal-peor."
|
||
|
||
Just as soon as these people were killed, and their heads hung
|
||
up before the Lord against the sun, and a horrible double murder of
|
||
a too merciful Israelite and a Midianitish woman, had been
|
||
committed by Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, "the plague was stayed
|
||
from the children of Israel." Twenty-four thousand had died.
|
||
Thereupon, "the Lord spake unto Moses and said" -- and it is a very
|
||
merciful commandment -- "Vex the Midianites and smite them."
|
||
|
||
In the twenty-first chapter of Numbers is more evidence that
|
||
God is merciful and compassionate.
|
||
|
||
The children of Israel had become discouraged. They had
|
||
wandered so long in the desert that they finally cried out:
|
||
"Wherefore have ye brought us up out of Egypt to die in the
|
||
wilderness? There is no bread, there is no water, and our soul
|
||
loatheth this light bread." Of course they were hungry and thirsty.
|
||
Who would not complain under similar circumstances? And yet, on
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
account of this complaint, the God of infinite tenderness and
|
||
compassion sent serpents among them, and these serpents bit them --
|
||
bit the cheeks of children, the breasts of maidens, and the
|
||
withered faces of age. Why would a God do such an infamous thing?
|
||
Why did he not, as the leader of this people, his chosen children,
|
||
feed them better? Certainly an infinite God had the power to
|
||
satisfy their hunger and to quench their thirst. He who overwhelmed
|
||
a world with water, certainly could have made a few brooks, cool
|
||
and babbling, to follow his chosen people through all their
|
||
journeying. He could have supplied them with miraculous food.
|
||
|
||
How fortunate for the Jews that Jehovah was not revengeful,
|
||
that he was so slow to anger, so patient, so easily pleased. What
|
||
would they have done had he been exacting, easily incensed,
|
||
revengeful, cruel, or blood-thirsty?
|
||
|
||
In the sixteenth chapter of Numbers, an account is given of a
|
||
rebellion. It seems that Korah, Dathan and Abiram got tired of
|
||
Moses and Aaron. They thought the priests were taking a little too
|
||
much upon themselves. So Moses told them to have two hundred and
|
||
fifty of their men bring their censers and put incense in them
|
||
before the Lord, and stand in the door of the tabernacle of the
|
||
congregation with Moses and Aaron. That being done, the Lord
|
||
appeared, and told Moses and Aaron to separate themselves from the
|
||
people, that he might consume them all in a moment. Moses and
|
||
Aaron, having a little compassion, begged God not to kill
|
||
everybody. The people were then divided, and Dathan and Abiram came
|
||
out and stood in the door of their tents with their wives and their
|
||
sons and their little children. and Moses said:
|
||
|
||
"Hereby ye shall know that the Lord hath sent me to do all
|
||
these works; for I have not done them of my mine own mind. If these
|
||
men die the common death of all men, or if they be visited after
|
||
the common visitation of all men, then the Lord hath not sent me.
|
||
But if the Lord make a new thing, and the earth open her mouth and
|
||
swallow them up, with all that appertain unto them, and they go
|
||
down quick into the pit, then ye shall understand that these men
|
||
have provoked the Lord." The moment he ceased speaking, "the ground
|
||
clove asunder that was under them; and the earth opened her mouth
|
||
and swallowed them up, and their houses, and all the men that
|
||
appertained unto Korah, and all their goods. They, and all that
|
||
appertained to them went down alive into the pit, and the earth
|
||
closed upon them, and they perished from among the congregation."
|
||
|
||
This, according to Mr. Talmage, was the act of an exceedingly
|
||
merciful God, prompted by infinite kindness, and moved by eternal
|
||
pity. What would he have done had he acted from motives of revenge?
|
||
What would he have done had he been remorselessly cruel and wicked?
|
||
|
||
In addition to those swallowed by the earth, the two hundred
|
||
and fifty men that offered the incense were consumed by "a fire
|
||
that came out from the "Lord." And not only this, but the same
|
||
merciful Jehovah wished to consume all the people, and he would
|
||
have consumed them all, only that Moses prevailed upon Aaron to
|
||
take a censer and put fire therein from off the altar of incense
|
||
and go quickly to the congregation and make an atonement for them.
|
||
He was not quick enough. The plague had already begun; and before
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
he could possibly get the censers and incense among the people,
|
||
fourteen thousand and seven hundred had died of the plague. How
|
||
many more might have died, if Jehovah had not been so slow to anger
|
||
and so merciful and tender to his children, we have no means of
|
||
knowing.
|
||
|
||
In the thirteenth chapter of the same book of Numbers, we find
|
||
that some spies were sent over into the promised land, and that
|
||
they brought back grapes and figs and pomegranates, and reported
|
||
that the whole land was flowing with milk and honey, but that the
|
||
people were strong, that the cities were walled, and that the
|
||
nations in the promised land were mightier than the Hebrews. They
|
||
reported that all the people they met were men of a great stature,
|
||
that they had seen "the giants, the sons of Anak which come of
|
||
giants," compared with whom the Israelites were "in their own sight
|
||
as grasshoppers, and so were we in their sight." Entirely
|
||
discouraged by these reports, "all the congregation lifted up their
|
||
voice and cried, and the people wept that night * * * and murmured
|
||
against Moses and against Aaron, and said unto them: Would God that
|
||
we had died in the land of Egypt! or would God we had died in this
|
||
wilderness!" Some of them thought that it would be better to go
|
||
back, -- that they might as well be slaves in Egypt as to be food
|
||
for giants in the promised land. They did not want their bones
|
||
crunched between the teeth of the sons of Anak.
|
||
|
||
Jehovah got angry again, and said to Moses: "How long will
|
||
these people provoke me? * * * I will smite them with pestilence,
|
||
and disinherit them." But Moses said: Lord, if you do this, the
|
||
Egyptians will hear of it, and they will say that you were not able
|
||
to bring your people into the promised land. Then he proceeded to
|
||
flatter him by telling him how merciful and long-suffering he had
|
||
been. Finally, Jehovah concluded to pardon the people this time,
|
||
but his pardon depended upon the violation of his promise, for he
|
||
said: "They shall not see the land which I swore unto their
|
||
fathers, neither shall any of them that provoked me see it; but my
|
||
servant Caleb, * * * him will I bring into the land." And Jehovah
|
||
said to the people: "Your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness,
|
||
and all that were numbered of you according to your whole number,
|
||
from twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against me,
|
||
ye shall not come into the land concerning which I swore to make
|
||
you dwell therein, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh, and Joshua the
|
||
son of Nun. But your little ones, which ye said should be a prey,
|
||
them will I bring in, and they shall know the land which ye have
|
||
despised. But as for you, your carcasses shall fall in this
|
||
wilderness. And your children shall wander in the wilderness forty
|
||
years * * * until your carcasses be wasted in the wilderness."
|
||
|
||
And all this because the people were afraid of giants,
|
||
compared with whom they were but as grasshoppers.
|
||
|
||
So we find that at one time the people became exceedingly
|
||
hungry. They had no flesh to eat. There were six hundred thousand
|
||
men of war, and they had nothing to feed on but manna. They
|
||
naturally murmured and complained, and thereupon a wind from the
|
||
Lord went forth and brought quails from the sea, (quails are
|
||
generally found in the sea,) and let them fall by the camp, as it
|
||
were a day's journey on this side, and as it were a day's journey
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
on the other side, round about the camp, and as it were two cubits
|
||
high upon the face of the earth. And the people stood up all that
|
||
day, and all that night, and all the next day, and they gathered
|
||
the quails. * * * And while the flesh was yet between their teeth,
|
||
ere it was chewed, the wrath of the Lord was kindled against the
|
||
people, and the Lord smote the people with a very great plague."
|
||
|
||
Yet he is slow to anger, long-suffering, merciful and just.
|
||
|
||
In the thirty-second chapter of Exodus, is the account of the
|
||
golden calf. It must be borne in mind that the worship of this calf
|
||
by the people was before the Ten Commandments had been given to
|
||
them. Christians now insist that these commandments must have been
|
||
inspired, because no human being could have constructed them, --
|
||
could have conceived of them.
|
||
|
||
It seems, according to this account, that Moses had been up in
|
||
the mount with God, getting the Ten Commandments, and that while he
|
||
was there the people had made the golden calf. When he came down
|
||
and saw them, and found what they had done, having in his hands the
|
||
two tables, the work of God, he cast the tables out of his hands,
|
||
and broke them beneath the mount. He then took the calf which they
|
||
had made, ground it to powder, strewed it in the water, and made
|
||
the children of Israel drink of it. And in the twenty-seventh verse
|
||
we are told what the Lord did: "Thus saith the Lord God of Israel:
|
||
Put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to
|
||
gate throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every
|
||
man his companion, and every man his neighbor. And the children of
|
||
Levi did according to the word of Moses; and there fell of the
|
||
people that day about three thousand men."
