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1431 lines
70 KiB
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22 page printout.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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SUPERSTITION.
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1898
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I.
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WHAT IS SUPERSTITION?
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To believe in spite of evidence or without evidence.
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To account for one mystery by another.
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To believe that the world is governed by chance or caprice.
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To disregard the true relation between cause and effect.
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To put thought, intention and design back of nature.
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To believe that mind created and controls matter.
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To believe in force apart from substance, or in substance
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apart from force.
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To believe in miracles, spells and charms, in dreams and
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prophecies.
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To believe in the supernatural.
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The foundation of superstition is ignorance, the
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superstructure is faith and the dome is a vain hope. Superstition
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is the child of ignorance and the mother of misery.
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In nearly every brain is found some cloud of superstition.
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A woman drops a cloth with which she is washing dishes, and
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she exclaims: "That means company."
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Most people will admit that there is no possible connection
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between dropping the cloth and the coming of visitors. The falling
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cloth could not have put the visit desire in the minds of people
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not present, and how could the cloth produce the desire to visit
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the particular person who dropped it? There is no possible
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connection between the dropping of the cloth and the anticipated
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effects.
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A man catches a glimpse of the new moon over his left
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shoulder, and he says: "This is bad luck."
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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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SUPERSTITION.
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To see the moon over the right or left shoulder, or not to see
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it, could not by any possibility affect the moon, neither could it
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change the effect or influence of the moon on any earthly thing.
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Certainly the left-shoulder glance could in no way affect the
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nature of things. All the facts in nature would remain the same as
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thought the glance had been over the right shoulder. We see no
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connection between the left shoulder glance and any possible evil
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effects upon the one who saw the moon in this way.
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A girl counts the leaves of a flower, and she says: "One, he
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comes; two, he tarries; three, he courts; four, he marries; five,
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he goes away."
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Of course the flower did not grow, and the number of its
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leaves was not determined with reference to the courtship or
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marriage of this girl, neither could there have been any
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intelligence that guided her hand when she selected that particular
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flower. So, counting the seeds in an apple cannot in any way
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determine whether the future of an individual is to be happy or
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miserable.
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Thousands of persons believe in lucky and unlucky days,
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numbers, signs and jewels.
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Many people regard Friday as an unlucky day -- as a bad day to
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commence a journey, to marry, to make any investment. The only
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reason given is that Friday is an unlucky day.
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Starting across the sea on Friday could have no possible
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effect upon the winds, or waves, or tides, any more than starting
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on any other day, and the only possible reason for thinking Friday
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unlucky is the assertion that it is so.
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So it is thought by many that it is dangerous for thirteen
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people to dine together. Now, if thirteen is a dangerous number,
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twenty-six ought to be twice as dangerous, and fifty-two four times
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as terrible.
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It is said that one of the thirteen will die in a year Now,
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there is no possible relation between the number and the digestion
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of each, between the number and the individual diseases. If
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fourteen dine together there is greater probability, if we take
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into account only the number, of a death within the year, than
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there would be if only thirteen were at the table.
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Overturning the salt is very unlucky, but spilling the vinegar
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makes no difference.
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Why salt should be revengeful and vinegar forgiving has never
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been told.
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If the first person who enters a theater is cross eyed, the
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audience will be small and the "run" a failure.
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How the peculiarity of the eyes of the first one who enters,
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changes the intention of a community, or how the intentions of a
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community cause the cross-eyed man to go early, has never been
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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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SUPERSTITION.
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satisfactorily explained. Between this so-called cause and the so-
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called effect there is, so far as we can see, no possible relation.
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To wear an opal is bad luck, but rubies bring health. How
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these stones affect the future, how they destroy causes and defeat
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effects, no one pretends to know.
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So, there are thousands of lucky and unlucky things, warnings,
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omens and prophecies, but all sensible, sane and reasoning human
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beings know that every one is an absurd and idiotic superstition.
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Let us take another step:
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For many centuries it was believed that eclipses of the sun
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and moon were prophetic of pestilence or famine, and that comets
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foretold the death of kings, or the destruction of nations, the
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coming of war or plague. All strange appearances in the heavens --
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the Northern Lights, circles about the moon, sun dogs, falling
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stars -- filled our intelligent ancestors with terror. They fell
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upon their knees -- did their best with sacrifice and prayer to
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avoid the threatened disaster. Their faces were ashen with fear as
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they closed their eyes and cried to the heavens for help. The
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clergy, who were as familiar with God then as the orthodox
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preachers are now, knew exactly the meaning of eclipses and sun
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dogs and Northern Lights; knew that God's patience was nearly
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exhausted; that he was then whetting the sword of his wrath, and
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that the people could save themselves only by obeying the priests,
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by counting their beads and doubling their subscriptions.
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Earthquakes and cyclones filled the coffers of the church. In
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the midst of disasters the miser, with trembling hands, opened his
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purse. In the gloom of eclipses thieves and robbers divided their
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booty with God, and poor, honest, ignorant girls, remembering that
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they had forgotten to say a prayer, gave their little earnings to
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soften the heart of God.
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Now we know that all these signs and wonders in the heavens
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have nothing to do with the fate of kings, nations or individuals;
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that they had no more reference to human beings than to colonies of
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ants, hives of bees or the eggs of insects. We now know that the
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signs and eclipses, the comets, and the falling stars, would have
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been just the same if not a human being had been upon the earth. We
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know now that eclipses come at certain times and that their coming
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can be exactly foretold.
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A little while ago the belief was general that there were
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certain healing virtues in inanimate things, in the bones of holy
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men and women, in the rags that had been torn from the foul
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clothing of still fowler saints, in hairs from martyrs, in bits of
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wood and rusty nails from the true cross, in the teeth and finger
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nails of pious men, and in a thousand other sacred things.
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The diseased were cured by kissing a box in which was kept
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some bone, or rag, or bit of wood, some holy hairs, provided the
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kiss was preceded, or followed by a gift -- a something for the
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church.
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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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SUPERSTITION.
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In some mysterious way the virtue in the bone, or rag, or
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piece of wood, crept or flowed from the box, took possession of the
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sick who had the necessary faith, and in the name of God drove out
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the devils who were the real disease.
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This belief in the efficacy of bones or rags and holy hair was
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born of another belief -- the belief that all diseases were
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produced by evil spirits. The insane were supposed to be possessed
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by devils. Epilepsy and hysteria were produced by the imps of
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Satan. In short, every human affliction was the work of the
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malicious emissaries of the god of hell. This belief was almost
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universal, and even in our time the sacred bones are believed in by
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millions of people.
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But to-day no intelligent man believes in the existence of
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devils -- no intelligent man believes that evil spirits cause
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disease -- consequently, no intelligent person believes that holy
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bones or rags, sacred hairs or pieces of wood, can drive disease
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out, or in any way bring back to the pallid cheek the rose of
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health.
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Intelligent people now know that the bone of a saint has in it
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no greater virtue than the bone of any animal. That a rag from a
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wandering beggar is just as good as one from a saint, and that the
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hair of a horse will cure disease just as quickly and surely as the
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hair of a martyr. We now know that all the sacred relics are
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religious rubbish; that those who use them are for the most part
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dishonest, and that those who rely on them are almost idiotic.
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This belief in amulets and charms, in ghosts and devils, is
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superstition, pure and simple.
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Our ancestors did not regard these relics as medicine, having
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a curative power, but the idea was that evil spirits stood in dread
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of holy things -- that they fled from the bone of a saint, that
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they feared a piece of the true cross, and that when holy water was
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sprinkled on a man they immediately left the premises. So, these
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devils hated and dreaded the sound of holy bells, the light of
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sacred tapers, and, above all, the ever-blessed cross.
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In those days the priests were fishers for money, and they
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used these relics for bait.
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II
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Let us take another step:
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This belief in the Devil and evil spirits laid the foundation
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for another belief: Witchcraft.
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It was believed that the devil had certain things to give in
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exchange for a soul. The old man, bowed and broken, could get back
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his youth -- the rounded form, the brown hair, the leaping heart of
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life's morning -- if he would sign and seal away his soul. So, it
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was thought that the malicious could by charm and spell obtain
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revenge, that the poor could be enriched, and that the ambitious
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could rise to place and power. All the good things of this life
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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4
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SUPERSTITION.
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were at the disposal of the Devil. For those who resisted the
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temptations of the Evil One, rewards were waiting in another world,
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but the Devil rewarded here in this life. No one has imagination
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enough to paint the agonies that were endured by reason of this
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||
belief in witchcraft. Think of the families destroyed, of the
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fathers and mothers cast in prison, tortured and burned, of the
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firesides darkened, of the children murdered, of the old, the poor
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and helpless that were stretched on racks mangled and flayed!
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Think of the days when superstition and fear were in every
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house, in every mind, when accusation was conviction, when
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assertion of innocence was regarded as a confession of guilt, and
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when Christendom was insane!
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Now we know that all of these horrors were the result of
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superstition. Now we know that ignorance was the mother of all the
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agonies endured. Now we know that witches never lived, that human
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beings never bargained with any devil, and that our pious savage
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ancestors were mistaken.
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Let us take another step:
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Our fathers believed in miracles, in signs and wonders,
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eclipses and comets, in the virtues of bones, and in the powers
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attributed to evil spirits. All these belonged to the miraculous.
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The world was supposed to be full of magic; the spirits were
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||
sleight-of-hand performers -- necromancers. There were no natural
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causes behind events. A devil wished, and it happened. One who had
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sold his soul to Satan made a few motions, uttered some strange
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words, and the event was present. Natural causes were not believed
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in. Delusion and illusion, the monstrous and miraculous, ruled the
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||
world. The foundation was gone -- reason had abdicated. Credulity
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||
gave tongues and wings to lies, while the dumb and limping facts
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were left behind -- were disregarded and remained untold.