|
||
|
||
The reason for this slaughter is thus given: "For Moses had
|
||
said: Consecrate yourselves to-day to the Lord, even every man upon
|
||
his son, and upon his brother, that he may bestow upon you a
|
||
blessing this day."
|
||
|
||
Now, it must be remembered that there had not been as yet a
|
||
promulgation of the commandment "Thou shalt have no other gods
|
||
before me." This was a punishment for the infraction of a law
|
||
before the law was known -- before the commandment had been given.
|
||
Was it cruel, or unjust?
|
||
|
||
Does the following sound as though spoken by a God of mercy:
|
||
"I will make mine arrows drunk with blood, and my sword shall
|
||
devour flesh"? And yet this is but a small part of the vengeance
|
||
and destruction which God threatens to his enemies, as recorded in
|
||
the thirty-second chapter of the book of Deuteronomy.
|
||
|
||
In the sixty-eighth Psalm is found this merciful passage:
|
||
"That thy foot may be dipped in the blood of thine enemies, and the
|
||
tongue of thy dogs in the same."
|
||
|
||
So we find in the eleventh chapter of Joshua the reason why
|
||
the Canaanites and other nations made war upon the Jews. It is as
|
||
follows: "For it was of the Lord to harden their hearts that they
|
||
should come against Israel in battle, that he might destroy them
|
||
utterly, and that they might have no favor, but that he might
|
||
destroy them."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
Read the thirtieth chapter of Exodus and you will find that
|
||
God gave to Moses a recipe for making the oil of holy anointment,
|
||
and in the thirty-second verse we find that no one was to make any
|
||
oil like it; and in the next verse it is declared that whoever
|
||
compounded any like it, or whoever put any of it on a stranger,
|
||
should be cut off from the Lord's people.
|
||
|
||
In the same chapter, a recipe is given for perfumery, and it
|
||
is declared that whoever shall make. any like it, or that smells
|
||
like it, shall suffer death.
|
||
|
||
In the next chapter, it is decreed that if any one fails to
|
||
keep the Sabbath "he shall be surely put to death."
|
||
|
||
There are in the Pentateuch hundreds and hundreds of passages
|
||
showing the cruelty of Jehovah. What could have been more cruel
|
||
than the flood? What more heartless than to overwhelm a world? What
|
||
more merciless than to cover a shoreless sea with the corpses of
|
||
men, women and children?
|
||
|
||
The Pentateuch is filled with anathemas, with curses, with
|
||
words of vengeance, of Jealousy, of hatred, and brutality. By
|
||
reason of these passages. millions of people have plucked from
|
||
their hearts the flowers of pity and Justified the murder of women
|
||
and the assassination of babes.
|
||
|
||
In the second chapter of Second Kings we find that the prophet
|
||
Elisha was on his way to a place called Bethel, and as he was
|
||
going, there came forth little children out of the city and mocked
|
||
him and said: "Go up thou bald head; Go up thou bald head! And he
|
||
turned back and looked on them and cursed them in the name of the
|
||
Lord. And there came forth two she bears out of the wood and tare
|
||
forty and two children of them."
|
||
|
||
Of course he obtained his miraculous power from Jehovah; and
|
||
there must have been some communication between Jehovah and the
|
||
bears. Why did the bears come? How did they happen to be there?
|
||
Here is a prophet of God cursing children in the name of the Lord,
|
||
and thereupon these children are torn in fragments by wild beasts.
|
||
|
||
This is the mercy of Jehovah; and yet I am told that the Bible has
|
||
nothing cruel in it; that it preaches only mercy, justice, charity,
|
||
peace; that all hearts are softened by reading it; that the savage
|
||
nature of man is melted into tenderness and pity by it, and that
|
||
only the totally depraved can find evil in it.
|
||
|
||
And so I might go on, page after page, book after book, in the
|
||
Old Testament, and describe the cruelties committed in accordance
|
||
with the commands of Jehovah.
|
||
|
||
But all the cruelties in the Old Testament are absolute
|
||
mercies compared with the hell of the New Testament. In the Old
|
||
Testament God stops with the grave. He seems to have been satisfied
|
||
when he saw his enemies dead, when he saw their flesh rotting in
|
||
the open air, or in the beaks of birds, or in the teeth of wild
|
||
beasts. But in the New Testament, vengeance does not stop with the
|
||
grave. It begins there, and stops never. The enemies of Jehovah are
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
to be pursued through all the ages of eternity. There is to be no
|
||
forgiveness -- no cessation, no mercy, nothing but everlasting
|
||
pain.
|
||
|
||
And yet we are told that the author of hell is a being of
|
||
infinite mercy.
|
||
|
||
SECOND. All intelligent Christians will admit that there are
|
||
many passages in the Bible that, if found in the Koran, they would
|
||
regard as impure and immoral.
|
||
|
||
It is not necessary for me to specify the passages, nor to
|
||
call the attention of the public to such things. I am willing to
|
||
trust the judgment of every honest reader, and the memory of every
|
||
biblical student.
|
||
|
||
The Old Testament upholds polygamy. That is infinitely impure.
|
||
It sanctions concubinage. That is impure; nothing could or can be
|
||
worse. Hundreds of things are publicly told that should have
|
||
remained unsaid. No one is made better by reading the history of
|
||
Tamar, or the biography of Lot, or the memoirs of Noah, of Dinah,
|
||
oh Sarah and Abraham, or of Jacob and Leah and Rachel and others
|
||
that I do not care to mention. No one is improved in his morals by
|
||
reading these things.
|
||
|
||
All I mean to say is, that the Bible is like other books
|
||
produced by other nations in the same stage of civilization. What
|
||
one age considers pure, the next considers impure. What one age may
|
||
consider just, me next may look upon as infamous. Civilization is
|
||
a growth. It is continually dying, and continually being born. Old
|
||
branches rot and fall, new buds appear. It is a perpetual twilight,
|
||
and a perpetual dawn -- the death of the old, and the birth of the
|
||
new.
|
||
|
||
I do not say, throw away the Bible because there are some
|
||
foolish passages in it, but I say, throw away the foolish passages.
|
||
Don't throw away wisdom because it is found in company with folly;
|
||
but do not say that folly is wisdom, because it is found in its
|
||
company. All that is true in the Bible is true whether it is
|
||
inspired or not. All that is true did not need be inspired. Only
|
||
that which is not true needs the assistance of miracles and
|
||
wonders. I read the Bible as I read other books. What I believe to
|
||
be good, I admit is good; what I think is bad, I say is bad what I
|
||
believe to be true, I say is true, and what I believe to be false,
|
||
I denounce as false.
|
||
|
||
THIRD. Let us see whether there are any contradictions in the
|
||
Bible.
|
||
|
||
A little book has been published, called "Self Contradictions
|
||
of the Bible," by J.P. Mendum, of The Boston Investigator. I Find
|
||
many of the apparent contradictions of the Bible noted in this
|
||
book.
|
||
|
||
We all know that the Pentateuch is filled with the
|
||
commandments of God upon the subject of sacrificing animals. We
|
||
know that God declared, again and again, that the smell of burning
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
flesh was a sweet savor to him. Chapter after chapter is filled
|
||
with directions how to kill the beasts that were set apart for
|
||
sacrifices; what to do with their blood, their flesh and their fat.
|
||
And yet, in the seventh chapter of Jeremiah, all this is expressly
|
||
denied, in the following language: "For I spake not unto your
|
||
fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of
|
||
the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings or sacrifices."
|
||
|
||
And in the sixth chapter of Jeremiah, the same Jehovah says:
|
||
"Your burnt offerings are not acceptable, nor your sacrifices sweet
|
||
unto me."
|
||
|
||
In the Psalms, Jehovah derides the idea of sacrifices, and
|
||
says: "Will I eat of the flesh of bulls, or drink the blood of
|
||
goats? Offer unto God thanksgiving, and pay thy vows unto the Most
|
||
High."
|
||
|
||
So I find in Isaiah the following: "Bring no more vain
|
||
oblations; incense is an abomination unto me; the new moons and
|
||
sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is
|
||
iniquity, even the solemn meeting. Your new moons and your
|
||
appointed feasts my soul hateth; they are a trouble to me; I am
|
||
weary to bear them." "To what purpose is the multitude of your
|
||
sacrifices unto me? saith the Lord. I am full of the burnt
|
||
offerings of rams, and the fat of fed beasts; and I delight not in
|
||
the blood of bullocks, or of lambs, or of he goats. When ye come to
|
||
appear before me, who hath required this at your hand?"