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WHAT IS A MIRACLE?
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An act performed by a master of nature without reference to
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the facts in nature. This is the only honest definition of a
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miracle.
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If a man could make a perfect circle, the diameter of which
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was exactly one-half the circumference, that would be a miracle in
|
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geometry. If a man could make twice four, nine, that would be a
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miracle in mathematics. If a man could make a stone, falling in the
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air, pass through a space of ten feet the first second, twenty-five
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feet the second second, and five feet the third second, that would
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be a miracle in physics. If a man could put together hydrogen,
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oxygen and nitrogen and produce pure gold, that would be a miracle
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in chemistry. If a minister were to prove his creed, that would be
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a theological miracle. If Congress by law would make fifty cents
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worth of silver worth a dollar, that would be a financial miracle.
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To make a square triangle would be a most wonderful miracle. To
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cause a mirror to reflect the faces of persons who stand behind it,
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instead of those who stand in front, would be a miracle. To make
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echo answer a question would be a miracle. In other words, to do
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anything contrary to or without regard to the facts in nature is to
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perform a miracle.
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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5
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SUPERSTITION.
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Now we are convinced of what is called the "uniformity of
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nature." We believe that all things act and are acted upon in
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accordance with their nature; that under like conditions the
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results will always be substantially the same; that like ever has
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and ever will produce like. We now believe that events have natural
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parents and that none die childless.
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Miracles are not simply impossible, but they are unthinkable
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by any man capable of thinking.
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Now an intelligent man cannot believe that a miracle ever was,
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or ever will be, performed.
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Ignorance is the soil in which belief in miracles grows.
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III
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Let us take another step:
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While our ancestors filled the darkness with evil spirits,
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enemies of mankind, they also believed in the existence of good
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spirits. These good spirits sustained the same relation to God that
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the evil ones did to the Devil. These good spirits protected the
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faithful from the temptations and snares of the Evil One. They took
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care of those who carried amulets and charms, of those who repeated
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prayers and counted beads, of those who fasted and performed
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ceremonies. These good spirits would turn aside the sword and arrow
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from the breast of the faithful. They made poison harmless, they
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protected the credulous, and in a thousand ways defended and
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rescued the true believer. They drove doubts from the minds of the
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pious, sowed the seeds of credulity and faith, saved saints from
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the wiles of women, painted the glories of heaven for those who
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fasted and prayed, made it possible for the really good to dispense
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with the pleasures of sense and to hate the Devil.
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These angels watched over infants who had been baptized, over
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persons who had made holy vows, over priests and nuns and wandering
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beggars who believed.
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These spirits were of various kinds: Some had once been men or
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women. some had never lived in this world, and some had been angels
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from the commencement. Nobody pretended to know exactly what they
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were, or exactly how they looked, or in what way they went from
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place to place, or how they affected or controlled the minds of
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men.
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It was believed that the king of all these evil spirits was
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the Devil, and that the king of all the good spirits was God. It
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was also believed that God was in fact the king of all, and that
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||
the Devil himself was one of the children of this God. This God and
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this Devil were at war, each trying to secure the souls of men. God
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||
offered the rewards of eternal joy and threatened eternal pain. The
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Devil baited his traps with present pleasure, with the
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gratification of the senses, with the ecstasies of love, and
|
||
laughed at the joys of heaven and the pangs of hell. With malicious
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||
hand he sowed the seeds of doubt -- induced men to investigate, to
|
||
reason, to call for evidence, to rely upon themselves; planted in
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||
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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6
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SUPERSTITION.
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their hearts the love of liberty, assisted them to break their
|
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chains, to escape from their prisons and besought them to think. In
|
||
this way he corrupted the children of men.
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Our fathers believed that they could by prayer, by sacrifice,
|
||
by fasting, by performing certain ceremonies, gain the assistance
|
||
of this God and of these good spirits. They were not quite logical.
|
||
They did not believe that the Devil was the author of all evil.
|
||
They thought that flood and famine, plague and cyclone, earthquake
|
||
and war, were sometimes sent by God as punishment for unbelief.
|
||
They fell upon their knees and with white lips, prayed the good God
|
||
to stay his hand. They humbled themselves, confessed their sins,
|
||
and filled the heavens with their vows and cries. With priests and
|
||
prayers they tried to stay the plague. They kissed the relics, fell
|
||
at shrines, besought the Virgin and the saints, but the prayers all
|
||
died in the heartless air, and the plague swept on to its natural
|
||
end. Our poor fathers knew nothing of any science. Back of all
|
||
events they put spirits, good or bad, angels or demons, gods or
|
||
devils. To them nothing had what we call a natural cause.
|
||
Everything was the work of spirits. All was done by the
|
||
supernatural, and everything was done by evil spirits that they
|
||
could do to ruin, punish, mislead and damn the children of men.
|
||
This world was a field of battle, and here the hosts of heaven and
|
||
hell waged war.
|
||
|
||
IV
|
||
|
||
Now no man in whose brain the torch of reason burns, no man
|
||
who investigates, who really thinks, who is capable of weighing
|
||
evidence, believes in signs, in lucky or unlucky days, in lucky or
|
||
unlucky numbers. He knows that Fridays and Thursdays are alike;
|
||
that thirteen is no more deadly than twelve. He knows that opals
|
||
affect the wearer the same as rubies, diamonds or common glass. He
|
||
knows that the matrimonial chances of a maiden are not increased or
|
||
decreased by the number of leaves of a flower or seeds in an apple.
|
||
He knows that a glance at the moon over the left shoulder is as
|
||
healthful and lucky as one over the right. He does not care whether
|
||
the first comer to a theater is cross-eyed or hump-backed, bow-
|
||
legged, or as well-proportioned as Apollo. He knows that a strange
|
||
cat could be denied asylum without bringing any misfortune to the
|
||
family. He knows that an owl does not hoot in the full of the moon
|
||
because a distinguished man is about to die. He knows that comets
|
||
and eclipses would come if all the folks were dead. He is not
|
||
frightened by sun dogs, or the Morning of the North when the
|
||
glittering lances pierce the shield of night. He knows that all
|
||
these things occur without the slightest reference to the human
|
||
race. He feels certain that floods would destroy and cyclones rend
|
||
and earthquakes devour; that the stars would shine; that day and
|
||
night would still pursue each other around the world; that flowers
|
||
would give their perfume to the air, and light would paint the
|
||
seven-hued arch upon the dusky bosom of the cloud if every human
|
||
being was unconscious dust.
|
||
|
||
A man of thought and sense does not believe in the existence
|
||
of the Devil. He feels certain that imps, goblins, demons and evil
|
||
spirits exist only in the imagination of the ignorant and
|
||
frightened. He knows how these malevolent myths were made. He knows
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
the part they have played in all religions. He knows that for many
|
||
centuries a belief in these devils, these evil spirits, was
|
||
substantially universal. He knows that the priest believed as
|
||
firmly as the peasant. In those days the best educated and the most
|
||
ignorant were equal dupes. Kings and courtiers, ladies and clowns,
|
||
soldiers and artists, slaves and convicts, believed as firmly in
|
||
the Devil as they did in God.
|
||
|
||
Back of this belief there is no evidence, and there never has
|
||
been. This belief did not rest on any fact. It was supported by
|
||
mistakes, exaggerations and lies. The mistakes were natural, the
|
||
exaggerations were mostly unconscious and the lies were generally
|
||
honest. Back of these mistakes, these exaggerations, these lies,
|
||
was the love of the marvelous. Wonder listened with greedy ears,
|
||
with wide eyes, and ignorance with open mouth.
|
||
|
||
The man of sense knows the history of this belief, and he
|
||
knows, also, that for many centuries its truth was established by
|
||
the Holy Bible. He knows that the Old Testament is filled with
|
||
allusions to the Devil, to evil spirits, and that the New Testament
|
||
is the same. He knows that Christ himself was a believer in the
|
||
Devil, in evil spirits, and that his principal business was casting
|
||
out devils from the bodies of men and women. He knows that Christ
|
||
himself, according to the New Testament, was not only tempted by
|
||
the Devil, but was carried by his Satanic Highness to the top of
|
||
the temple. If the New Testament is the inspired word of God, then
|
||
I admit that these devils, these imps, do actually exist and that
|
||
they do take possession of human beings.
|
||
|
||
To deny the existence of these evil spirits, to deny the
|
||
existence of the Devil, is to deny the truth of the New Testament.
|
||
To deny the existence of these imps of darkness is to contradict
|
||
the words of Jesus Christ. If these devils do not exist, if they do
|
||
not cause disease, if they do not tempt and mislead their victims,
|
||
then Christ was an ignorant, superstitious man, insane, an
|
||
impostor, or the New Testament is not a true record of what he said
|
||
and what he pretended to do. If we give up the belief in devils, we
|
||
must give up the inspiration of the Old and New Testament. We must
|
||
give up the divinity of Christ. To deny the existence of evil
|
||
spirits is to utterly destroy the foundation of Christianity. There
|
||
is no half-way ground. Compromise is impossible. If all the
|
||
accounts in the New Testament of casting out devils are false, what
|
||
part of the Blessed Book is true?
|
||
|
||
As a matter of fact, the success of the Devil in the Garden of
|
||
Eden made the coming of Christ a necessity, laid the foundation for
|
||
the atonement, crucified the Savior and gave us the Trinity.