|
||
|
||
So I find in James: "Let no man say when he is tempted: I am
|
||
tempted of God; for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither
|
||
tempteth he any man;" and yet in the twenty-second chapter of
|
||
Genesis I find this: "And it came to pass after these things, that
|
||
God did tempt Abraham."
|
||
|
||
In Second Samuel we see that he tempted David. He also tempted
|
||
Job, and Jeremiah says: "O Lord, thou hast deceived me, and I was
|
||
deceived." To such an extent was Jeremiah deceived, that in the
|
||
fourteenth chapter and eighteenth verse we find him crying out to
|
||
the Lord: "Wilt thou be altogether unto me as a liar?"
|
||
|
||
So in Second Thessalonians: "For these things God shall send
|
||
them strong delusions, that they should believe a lie."
|
||
|
||
So in First Kings, twenty-second chapter: "Behold, the Lord
|
||
hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these thy prophets, and
|
||
the Lord hath spoken evil concerning thee."
|
||
|
||
So in Ezekiel: "And if the prophet be deceived when he hath
|
||
spoken a thing, I, the Lord, have deceived that prophet."
|
||
|
||
So I find: "Thou shalt not bear false witness;" and in the
|
||
book of Revelation: "All liars shall have their part in the lake
|
||
which burneth with fire and "brimstone;" yet in First Kings,
|
||
twenty-second chapter, I find the following: "And the Lord said:
|
||
Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at
|
||
Ramoth-Gilead? And one said on this manner, and another said on
|
||
that manner. And there came forth a spirit and stood before the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
Lord, and said: I will persuade him. And the Lord said unto him:
|
||
Wherewith? And he said: I will go forth, and I will be a lying
|
||
spirit in the mouth of all his prophets. And he said: Thou shalt
|
||
persuade him, and prevail also. Go forth, and do so."
|
||
|
||
In the Old Testament we find contradictory laws about the same
|
||
thing, and contradictory accounts of the same occurrences.
|
||
|
||
In the twentieth chapter of Exodus we find the first account
|
||
of the giving of the Ten Commandments. In the thirty-fourth chapter
|
||
another account of the same transaction is given. These two
|
||
accounts could not have been written by the same person. Read them,
|
||
and you will be forced to admit that both of them cannot by any
|
||
possibility be true. They differ in so many particulars, and the
|
||
commandments themselves are so different, that it is impossible
|
||
that both can be true.
|
||
|
||
So there are two histories of the creation. If you will read
|
||
the first and second chapters of Genesis, you will find two
|
||
accounts inconsistent with each other, both of which cannot be
|
||
true. The first account ends with the third verse of the second
|
||
chapter of Genesis. By the first account, man and woman were made
|
||
at the same time, and made last of all. In the second account, not
|
||
to be too critical, all the beasts of the field were made before
|
||
Eve was, and Adam was made before the beasts of the field; whereas
|
||
in the first account, God made all the animals before he made Adam.
|
||
In the first account there is nothing about the rib or the bone or
|
||
the side, -- that is only found in the second account. In the first
|
||
account,: there is nothing about the Garden of Eden, nothing about
|
||
the four rivers, nothing about the mist that went up from the earth
|
||
and watered the whole face of the ground; nothing said about making
|
||
man from dust; nothing about God breathing into his nostrils the
|
||
breath of life; yet according to the second account, the Garden of
|
||
Eden was planted, and all the animals were made before Eve was
|
||
formed. It is impossible to harmonize the two accounts.
|
||
|
||
So, in the first account, only the word God is used -- "God
|
||
said so and so, -- God did so and so." In the second account he is
|
||
called Lord God, -- "the Lord God formed man," -- "the Lord God
|
||
caused it to rain," -- "the Lord God planted a garden." It is now
|
||
admitted that the book of Genesis is made up of two stories, and it
|
||
is very easy to take them apart and show exactly how they were put
|
||
together.
|
||
|
||
So there are two stories of the flood, differing almost
|
||
entirely from each other -- that is to say, so contradictory that
|
||
both cannot be true.
|
||
|
||
There: are two accounts of the manner in which Saul was made
|
||
king, and the accounts are inconsistent with each other.
|
||
|
||
Scholars now everywhere admit that the copyists made many
|
||
changes, pieced out fragments, and made additions, interpolations,
|
||
and meaningless repetitions. It is now generally conceded that the
|
||
speeches of Elihu, in Job, were interpolated, and most of the
|
||
prophecies were made by persons whose names even are not known.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
The manuscripts of the Old Testament were not alike. The Greek
|
||
version differed from the Hebrew, and there was no generally
|
||
received text of the Old Testament until after the beginning of the
|
||
Christian era. Marks and points to denote vowels were invented
|
||
probably in the seventh century after Christ; and whether these
|
||
marks and points were put in the proper places, is still an open
|
||
question. The Alexandrian version, or what is known as the
|
||
Septuagint, translated by seventy-two learned Jews assisted by
|
||
miraculous power, about two hundred years before Christ, could not,
|
||
it is now said, have been translated from the Hebrew text that we
|
||
now have. This can only be accounted for by supposing that we have
|
||
a different Hebrew text. The early Christians adopted the
|
||
Septuagint and were satisfied for a time; but so many errors were
|
||
found, and so many were scanning every word in search of something
|
||
to assist their peculiar views, that new versions were produced.
|
||
and the new versions all differed somewhat from the Septuagint as
|
||
well as from each other. These versions were mostly in Greek. The
|
||
first Latin Bible was produced in Africa, and no one has ever found
|
||
out which Latin manuscript was original. Many were produced, and
|
||
all differed from each other. These Latin versions were compared
|
||
with each other and with the Hebrew, and a new Latin version was
|
||
made in the fifth century, and the old ones held their own for
|
||
about four hundred years, and no one knows which version was right.
|
||
Besides, there were Ethiopia, Egyptian, Armenian and several other
|
||
versions, all differing from each other as well as from all others.
|
||
It was not until the fourteenth century that the Bible was
|
||
translated into German, and not until the fifteenth that Bibles
|
||
were printed in the principal languages of Europe; and most of
|
||
these Bibles differed from each other, and gave rise to endless
|
||
disputes and to almost numberless crimes.
|
||
|
||
No man in the world is learned enough, nor has he time enough,
|
||
even if he could live a thousand years, to find what books belonged
|
||
to and constituted the Old Testament. He could not ascertain the
|
||
authors of the books, nor when they were written, nor what they
|
||
mean. Until a man has sufficient time to do all this, no one can
|
||
tell whether he believes the Bible or not. It is sufficient,
|
||
however, to say that the Old Testament is filled with
|
||
contradictions as to the number of men slain in battle, as to the
|
||
number of years certain kings reigned, as to the number of a
|
||
woman's children, as to dates of events, and as to locations of
|
||
towns and cities.
|
||
|
||
Besides all this, many of its laws are contradictory, often
|
||
commanding and prohibiting the same thing.
|
||
|
||
The New Testament also is filled with contradictions. The
|
||
gospels do not even agree upon the terms of salvation. They do not
|
||
even agree as to the gospel of Christ, as to the mission of Christ.
|
||
They do not tell the same story regarding the betrayal, the
|
||
crucifixion, the resurrection or the ascension of Christ. John is
|
||
the only one that ever heard of being "born again." The evangelists
|
||
do not give the same account of the same miracles, and the miracles
|
||
are not given in the same order. They do not agree even in the
|
||
genealogy of Christ.
|
||
|
||
FOURTH. Is the Bible scientific? In my judgment it is not.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that this world was "created; "that
|
||
the universe was produced by an infinite being, who had existed an
|
||
eternity prior to such "creation." My mind is such that I cannot
|
||
possibly conceive of a "creation." Neither can I conceive of an
|
||
infinite being who dwelt in infinite space an infinite length of
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
I do not think it is scientific to say that the universe was
|
||
made in six days, or that this world is only about six thousand
|
||
years old, or that man has only been upon the earth for about six
|
||
thousand year.
|
||
|
||
If the Bible is true, Adam was the first man. The age of Adam
|
||
is given, the age of his children, and the time, according to the
|
||
Bible, was kept and known from Adam, so that if the Bible is true,
|
||
man has only been in this world about six thousand years. In my
|
||
judgment, and in the judgment of every scientific man whose
|
||
judgment is worth having or quoting, man inhabited this earth for
|
||
thousands of ages prior to the creation of Adam. On one point the
|
||
Bible is at least certain, and that is, as to the life of Adam. The
|
||
genealogy is given, the pedigree is there, and it is impossible to
|
||
escape the conclusion that, according to the Bible, man has only
|
||
been upon this earth about six thousand years. There is no chance
|
||
there to say "long periods of time," or "geological ages." There we
|
||
have the years. And as to the time of the creation of man, the
|
||
Bible does not tell the truth.
|
||
|
||
What is generally called "The Fall of Man" is unscientific.
|
||
God could not have made a moral character for Adam. Even admitting
|
||
the rest of the story to be true, Adam certainly had to make
|
||
character for himself.
|
||
|
||
The idea that there never would have been any disease or death
|
||
in this world had it not been for the eating of the forbidden fruit
|
||
is preposterously unscientific. Admitting that Adam was made only
|
||
six thousand years ago, death was in the world millions of years
|
||
before that time. The old rocks are filled with remains of what
|
||
were once living and breathing animals. Continents were built up
|
||
with the petrified corpses of animals. We know, therefore, that
|
||
death did not enter the world because of Adam's sin. We know that
|
||
life and death are but successive links in an eternal chain.
|
||
|
||
So it is unscientific to say that thorns and brambles were
|
||
produced by Adam's sin.
|
||
|
||
It is also unscientific to say that labor was pronounced as a
|
||
curse upon man. Labor is not a curse. Labor is a blessing. Idleness
|
||
is a curse.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that the sons of God. living, we
|
||
suppose, in heaven, fell in love with the daughters of men, and
|
||
that on account of this a flood was sent upon the earth that
|
||
covered the highest mountains.
|
||
|
||
The whole story of the flood is unscientific, and no
|
||
scientific man worthy of the name, believes it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
Neither is the story of the tower of Babel a scientific thing.
|
||
Does any scientific man believe that God confounded the language of
|
||
men for fear they would succeed in building a tower high enough to
|
||
reach to heaven?
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that angels were in the habit of
|
||
walking about the earth, eating veal dressed with butter and milk,
|
||
and making bargains about the destruction of cities.
|
||
|
||
The story of Lot's wife having been turned into a pillar of
|
||
salt is extremely unscientific.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that people at one time lived to be
|
||
nearly a thousand years of age. The history of the world shows that
|
||
human life is lengthening instead of shortening.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that the infinite God wrestled with
|
||
Jacob and got the better of him, putting his thigh out of joint.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that God, in the likeness of a flame
|
||
of fire, inhabited a bush.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that a stick could be changed into
|
||
a living snake. Living snakes can not be made out of sticks. There
|
||
are not the necessary elements in a stick to make a snake.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that God changed water into blood.
|
||
All the elements of blood are not in water.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to declare that dust was changed into lice.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that God caused a thick darkness
|
||
over the land of Egypt, and yet allowed it to be light in the
|
||
houses of the Jews.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that about seventy people could,
|
||
in two hundred and fifteen years increase to three millions.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that an infinitely good God would
|
||
destroy innocent people to get revenge upon a king.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that slavery was once right, that
|
||
polygamy was once a virtue, and that extermination was mercy.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to assert that a being of infinite power
|
||
and goodness went into partnership with insects, -- granted letters
|
||
of marque and reprisal to hornets.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to insist that bread was really rained from
|
||
heaven.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to suppose that an infinite being spent
|
||
forty days and nights furnishing Moses with plans and
|
||
specifications for a tabernacle, an ark, a mercy seat, cherubs of
|
||
gold, a table, four rings, some dishes, some spoons, one
|
||
candlestick, several bowls, a few knobs, seven lamps, some
|
||
snuffers, a pair of tongs, some curtains, a roof for a tent of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
rams' skins dyed red, a few boards, an altar with horns, ash pans,
|
||
basins and flesh hooks, shovels and pots and sockets of silver and
|
||
ounces of gold and pins of brass -- for all of which this God
|
||
brought with him patterns from heaven.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that when a man commits a sin, he
|
||
can settle with God by killing a sheep.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to say that a priest, by laying his hands
|
||
on the head of a goat, can transfer the sins of a people to the
|
||
animal.
|
||
|
||
Was it scientific to endeavor to ascertain whether a woman was
|
||
virtuous or not, by compelling her to drink water mixed with dirt
|
||
from the floor of the sanctuary?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that a dry stick budded, blossomed,
|
||
and bore almonds; or that the ashes of a red heifer mixed with
|
||
water can cleanse us of sin; or that a good being gave cities into
|
||
the hands of the Jews in consideration of their murdering all the
|
||
inhabitants?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that an animal saw an angel, and
|
||
conversed with a man?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to imagine that thrusting a spear through the
|
||
body of a woman ever stayed a plague?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that a river cut itself in two and
|
||
allowed the lower end to run off?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to assert that seven priests blew seven rams'
|
||
horns loud enough to blow down the walls of a city?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that the sun stood still in the midst
|
||
of heaven, and hasted not to go down for about a whole day, and
|
||
that the moon also stayed?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientifically probable that an angel of the Lord
|
||
devoured unleavened cakes and broth with fire that came out of the
|
||
end of a stick, as he sat under an oak tree; or that God made known
|
||
his will by letting dew fall on wool without wetting the ground
|
||
around it; or that an angel of God appeared to Manoah in the
|
||
absence of her husband, and that this angel afterwards went up in
|
||
a flame of fire, and as the result of this visit a child was born
|
||
whose strength was in his hair?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that the muscle of a man depended upon
|
||
the length of his locks?
|
||
|
||
Is it unscientific to deny that water gushed from a hollow
|
||
place in a dry bone?
|
||
|
||
Is it evidence of a thoroughly scientific mind to believe that
|
||
one man turned over a house so large that three thousand people
|
||
were on its roof?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
Is it purely scientific to say that a man was once fed by the
|
||
birds of the air, who brought him bread and meat every morning and
|
||
evening, and that afterward an angel turned cook and prepared two
|
||
suppers in one night, for the same prophet, who ate enough to last
|
||
him forty days and forty nights?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that a river divided because the water
|
||
had been struck with a cloak; or that a man actually went to heaven
|
||
in a chariot of fire drawn by horses of fire; or that a being of
|
||
infinite mercy would destroy children for laughing at a bald-headed
|
||
prophet; or curse children and children's children with leprosy for
|
||
a father's fault; or that he made iron float in water; or that when
|
||
one corpse touched another it came to life; or that the sun went
|
||
backward in heaven so that the shadow on a sundial went back ten
|
||
degrees, as a sign that a miserable barbarian king would get well?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that the earth not only stopped in its
|
||
rotary motion, but absolutely turned the other way, -- that its
|
||
motion was reversed simply as a sign to a petty king?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that Solomon made gold and silver at
|
||
Jerusalem as plentiful as stones, when we know that there were
|
||
kings in his day who could have thrown away the value of the whole
|
||
of Palestine without missing the amount?
|
||
|
||
Is it scientific to say that Solomon exceeded all the kings of
|
||
the earth in glory, when his country was barren, without roads,
|
||
when his people were few, without commerce, without the arts,
|
||
without the sciences, without education, without luxuries?
|
||
|
||
According to the Bible, as long as Jehovah attended to the
|
||
affairs of the Jews, they had nothing but war, pestilence and
|
||
famine; after Jehovah abandoned them, and the Christians ceased, in
|
||
a measure, to persecute them, the Jews became the most prosperous
|
||
of people. Since Jehovah in his anger cast them away, they have
|
||
produced painters, sculptors, scientists, statesmen. composers,
|
||
soldiers and philosophers.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that God ever prevented rain,
|
||
that he ever caused famine, that he ever sent locusts to devour the
|
||
wheat and corn, that he ever relied on pestilence for the
|
||
government of mankind; or that he ever killed children to get even
|
||
with their parents.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that the king of Egypt invaded
|
||
Palestine with seventy thousand horsemen and twelve hundred
|
||
chariots of war. There was not, at that time, a road in Palestine
|
||
over which a chariot could be driven.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that in a battle between
|
||
Jeroboam and Abijah, the army of Abijah slew in one day five
|
||
hundred thousand chosen men.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that Zerah, the Ethiopian,
|
||
invaded Palestine with a million of men who were overthrown and
|
||
destroyed; or that Jehoshaphat had a standing army of nine hundred
|
||
and sixty thousand men.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
lt is unscientific to believe that Jehovah advertised for a
|
||
liar, as is related in Second Chronicles.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that fire refused to burn, or
|
||
that water refused to wet.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe in dreams, in visions, and in
|
||
miracles.
|
||
|
||
It is not scientific to believe that children have been born
|
||
without fathers, that the dead have ever been raised to life, or
|
||
that people have bodily ascended to heaven taking their clothes
|
||
with them. It is not scientific to believe in the supernatural.