|
||
|
||
If the Devil does not exist, the Christian creeds all crumble,
|
||
and the superstructure known as "Christianity," built by the
|
||
fathers, by popes, by priests and theologians -- built with
|
||
mistakes and falsehoods, with miracles and wonders, with blood and
|
||
flame, with lies and legends borrowed from the savage world,
|
||
becomes a shapeless ruin.
|
||
|
||
If we give up the belief in devils and evil spirits, we are
|
||
compelled to say that a witch never lived. No sensible human being
|
||
now believes in witchcraft. We know that it was a delusion. We now
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
know that thousands and thousands of innocent men, women and
|
||
children were tortured and burned for having been found guilty of
|
||
an impossible crime, and we also know, if our minds have not been
|
||
deformed by faith, that all the books in which the existence of
|
||
witches is taught were written by ignorant and superstitious men.
|
||
We also know that the Old Testament asserted the existence of
|
||
witches. According to that Holy Book, Jehovah was a believer in
|
||
witchcraft, and said to his chosen people: "Thou shalt not suffer
|
||
a witch to live."
|
||
|
||
This one commandment -- this simple line -- demonstrates that
|
||
Jehovah was not only not God, but that he was a poor, ignorant,
|
||
superstitious savage. This one line proves beyond all possible
|
||
doubt that the Old Testament was written by men, by barbarians.
|
||
|
||
John Wesley was right when he said that to give up a belief in
|
||
witchcraft was to give up the Bible.
|
||
|
||
Give up the Devil, and what can you do with the Book of Job?
|
||
How will you account for the lying spirits that Jehovah sent to
|
||
mislead Ahab?
|
||
|
||
Ministers who admit that witchcraft is a superstition will
|
||
read the story of the Witch of Endor -- will read it in a solemn,
|
||
reverential voice -- with a theological voice -- and will have the
|
||
impudence to say that they believe it.
|
||
|
||
It would be delightful to know that angels hover in the air;
|
||
that they guard the innocent, protect the good; that they bend over
|
||
the cradles and give health and happy dreams to pallid babes; that
|
||
they fill dungeons with the light of their presence and give hope
|
||
to the imprisoned; that they follow the fallen, the erring, the
|
||
outcasts, the friendless, and win them back to virtue, love and
|
||
joy. But we have no more evidence of the existence of good spirits
|
||
than of bad. The angels that visited Abraham and the mother of
|
||
Samson are as unreal as the ghosts and goblins of the Middle Ages.
|
||
The angel that stopped the donkey of Baalim, the one who walked in
|
||
the furnace flames with Meshech, Shadrack and Abednego, the one who
|
||
slew the Assyrians and the one who in a dream removed the
|
||
suspicions of Joseph, were all created by the imagination of the
|
||
credulous, by the lovers of the marvelous, and they have been
|
||
handed down from dotage to infancy, from ignorance to ignorance,
|
||
through all the years. Except in Catholic countries, no winged
|
||
citizen of the celestial realm has visited the world for hundreds
|
||
of years. Only those who are blind to facts can see these beautiful
|
||
creatures, and only those who reach conclusions without the
|
||
assistance of evidence can believe in their existence. It is told
|
||
that the great Angelo, in decorating a church, painted some angels
|
||
wearing sandals. A cardinal looking at the picture said to the
|
||
artist: "Whoever saw angels with sandals?" Angelo answered with
|
||
another question: "Whoever saw an angel bare-footed?"
|
||
|
||
The existence of angels has never been established. Of course,
|
||
we know that millions and millions have believed in seraphim and
|
||
cherubim; have believed that the angel Gabriel contended with the
|
||
Devil for the body of Moses; that angels shut the mouths of the
|
||
lions for the protection of Daniel that angels ministered unto
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
Christ, and that countless angels will accompany the Savior when he
|
||
comes to take possession of the world. And we know that all these
|
||
millions believe through blind, unreasoning faith, holding all
|
||
evidence and all facts in theological contempt.
|
||
|
||
But the angels come no more. They bring no balm to any wounded
|
||
heart. Long ago they folded their pinions and faded from the earth
|
||
and air. These winged guardians no longer protect the innocent; no
|
||
longer cheer the suffering; no longer whisper words of comfort to
|
||
the helpless. They have become dreams -- vanished visions.
|
||
|
||
V
|
||
|
||
In the dear old religious days the earth was flat -- a little
|
||
dishing, if anything -- and just above it was Jehovah's house, and
|
||
just below it was where the Devil lived. God and his angels
|
||
inhabited the third story, the Devil and his imps the basement, and
|
||
the human race the second floor.
|
||
|
||
Then they knew where heaven was. They could almost hear the
|
||
harps and hallelujahs. They knew where hell was, and they could
|
||
almost hear the groans and smell the sulphurous fumes. They
|
||
regarded the volcanoes as chimneys. They were perfectly acquainted
|
||
with the celestial, the terrestrial and the infernal. They were
|
||
quite familiar with the New Jerusalem, with its golden streets and
|
||
gates of pearl. Then the translation of Enoch seemed reasonable
|
||
enough, and no one doubted that before the flood the sons of God
|
||
came down and made love to the daughters of men. The theologians
|
||
thought that the builders of Babel would have succeeded if God had
|
||
not come down and caused them to forget the meaning of words.
|
||
|
||
In those blessed days the priests knew all about heaven and
|
||
hell. They knew that God governed the world by hope and fear, by
|
||
promise and threat, by reward and punishment. The reward was to be
|
||
eternal and so was the punishment. It was not God's plan to develop
|
||
the human brain, so that man would perceive and comprehend the
|
||
right and avoid the wrong. He taught ignorance, nothing but
|
||
obedience, and for obedience he offered eternal joy. He loved the
|
||
submissive -- the kneelers and crawlers. He hated the doubters, the
|
||
investigators, the thinkers, the philosophers. For them he created
|
||
the eternal prison where he could feed forever the hunger of his
|
||
hate. He loved the credulous -- those who believed without evidence
|
||
-- and for them he prepared a home in the realm of fadeless light.
|
||
He delighted in the company of the questionless.
|
||
|
||
But where is this heaven, and where is this hell? We now know
|
||
that heaven is not just above the clouds and that hell is not just
|
||
below the earth. The telescope has done away with the ancient
|
||
heaven, and the revolving world has quenched the flames of the
|
||
ancient hell. These theological countries, these imagined worlds,
|
||
have disappeared. No one knows, and no one pretends to know, where
|
||
heaven is; and no one knows, and no one pretends to know, the
|
||
locality of hell. Now the theologians say that hell and heaven are
|
||
not places, but states of mind-conditions.
|
||
|
||
The belief in gods and devils has been substantially
|
||
universal. Back of the good, man placed a god; back of the evil, a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
devil; back of health, sunshine and harvest was a good deity; back
|
||
of disease, misfortune and death he placed a malicious fiend.
|
||
|
||
Is there any evidence that gods and devils exist? The evidence
|
||
of the existence of a god and of a devil is substantially the same.
|
||
Both of these deities are inferences; each one is a perhaps. They
|
||
have not been seen -- they are invisible -- and they have not
|
||
ventured within the horizon of the senses. The old lady who said
|
||
there must be a devil, else how could they make pictures that
|
||
looked exactly like him, reasoned like a trained theologian -- like
|
||
a doctor of divinity.
|
||
|
||
Now no intelligent man believes in the existence of a devil --
|
||
no longer fears the leering fiend. Most people who think have given
|
||
up a personal God, a creative deity. They now talk about the
|
||
"Unknown," the "Infinite Energy," but they put Jehovah with
|
||
Jupiter. They regard them both as broken dolls from the nursery of
|
||
the past.
|
||
|
||
The men or women who ask for evidence -- who desire to know
|
||
the truth -- care nothing for signs; nothing for what are called
|
||
wonders; nothing for lucky or unlucky jewels, days or numbers;
|
||
nothing for charms or amulets; nothing for comets or eclipses. and
|
||
have no belief in good or evil spirits, in gods or devils. They
|
||
place no reliance on general or special providence -- on any power
|
||
that rescues, protects and saves the good or punishes the vile and
|
||
vicious. They do not believe that in the whole history of mankind
|
||
a prayer has been answered. They think that all the sacrifices have
|
||
been wasted, and that all the incense has ascended in vain. They do
|
||
not believe that the world was created and prepared for man any
|
||
more than it was created and prepared for insects. They do not
|
||
think it probable that whales were invented to supply the Eskimo
|
||
with blubber, or that flames were created to attract and destroy
|
||
moths. On every hand there seems to be evidence of design, design
|
||
for the accomplishment of good, design for the accomplishment of
|
||
evil. On every side are the benevolent and malicious -- something
|
||
toiling to preserve, something laboring to destroy. Everything
|
||
surrounded by friends and enemies -- by the love that protects, by
|
||
the hate that kills. Design is as apparent in decay, as in growth;
|
||
in failure, as in success; in grief, as in joy. Nature with one
|
||
hand building, with one hand tearing down, armed with sword and
|
||
shield -- slaying and protecting, and protecting but to slay. All
|
||
life journeying toward death, and all death hastening back to life.
|
||
Everywhere waste and economy, care and negligence.
|
||
|
||
We watch the flow and ebb of life and death -- the great drama
|
||
that forever holds the stage, where players act their parts and
|
||
disappear; the great drama in which all must act -- ignorant and
|
||
learned, idiotic and insane -- without rehearsal and without the
|
||
slightest knowledge of a part, or of any plot or purpose in the
|
||
play. The scene shifts; some actors disappear and others come, and
|
||
again the scene shifts; mystery everywhere. We try to explain, and
|
||
the explanation of one fact contradicts another. Behind each veil
|
||
removed, another. All things equal in wonder. One drop of water as
|
||
wonderful as all the seas; one grain of sand as all the world; one
|
||
moth with painted wings as all the things that live; one egg from
|
||
which warmth, in darkness, woos to life an organized and breathing
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
form -- a form with sinews, bones and nerves, with blood and brain,
|
||
with instincts, passions, thoughts and wants -- as all the stars
|
||
that wheel in space.