|
||
Science dwells in the realm of fact, in the realm of demonstration.
|
||
science depends upon human experience, upon observation, upon
|
||
reason.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that an innocent man can be Punished
|
||
in place of a criminal, and for a criminal, and that the criminal,
|
||
on account of such punishment, can be justified.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to say that a finite sin deserves infinite
|
||
punishment.
|
||
|
||
It is unscientific to believe that devils can inhabit human
|
||
beings, or that they can take possession of swine, or that the
|
||
devil could bodily take a man, or the Son of God, and carry him to
|
||
the pinnacle of a temple.
|
||
|
||
In short, the foolish, the unreasonable, the false, the
|
||
miraculous and the supernatural are unscientific.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Mr. Talmage gives his reason for accepting the New
|
||
Testament, and says: "You can trace it right out. Jerome and
|
||
Eusebius in the first century, and Origen in the second century,
|
||
gave lists of the writers of the New Testament. These lists
|
||
correspond with our list of the writers of the New Testament,
|
||
showing that precisely as we have it, they had it in the third and
|
||
fourth centuries. Where did they get it? From Irenaeua. Where did
|
||
he get it? From Polycarp. Where did Polycarp get it? From Saint
|
||
John, who was a personal associate of Jesus. The line is just as
|
||
clear as anything ever was clear." How do you understand this
|
||
matter, and has Mr. Talmage stated the facts?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. Let us examine first the witnesses produced by Mr.
|
||
Talmage. We will also call attention to the great principle laid
|
||
down by Mr. Talmage for the examination of evidence, -- that where
|
||
a witness is found false in one particular, his entire testimony.
|
||
must be thrown away.
|
||
|
||
Eusebius was born somewhere about two hundred and seventy
|
||
years after Christ. After many vicissitudes he became, it is said,
|
||
the friend of Constantine. He made an oration in which he extolled
|
||
the virtues of this murderer, and had the honor of sitting at the
|
||
right hand of the man who had shed the blood of his wife and son.
|
||
In the great controversy with regard to the position that Christ
|
||
should occupy in the Trinity, he sided with Arius, "and lent
|
||
himself to the persecution of the orthodox with Athanasius." He
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
insisted that Jesus Christ was not the same as God, and that he was
|
||
not of equal power and glory. Will Mr. Talmage admit that his
|
||
witness told the truth in this? "He would not even call the Son
|
||
co-eternal with God."
|
||
|
||
Eusebius must have been an exceedingly truthful man. He
|
||
declared that the tracks of Pharaoh's chariots were in his day
|
||
visible upon the shores of the Red Sea; that these tracks had been
|
||
through all the years miraculously preserved from the action of
|
||
wind and wave, as a supernatural testimony to the fact that God
|
||
miraculously overwhelmed Pharaoh and his hosts.
|
||
|
||
Eusebius also relates that when Joseph and Mary arrived in
|
||
Egypt they took up their abode in Hermopolis, a city of Thebaeus,
|
||
in which was the superb temple of Serapis. When Joseph and Mary
|
||
entered the temple, not only the great idol, but all the lesser
|
||
idols fell down before him.
|
||
|
||
"It is believed by the learned Dr. Lardner, that Eusebius was
|
||
the one guilty of the forgery in the passage found in Josephus
|
||
concerning Christ. Unblushing falsehoods and literary forgeries of
|
||
the vilest character darkened the pages of his historical
|
||
writings." (White's History.)
|
||
|
||
From the same authority I learn that Eusebius invented an
|
||
eclipse, and some earthquakes, to agree with the account of the
|
||
crucifixion. It is also believed that Eusebius quoted from works
|
||
that never existed, and that he pretended a work had been written
|
||
by Porphyry, entitled: "The Philosophy of Oracles," and then quoted
|
||
from it for the purpose of proving the truth of the Christian
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
The fact is, Eusebius was utterly destitute of truth. He
|
||
believed, as many still believe, that he could please God by the
|
||
fabrication of lies.
|
||
|
||
Irenaeus lived somewhere about the end of the second century.
|
||
"Very little is known of his early history, and the accounts given
|
||
in various biographies are for the most part conjectural." The
|
||
writings of Irenaeus are known to us principally through Eusebius,
|
||
and we know the value of his testimony.
|
||
|
||
Now, if we are to take the testimony of Irenaeus, why not take
|
||
it? He says that the ministry of Christ lasted for twenty years,
|
||
and that Christ was fifty years old at the time of his crucifixion.
|
||
He also insisted that the "Gospel of Paul" was written by Luke, "a
|
||
statement made to give sanction to the gospel of Luke."
|
||
|
||
Irenaeus insisted that there were four gospels, that there
|
||
must be, and "he speaks frequently of these gospels, and argues
|
||
that they should be four in number, neither more nor less, because
|
||
there are four universal winds, and four quarters of the world;"
|
||
and he might have added: because donkeys have four legs.
|
||
|
||
These facts can be found in "The History of the Christian
|
||
Religion to A.D. 200," by Charles B. Waite, -- a book that Mr.
|
||
Talmage ought to read.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
According to Mr. Waite, Irenaeus, in the thirty-third chapter
|
||
of his fifth book, Adversus Haereses, cites from Papias the
|
||
following sayings of Christ: "The days will come in which vines
|
||
shall grow which shall have ten thousand branches, and on each
|
||
branch ten thousand twigs, and in each twig ten thousand shoots,
|
||
and in each shoot ten thousand clusters, and in every one of the
|
||
clusters ten thousand grapes, and every grape when pressed will
|
||
give five and twenty metrets of wine." Also that "one thousand
|
||
million pounds of clear, pure, fine flour will be produced from one
|
||
grain of wheat." Irenaeus adds that "these things were borne
|
||
witness to by Papias the hearer of John and the companion of
|
||
Polycarp."
|
||
|
||
Is it possible that the eternal welfare of a human being
|
||
depends upon believing the testimony of Polycarp and Irenaeus? Are
|
||
people to be saved or lost on the reputation of Eusebius? Suppose
|
||
a man is firmly convinced that Polycarp knew nothing about Saint
|
||
John, and that Saint John knew nothing about Christ, -- what then?
|
||
Suppose he is convinced that Eusebius is utterly unworthy of
|
||
credit, -- what then? Must a man believe statements that he has
|
||
every reason to think are false?
|
||
|
||
The question arises as to the witnesses named by Mr. Talmage,
|
||
whether they were competent to decide as to the truth or falsehood
|
||
of the gospels. We have the right to inquire into their mental
|
||
traits for the purpose of giving only due weight to what they have
|
||
said.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Bronson C. Keeler is the author of a book called: "A Short
|
||
History of the Bible." I avail myself of a few of the facts he has
|
||
there collected. I find in this book, that Irenaeus, Clement and
|
||
Origen believed in the fable of the Phoenix, and insisted that God
|
||
produced the bird on purpose to prove the probability of the
|
||
resurrection of the body. Some of the early fathers believed that
|
||
the hyena changed its sex every year. Others of them gave as a
|
||
reason why good people should eat only animals with a cloven foot,
|
||
the fact that righteous people lived not only in this world, but
|
||
had expectations in the next. They also believed that insane people
|
||
were possessed by devils; that angels ate manna; that some angels
|
||
loved the daughters of men and fell; that the pains of women in
|
||
childbirth, and the fact that serpents crawl on their bellies, were
|
||
proofs that the account of the fall, as given in Genesis, is true;
|
||
that the stag renewed its youth by eating poisonous snakes; that
|
||
eclipses and comets were signs of God's anger; that volcanoes were
|
||
openings into hell; that demons blighted apples; that a corpse in
|
||
a cemetery moved to make room for another corpse to be placed
|
||
beside it. Clement of Alexandria believed that hail storms,
|
||
tempests and plagues were caused by demons. He also believed, with
|
||
Mr. Talmage, that the events in the life of Abraham were typical
|
||
and prophetical of arithmetic and astronomy.
|
||
|
||
Origen, another of the witnesses of Mr. Talmage, said that the
|
||
sun, moon and stars were living creatures, endowed with reason and
|
||
free will, and occasionally inclined to sin. That they had free
|
||
will, he proved by quoting from Job; that they were rational
|
||
creatures, he inferred from the fact that they moved. The sun, moon
|
||
and stars, according to him, were "subject to vanity," and he
|
||
believed that they prayed to God through his only begotten son.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
35
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
These intelligent witnesses believed that the blighting of
|
||
vines and fruit trees, and the disease and destruction that came
|
||
upon animals and men, were all the work of demons; but that when
|
||
they had entered into men, the sign of the cross would drive them
|
||
out. They derided the idea that the earth is round, and one of them
|
||
said: "About the antipodes also, one can neither hear nor speak
|
||
without laughter. It is asserted as something serious that we
|
||
should believe that there are men who have their feet opposite to
|
||
ours. The ravings of Anaxagoras are more tolerable, who said that
|
||
snow was black."
|
||
|
||
Concerning these early fathers, Professor Davidson, as quoted
|
||
by Mr. Keeler, uses the following language: "Of the three fathers
|
||
who contributed most to the growth of the canon, Irenaeus was
|
||
credulous and blundering; Tertullian passionate and one-sided; and
|
||
Clement of Alexandria, imbued with the treasures of Greek wisdom,
|
||
was mainly occupied with ecclesiastical ethics. Their assertions
|
||
show both ignorance and exaggeration."
|
||
|
||
These early fathers relied upon by Mr. Talmage, quoted from
|
||
books now regarded as apocryphal -- books that have been thrown
|
||
away by the church and are no longer considered as of the slightest
|
||
authority. Upon this subject I again quote Mr. Keeler; "Clement
|
||
quoted the 'Gospel according to the Hebrews,' which is now thrown
|
||
away by the church; he also quoted from the Sibylline books and the
|
||
Pentateuch in the same sentence. Origen frequently cited the Gospel
|
||
of the Hebrews. Jerome did the same, and Clement believed in the
|
||
'Gospel according to the Egyptians.' The Shepherd of Hermas, a book
|
||
in high repute in the early church, and one which distinctly claims
|
||
to have been inspired, was quoted by Irenaeus as Scripture. Clement
|
||
of Alexandria said it was a divine revelation. Origen said it was
|
||
divinely inspired, and quoted it as Holy Scripture at the same time
|
||
that he cited the Psalms and Epistles of Paul. Jerome quoted the
|
||
'Wisdom of Jesus, the Son of Sirach,' as divine Scripture. Origen
|
||
quotes the 'Wisdom of Solomon' as the 'Word of God' and 'the words
|
||
of Christ himself.' Eusebius of Caesarea cites it as a 'Divine
|
||
Oracle,' and St. Chrysostom used it as Scripture. So Eusebius
|
||
quotes the thirteenth chapter of Daniel as Scripture, but as a
|
||
matter of fact, Daniel has not a thirteenth chapter, -- the church
|
||
has taken it away. Clement spoke of the writer of the fourth book
|
||
of Esdras as a prophet; he thought Baruch as much the word of God
|
||
as any other book, and he quotes it as divine Scripture. Clement
|
||
cites Barnabas as an apostle. Origen quotes from the Epistle of
|
||
Barnabas, calls it 'Holy Scripture,' and places it on a level with
|
||
the Psalms and the Epistles of Paul; and Clement of Alexandria
|
||
believed in the 'Epistle of Barnabas,' and the Revelation of
|
||
Peter,' and wrote comments upon these holy books."
|
||
|
||
Nothing can exceed the credulity of the early fathers, unless
|
||
it may be their ignorance. They believed everything that was
|
||
miraculous. They believed everything except the truth. Anything
|
||
that really happened was considered of no importance by them. They
|
||
looked for wonders, miracles, and monstrous things, and --
|
||
generally found them. They revelled in the misshapen and the
|
||
repulsive. They did not think it wrong to swear falsely in a good
|
||
cause. They interpolated, forged, and changed the records to suit
|
||
themselves, for the sake of Christ. They quoted from persons who
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
36
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
never wrote. They misrepresented those who had written, and their
|
||
evidence is absolutely worthless. They were ignorant, credulous,
|
||
mendacious, fanatical, pious, unreasonable, bigoted, hypocritical,
|
||
and for the most part, insane. Read the book of Revelation, and you
|
||
will agree with me that nothing that ever emanated from a madhouse
|
||
can more than equal it for incoherence. Most of the writings of the
|
||
early fathers are of the same kind.
|
||
|
||
As to Saint John, the real truth is, that we know nothing
|
||
certainly of him. We do not know that he ever lived.
|
||
|
||
We know nothing certainly of Jesus Christ. We know nothing of
|
||
his infancy, nothing of his youth, and we are not sure that such a
|
||
person ever existed.
|
||
|
||
We know nothing of Polycarp. We do not know where he was born,
|
||
or when, or how he died. We know nothing for certain about
|
||
Irenaeus. All the names quoted by Mr. Talmage as his witnesses are
|
||
surrounded by clouds and doubts, by mist and darkness. We only know
|
||
that many of their statements are false, and do not know that any
|
||
of them are true.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. What do you think of the following statement by Mr.
|
||
Talmage: "Oh, I have to tell you that no man ever died for a lie
|
||
cheerfully and triumphantly"?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. There was a time when men "cheerfully and triumphantly
|
||
died" in defence of the doctrine of the "real presence" of God in
|
||
the wafer and wine. Does Mr. Talmage believe in the doctrine of
|
||
"transubstantiation"? Yet hundreds have died "cheerfully and
|
||
triumphantly" for it. Men have died for the idea that baptism by
|
||
immersion is the only scriptural baptism. Did they die for a lie?
|
||
If not, is Mr. Talmage a Baptist?
|
||
|
||
Giordano Bruno was an atheist, yet he perished at the stake
|
||
rather than retract his opinions. He did not expect to be welcomed
|
||
by angels and by God. He did not look for a crown of glory. He
|
||
expected simply death and eternal extinction. Does the fact that he
|
||
died for that belief prove its truth?
|
||
|
||
Thousands upon thousands have died in defence of the religion
|
||
of Mohammed. Was Mohammed an impostor? Thousands have welcomed
|
||
death in defence of the doctrines of Buddha. Is Buddhism true?
|
||
|
||
So I might make a tour of the world, and of all ages of human
|
||
history, and find that millions and millions have died "cheerfully
|
||
and triumphantly "in defence of their opinions. There is not the
|
||
slightest truth in Mr. Talmage's statement.
|
||
|
||
A little while ago, a man shot at the Czar of Russia. On the
|
||
day of his execution he was asked if he wished religious
|
||
consolation. He replied that he believed in no religion. What did
|
||
that prove? It proved only the man's honesty of opinion. All the
|
||
martyrs in the world cannot change, never did change, a falsehood
|
||
into a truth, nor a truth into a falsehood. Martyrdom proves
|
||
nothing but the sincerity of the martyr and the cruelty and
|
||
meanness of his murderers. Thousands and thousands of people have
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
37
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
imagined that they knew things, that they were certain, and have
|
||
died rather than retract their honest beliefs.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Talmage now says that he knows all about the Old
|
||
Testament, that the prophecies were fulfilled, and yet he does not
|
||
know when the prophecies were made -- whether they were made before
|
||
or after the fact. He does not know whether the destruction of
|
||
Babylon was told before it happened, or after. He knows nothing
|
||
upon the subject. He does not know who made the pretended
|
||
prophecies. He does not know that Isaiah, or Jeremiah, or Habakkuk,
|
||
or Hosea ever lived in this world. He does not know who wrote a
|
||
single book of the Old Testament. He knows nothing on the subject.
|
||
He believes in the inspiration of the Old Testament because ancient
|
||
cities finally fell into decay -- were overrun and destroyed by
|
||
enemies, and he accounts for the fact that the Jew does not lose
|
||
his nationality by saying that the Old Testament is true.
|
||
|
||
The Jews have been persecuted by the Christians, and they are
|
||
still persecuted by them; and Mr. Talmage seems to think that this
|
||
persecution was a part of God's plan, that the Jews might, by
|
||
persecution, be prevented from mingling with other nationalities,
|
||
and so might stand, through the instrumentality of perpetual hate
|
||
and cruelty, the suffering witnesses of the divine truth of the
|
||
Bible.
|
||
|
||
The Jews do not testify to the truth of the Bible, but to the
|
||
barbarism and inhumanity of Christians -- to the meanness and
|
||
hatred of what we are pleased to call the "civilized world." They
|
||
testify to the fact that nothing so hardens the human heart as
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
There is no prophecy in the Old Testament foretelling the
|
||
coming of Jesus Christ. There is not one word in the Old Testament
|
||
referring to him in any way -- not one word. The only way to prove
|
||
this is to take your Bible, and wherever you find these words:
|
||
"That it might be fulfilled," and "which was spoken," turn to the
|
||
Old Testament and find what was written, and you will see that it
|
||
had not the slightest possible reference to the thing recounted in
|
||
the New Testament -- not the slightest.
|
||
|
||
Let us take some of the prophecies of the Bible, and see how
|
||
plain they are, and how beautiful they are. Let us see whether any
|
||
human being can tell whether they have ever been fulfilled or not.