|
||
|
||
The smallest seed that, wrapped in soil, has dreams of April
|
||
rains and days of June, withholds its secret from the wisest men.
|
||
The wisdom of the world cannot explain one blade of grass, the
|
||
faintest motion of the smallest leaf. And yet theologians, popes,
|
||
priests, parsons, who speechless stand before the wonder of the
|
||
smallest thing that is, know all about the origin of worlds, know
|
||
when the beginning was, when the end will be, know all about the
|
||
God who with a wish created all, know what his plan and purpose
|
||
was, the means he uses and the end he seeks. To them all mysteries
|
||
have been revealed, except the mystery of things that touch the
|
||
senses of a living man.
|
||
|
||
But honest men do not pretend to know; they are candid and
|
||
sincere; they love the truth; they admit their ignorance, and they
|
||
say, "We do not know."
|
||
|
||
After all, why should we worship our ignorance why should we
|
||
kneel to the Unknown, why should we prostrate ourselves before a
|
||
guess?
|
||
|
||
If God exists, how do we know that he is good, that he cares
|
||
for us? The Christians say that their God has existed from
|
||
eternity; that he forever has been, and forever will be, infinite,
|
||
wise and good. Could this God have avoided being God? Could he have
|
||
avoided being good? Was he wise and good without his wish or will?
|
||
|
||
Being from eternity, he was not produced. He was back of all
|
||
cause. What he is, he was, and will be, unchanged, unchangeable. He
|
||
had nothing to do with the making or developing of his character.
|
||
Nothing to do with the development of his mind. What he was, he is.
|
||
He has made no progress. What he is, he will be, there can be no
|
||
change. Why then, I ask, should we praise him? He could not have
|
||
been different from what he was and is. Why should we pray to him?
|
||
He cannot change.
|
||
|
||
And yet Christians implore their God not to do wrong.
|
||
|
||
The meanest thing charged against the Devil is that he leads
|
||
the children of men into temptation, and yet, in the Lord's Prayer,
|
||
God is insultingly asked not to imitate the king of fiends.
|
||
|
||
"Lead us not into temptation."
|
||
|
||
Why should God demand praise? He is as he was. He has never
|
||
learned anything; has never practiced any self-denial; was never
|
||
tempted, never touched by fear or hope, and never had a want. Why
|
||
should he demand our praise?
|
||
|
||
Does anyone know that this God exists; that he ever heard or
|
||
answered any prayer? Is it known that he governs the world; that he
|
||
interferes in the affairs of men; that he protects the good or
|
||
punishes the wicked? Can evidence of this be found in the history
|
||
of mankind? If God governs the world, why should we credit him for
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
the good and not charge him with the evil? To Justify this God we
|
||
must say that good is good and that evil is also good. If all is
|
||
done by this God we should make no distinction between his actions
|
||
-- between the actions of the infinitely wise, powerful and good.
|
||
If we thank him for sunshine and harvest we should also thank him
|
||
for plague and famine. If we thank him for liberty, the slave
|
||
should raise his chained hands in worship and thank God that he
|
||
toils unpaid with the lash upon his naked back. If we thank him for
|
||
victory we should thank him for defeat.
|
||
|
||
Only a few days ago our President, by proclamation, thanked
|
||
God for giving us the victory at Santiago. He did not thank him for
|
||
sending the yellow fever. To be consistent the President should
|
||
have thanked him equally for both.
|
||
|
||
The truth is that good and evil spirits -- gods and devils --
|
||
are beyond the realm of experience; beyond the horizon of our
|
||
senses; beyond the limits of our thoughts; beyond imagination's
|
||
utmost flight.
|
||
|
||
Man should think; he should use all his senses; he should
|
||
examine; he should reason. The man who cannot think is less than
|
||
man; the man who will not think is traitor to himself; the man who
|
||
fears to think is superstition's slave.
|
||
|
||
VI
|
||
|
||
What harm does superstition do? What harm in believing in
|
||
fables, in legends?
|
||
|
||
To believe in signs and wonders, in amulets, charms and
|
||
miracles, in gods and devils, in heavens and hells, makes the brain
|
||
an insane ward, the world a madhouse, takes all certainty from the
|
||
mind, makes experience a snare, destroys the kinship of effect and
|
||
cause -- the unity of nature -- and makes man a trembling serf and
|
||
slave. With this belief a knowledge of nature sheds no light upon
|
||
the path to be pursued. Nature becomes a puppet of the unseen
|
||
powers. The fairy, called the supernatural, touches with her wand
|
||
a fact, it disappears. Causes are barren of effects, and effects
|
||
are independent of all natural causes. Caprice is king. The
|
||
foundation is gone. The great dome rests on air. There is no
|
||
constancy in qualities, relations or results. Reason abdicates and
|
||
superstition wears her crown.