|
||
|
||
Here is a vision of Ezekiel: "I looked, and behold a whirlwind
|
||
came out of the north, a great cloud, and a fire infolding itself,
|
||
and a brightness was about it, and out of the midst thereof as the
|
||
color of amber, out of the midst of the fire. Also out of the midst
|
||
thereof came the likeness of four living creatures. And this was
|
||
their appearance; they had the likeness of a man. And every one had
|
||
four faces, and every one had four wings. And their feet were
|
||
straight feet; and the sole of their feet was like the sole of a
|
||
calf's foot: and they sparkled like the color of burnished brass.
|
||
And they had the hands of a man under their wings on their four
|
||
sides; and they four had their faces and their wings. Their wings
|
||
were joined one to another; they turned not when they went; they
|
||
went every one straight forward. As for the likeness of their
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
38
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
faces, they four had the face of a man, and the face of a lion, on
|
||
the right side: and they four had the face of an ox on the left
|
||
side; they four also had the face of an eagle.
|
||
|
||
Thus were their faces: and their wings were stretched upward;
|
||
two wings of every one were joined one to another. and two covered
|
||
their bodies. And they went every one straight forward: whither the
|
||
spirit was to go, they went; and they turned not when they went.
|
||
|
||
As for the likeness of the living creatures, their appearance
|
||
was like burning coals of fire, and like the appearance of lamps:
|
||
it went up and down among the living creatures; and the fire was
|
||
bright, and out of the fire: went forth lightning. And the living
|
||
creatures ran and returned as the appearance of a flash of
|
||
lightning.
|
||
|
||
Now as I beheld the living creatures, behold one wheel upon
|
||
the earth by the living creatures, with his four faces. The
|
||
appearance of the wheels and their work was like unto the color of
|
||
a beryl: and they four had one likeness: and their appearance and
|
||
their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel. When
|
||
they went, they went upon their four sides: and they turned not
|
||
when they went. As for their rings, they were so high that they
|
||
were dreadful; and their rings were full of eyes round about them
|
||
four. And when the living creatures went, the wheels went by them:
|
||
and when the living creatures were lifted up from the earth, the
|
||
wheels were lifted up. Whithersoever the spirit was to go, they
|
||
went, thither was their spirit to go; and the wheels were lifted up
|
||
over against them: for the spirit of the living creature was in the
|
||
wheels. When those went, these went; and when those stood, these
|
||
stood; and when those were lifted up from the earth, the wheels
|
||
were lifted up over against them: for the spirit of the living
|
||
creature was in the wheels. And the likeness of the firmament upon
|
||
the heads of the living creature was as the color of the terrible
|
||
crystal, stretched forth over their heads above. And under the
|
||
firmament were their wings straight, the one toward the other;
|
||
every one had two, which covered on this side, and every one had
|
||
two which covered on that side, their bodies."
|
||
|
||
Is such a vision a prophecy? Is it calculated to convey the
|
||
slightest information? If so, what?
|
||
|
||
So, the following vision of the prophet Daniel is exceedingly
|
||
important and instructive:
|
||
|
||
"Daniel spake and said: I saw in my vision by night, and
|
||
behold, the four winds of the heaven strove upon the great sea. And
|
||
four great beasts came up from the sea, diverse one from another.
|
||
The first was like a lion, and had eagle's wings: I beheld till the
|
||
wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted up from the earth,
|
||
and made stand upon the feet as a man, and a man's heart was given
|
||
to it. And behold another beast, a second, like to a bear, and it
|
||
raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of
|
||
it between the teeth of it: and they said thus unto it, Arise,
|
||
devour much flesh.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
39
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
After this I beheld, and lo another, like a leopard, which had
|
||
upon the back of it four wings of a fowl the beast had also four
|
||
heads, and dominion was given to it.
|
||
|
||
After this I saw in the night visions, and behold a fourth
|
||
beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it had
|
||
great iron teeth; it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the
|
||
residue with the feet of it; and it was diverse from, all the
|
||
beasts that were before it, and it had ten horns. I considered the
|
||
horns, and, behold, there came up among them another little horn,
|
||
before whom there were three of the first horns plucked up by the
|
||
roots: and behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of man, and
|
||
a mouth speaking great things."
|
||
|
||
I have no doubt that this prophecy has been literally
|
||
fulfilled, but I am not at present in condition to give the time,
|
||
place, or circumstances.
|
||
|
||
A few moments ago, my attention was called to the following
|
||
extract from The New York Harold of the thirteenth of March,
|
||
instant:
|
||
|
||
"At the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, Dr. Armitage took as his
|
||
text, 'A wheel in the middle of a wheel' -- Ezekiel, i., 16. Here,
|
||
said the preacher, are three distinct visions in one -- the living
|
||
creatures, the moving wheels and the fiery throne. We have time
|
||
only to stop the wheels of this mystic chariot of Jehovah, that we
|
||
may hold holy converse with Him who rides upon the wings of the
|
||
wind. In this vision of the prophet we have a minute and amplified
|
||
account of these magnificent symbols or hieroglyphics, this
|
||
wondrous machinery which denotes immense attributes and agencies
|
||
and volitions, passing their awful and mysterious course of power
|
||
and intelligence in revolution after revolution of the emblematical
|
||
mechanism, in steady and harmonious advancement to the object after
|
||
which they are reaching. We are compelled to look upon the whole as
|
||
symbolical of that tender and endearing providence of which Jesus
|
||
spoke when He said, 'The very hairs of your head are numbered.'"
|
||
|
||
Certainly, an ordinary person. not having been illuminated by
|
||
the spirit of prophecy, would never have even dreamed that there
|
||
was the slightest reference in Ezekiel's vision to anything like
|
||
counting hairs. As a commentator, the Rev. Dr. Armitage has no
|
||
equal; and, in my judgment, no rival. He has placed himself beyond
|
||
the reach of ridicule. It is impossible to say anything about his
|
||
sermon as laughable as his sermon.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Have you no confidence in any prophecies? Do you
|
||
take the ground that there never has been a human being who could
|
||
predict the future?
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. I admit that a man of average intelligence knows that
|
||
a certain course, when pursued long enough, will bring national
|
||
disaster, and it is perfectly safe to predict the downfall of any
|
||
and every country in the world. In my judgment, nations, like
|
||
individuals, have an average life. Every nation is mortal. An
|
||
immortal nation cannot be constructed of mortal individuals. A
|
||
nation has a reason for existing, and that reason sustains the same
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
40
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
relation to the nation that the acorn does to the oak. The nation
|
||
will attain its growth -- other things being equal. It will reach
|
||
its manhood and its prime, but it will sink into old age, and at
|
||
last must die. Probably, in a few thousand years, men will be able
|
||
to calculate the average life of nations, as they now calculate the
|
||
average life of persons. There has been no period since the morning
|
||
of history until now, that men did not know of dead and dying
|
||
nations. There has always been a national cemetery. Poland is dead,
|
||
Turkey is dying. In every nation are the seeds of dissolution. Not
|
||
only do nations die, but races of men. A nation is born, becomes
|
||
powerful, luxurious, at last grows weak, is overcome, dies, and
|
||
another takes its place. In this way civilization and barbarism,
|
||
like day and night. alternate through all of history's years.
|
||
|
||
In every nation there are at least two classes of men: First,
|
||
the enthusiastic, the patriotic, who believe that the nation will
|
||
live forever, -- that its flag will float while the earth has air;
|
||
Second, the owls and ravens and croakers, who are always predicting
|
||
disaster, defeat, and death. To the last class belong the
|
||
Jeremiahs, Ezekiels, and Isaiahs of the Jews. They were always
|
||
predicting the downfall of Jerusalem. They revelled in defeat and
|
||
captivity. They loved to paint the horrors of famine and war. For
|
||
the most part, they were envious, hateful, misanthropic and unjust.
|
||
|
||
There seems to have been a war between church and state. The
|
||
prophets were endeavoring to preserve the ecclesiastical power.
|
||
Every king who would listen to them, was chosen of God. He
|
||
instantly became the model of virtue, and the prophets assured him
|
||
that he was in the keeping of Jehovah. But if the king had a mind
|
||
of his own, the prophets immediately called down upon him all the
|
||
curses of heaven, and predicted the speedy destruction of his
|
||
kingdom.
|
||
|
||
If our own country should be divided, if an empire should rise
|
||
upon the ruins of the Republic, it would be very easy to find that
|
||
hundreds and thousands of people had foretold that very thing. If
|
||
you will read the political speeches of the last twenty-two years,
|
||
you will find prophecies to fit any possible future state of
|
||
affairs in our country. No matter what happens, you will find that
|
||
somebody predicted it. If the city of London should lose her trade,
|
||
if the Parliament house should become the abode of moles and bats,
|
||
if "the New Zealander should sit upon the ruins of London Bridge,"
|
||
all these things would be simply the fulfillment of prophecy. The
|
||
fall of every nation under the sun has been predicted by hundreds
|
||
and thousands of people.
|
||
|
||
The prophecies of the Old Testament can be made to fit
|
||
anything that may happen, or that may not happen. They will apply
|
||
to the death of a king, or to the destruction of a people, -- to
|
||
the loss of commerce, or the discovery of a continent. Each
|
||
prophecy is a jugglery of words, of figures, of symbols, so put
|
||
together, so used, so interpreted, that they can mean anything,
|
||
everything, or nothing.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION. Do you see anything "prophetic" in the fate of the
|
||
Jewish people themselves? Do you think that God made the Jewish
|
||
people wanderers, so that they might he perpetual witnesses to the
|
||
truth of the Scriptures?
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
41
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
ANSWER. I cannot believe that an infinitely good God would
|
||
make anybody a wanderer. Neither can I believe that he would keep
|
||
millions of people without country and without home, and allow them
|
||
to be persecuted for thousands of years, simply that they might be
|
||
used as witnesses. Nothing could be more absurdly cruel than this.
|
||
|
||
The Christians justify their treatment of the Jews on the
|
||
ground that they are simply fulfilling prophecy. The Jews have
|
||
suffered because of the horrid story of their ancestors crucified
|
||
the Son of God. Christianity, coming into power, looked with horror
|
||
upon the Jews, who denied the truth of the gospel. Each Jew was
|
||
regarded as a dangerous witness against Christianity. The early
|
||
Christians saw how necessary it was that the people who lived in
|
||
Jerusalem at the time of Christ should be convinced that he was
|
||
God, and should testify to the miracles he wrought. Whenever a Jew
|
||
denied it, the Christian was filled with malignity and hatred, and
|
||
immediately excited the prejudice of other Christians against the
|
||
man simply because he was a Jew. They forgot, in their general
|
||
hatred, that Mary, the mother of Christ, was a Jewess; that Christ
|
||
himself was of Jewish blood; and with an inconsistency of which, of
|
||
all religions, Christianity alone could have been guilty, the Jew
|
||
became an object of especial hatred and aversion.
|
||
|
||
When we remember that Christianity pretends to be a religion
|
||
of love and kindness, of charity and forgiveness, must not every
|
||
intelligent man be shocked by the persecution of the Jews? Even
|
||
now, in learned and cultivated Germany, the Jew is treated as
|
||
though he were a wild beast. The reputation of this great people
|
||
has been stained by a persecution springing only from ignorance and
|
||
barbarian prejudice. So in Russia, the Christians are anxious to
|
||
shed every drop of Jewish blood, and thousands are to-day fleeing
|
||
from their homes to seek a refuge from Christian hate. And Mr.
|
||
Talmage believes that all these persecutions are kept up by the
|
||
perpetual intervention of God, in order that the homeless wanderers
|
||
of the seed of Abraham may testify to the truth of the Old and New
|
||
Testaments. He thinks that every burning Jewish home sheds light
|
||
upon the gospel, -- that every gash in Jewish flesh cries out in
|
||
favor of the Bible, -- that every violated Jewish maiden shows the
|
||
interest that God still takes in the preservation of his Holy Word.
|
||
|
||
I am endeavoring to do away with religious prejudice. I wish
|
||
to substitute humanity for superstition, the love of our fellow-
|
||
men, for the fear of God. In the place of ignorant worship, let us
|
||
put good deeds. We should be great enough and grand enough to know
|
||
that the rights of the Jew are precisely the same as our own. We
|
||
cannot trample upon their rights, without endangering our own; and
|
||
no man who will take liberty from another, is great enough to enjoy
|
||
liberty himself.
|
||
|
||
Day by day Christians are laying the foundation of future
|
||
persecution. In every Sunday school little children are taught that
|
||
Jews killed the God of this universe. Their little hearts are
|
||
filled with hatred against the Jewish people. They are taught as a
|
||
part of the creed to despise the descendants of the only people
|
||
with whom God is ever said to have had any conversation whatever.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
42
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
When we take into consideration what the Jewish people have
|
||
suffered, it is amazing that every one of them does not hate with
|
||
all his heart and soul and strength the entire Christian world. But
|
||
in spite of the persecutions they have endured, they are to-day,
|
||
where they are permitted to enjoy reasonable liberty, the most
|
||
prosperous people on the globe. The idea that their condition
|
||
shows, or tends to show, that upon them abides the wrath of
|
||
Jehovah, cannot be substantiated by the facts.
|
||
|
||
The Jews to-day control the commerce of the world. They
|
||
control the money of the world. It is for them to say whether
|
||
nations shall or shall not go to war. They are the people of whom
|
||
nations borrow money. To their offices kings come with their hats
|
||
in their hands. Emperors beg them to discount their notes. Is all
|
||
this a consequence of the wrath of God?
|
||
|
||
We find upon our streets no Jewish beggars. It is a rare sight
|
||
to find one of these people standing as a criminal before a court.
|
||
They do not fill our almshouses, nor our penitentiaries, nor our
|
||
jails. Intellectually and morally they are the equal of any people.
|
||
They have become illustrious in every department of art and
|
||
science. The old cry against them is at last perceived to be
|
||
ignorant. Only a few years ago, Christians would rob a Jew, strip
|
||
him of his possessions, steal his money, declare him an outcast,
|
||
and drive him forth. Then they would point to him as a fulfillment
|
||
of prophecy.
|
||
|
||
If you wish to see the difference between some Jews and some
|
||
Christians, compare the addresses of Felix Adler with the sermons
|
||
of Mr. Talmage.
|
||
|
||
I cannot convince myself that an infinitely good and wise God
|
||
holds a Jewish babe in the cradle of to-day responsible for the
|
||
crimes of Caiaphas the high priest. I hardly think that an
|
||
infinitely good being would pursue this little babe through all its
|
||
life simply to get revenge on those who died two thousand years
|
||
ago. An infinite being ought certainly to know that the child is
|
||
not to blame; and an infinite being who does not know this, is not
|
||
entitled to the love or adoration of any honest man.
|
||
|
||
There is a strange inconsistency in what Mr. Talmage says. For
|
||
instance, he finds great fault with me because I do not agree with
|
||
the religious ideas of my father; and he finds fault equally with
|
||
the Jews who do. The Jews who were true to the religion of their
|
||
fathers, according to Mr. Talmage, have been made a by-word and a
|
||
hissing and a reproach among all nations, and only those Jews were
|
||
fortunate and blest who abandoned the religion of their fathers.
|
||
The real reason for this inconsistency is this: Mr. Talmage really
|
||
thinks that a man can believe as he wishes. He imagines that
|
||
evidence depends simply upon volition; consequently, he holds every
|
||
one responsible for his belief. Being satisfied that he has the
|
||
exact truth in this matter, he measures all other people by his
|
||
standard, and if they fail by that measurement, he holds them
|
||
personally responsible, and believes that his God does the same. If
|
||
Mr. Talmage had been born in Turkey, he would in all probability
|
||
have been a Mohammedan, and would now be denouncing some man who
|
||
had denied the inspiration of the Koran, as the "champion
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
43
|
||
|
||
FIFTH INTERVIEW ON TALMAGE
|
||
|
||
blasphemer" of Constantinople. Certainly he would have been, had
|
||
his parents been Mohammedans; because, according to his doctrine,
|
||
he would have been utterly lacking in respect and love for his
|
||
father and mother had he failed to perpetuate their errors. So, had
|
||
he been born in Utah, of Mormon parents, he would now have been a
|
||
defender of polygamy. He would not "run the ploughshare of contempt
|
||
through the graves of his parents," by taking the ground that
|
||
polygamy is wrong.
|
||
|
||
I presume that all of Mr. Talmage's forefathers were not
|
||
Presbyterians. There must have been a time when one of his
|
||
progenitors left the faith of his father, and joined the
|
||
Presbyterian Church. According to the reasoning of Mr.Talmage, that
|
||
particular progenitor was an exceedingly bad man; but had it not
|
||
been for the crime of that bad man, Mr. Talmage might not now have
|
||
been on the road to heaven.
|
||
|
||
I hardly think that all the inventors, the thinkers, the
|
||
philosophers, the discoverers, dishonored their parents. Fathers
|
||
and mothers have been made immortal by such sons. And yet these
|
||
sons demonstrated the errors of their parents. A good father wishes
|
||
to be excelled by his children.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
44
|
||
|