|
||
|
||
The heart hardens and the brain softens.
|
||
|
||
The energies of man are wasted in a vain effort to secure the
|
||
protection of the supernatural. Credulity, ceremony, worship,
|
||
sacrifice and prayer take the place of honest work, of
|
||
investigation, of intellectual effort, of observation, of
|
||
experience. Progress becomes impossible.
|
||
|
||
Superstition is, always has been, and forever will be, the
|
||
enemy of liberty.
|
||
|
||
Superstition created all the gods and angels, all the devils
|
||
and ghosts, all the witches, demons and goblins, gave us all the
|
||
augurs, soothsayers and prophets, filled the heavens with signs and
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
wonders, broke the chain of cause and effect, and wrote the history
|
||
of man in miracles and lies. Superstition made all the popes,
|
||
cardinals, bishops and priests, all the monks and nuns, the begging
|
||
friars and the filthy saints, all the preachers and exhorters, all
|
||
the "called" and "set apart." Superstition made men fall upon their
|
||
knees before beasts and stones, caused them to worship snakes and
|
||
trees and insane phantoms of the air, beguiled them of their gold
|
||
and toil, and made them shed their children's blood and give their
|
||
babes to flames. Superstition built the cathedrals and temples, all
|
||
the altars, mosques and churches, filled the world with amulets and
|
||
charms, with images and idols, with sacred bones and holy hairs,
|
||
with martyrs' blood and rags, with bits of wood that frighten
|
||
devils from the breasts of men. Superstition invented and used the
|
||
instruments of torture, flayed men and women alive, loaded millions
|
||
with chains and destroyed hundreds of thousands with fire.
|
||
Superstition mistook insanity for inspiration and the ravings of
|
||
maniacs for prophesy, for the wisdom of God. Superstition
|
||
imprisoned the virtuous, tortured the thoughtful, killed the
|
||
heroic, put chains on the body, manacles on the brain, and utterly
|
||
destroyed the liberty of speech. Superstition gave us all the
|
||
prayers and ceremonies; taught all the kneelings, genuflections and
|
||
prostrations; taught men to hate themselves, to despise pleasure,
|
||
to scar their flesh, to grovel in the dust, to desert their wives
|
||
and children, to shun their fellow-men, and to spend their lives in
|
||
useless pain and prayer. Superstition taught that human love is
|
||
degrading, low and vile; taught that monks are purer than fathers,
|
||
that nuns are holier than mothers, that faith is superior to fact,
|
||
that credulity leads to heaven, that doubt is the road to hell,
|
||
that belief is better than knowledge, and that to ask for evidence
|
||
is to insult God. Superstition is, always has been, and forever
|
||
will be, the foe of progress, the enemy of education and the
|
||
assassin of freedom. It sacrifices the known to the unknown, the
|
||
present to the future, this actual world to the shadowy next. It
|
||
has given us a selfish heaven, and a hell of infinite revenge; it
|
||
has filled the world with hatred, war and crime, with the malice of
|
||
meekness and the arrogance of humility. Superstition is the only
|
||
enemy of science in all the world.
|
||
|
||
Nations, races, have been destroyed by this monster. For
|
||
nearly two thousand years the infallible agent of God has lived in
|
||
Italy. That country has been covered with nunneries, monasteries,
|
||
cathedrals and temples -- filled with all varieties of priests and
|
||
holy men. For centuries Italy was enriched with the gold of the
|
||
faithful. All roads led to Rome, and these roads were filled with
|
||
pilgrims bearing gifts, and yet Italy, in spite of all the prayers,
|
||
steadily pursued the downward path, died and was buried, and would
|
||
at this moment be in her grave had it not been for Cavour, Mazzini
|
||
and Garibaldi. For her poverty, her misery, she is indebted to the
|
||
holy Catholic Church, to the infallible agents of God. For the life
|
||
she has she is indebted to the enemies of superstition. A few years
|
||
ago Italy was great enough to build a monument to Giordano Bruno --
|
||
Bruno, the victim of the "Triumphant Beast;" -- Bruno, the
|
||
sublimest of her sons.
|
||
|
||
Spain was at one time owner of half the earth, and held within
|
||
her greedy hands the gold and silver of the world. At that time all
|
||
nations were in the darkness of superstition. At that time the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
world was governed by priests. Spain clung to her creed. Some
|
||
nations began to think, but Spain continued to believe. In some
|
||
counties, priests lost power, but not in Spain. The power behind
|
||
her throne was the cowled monk. In some countries men began to
|
||
interest themselves in science, but not in Spain. Spain told her
|
||
beads and continued to pray to the Virgin. Spain was busy saving
|
||
her soul. In her zeal she destroyed herself. She relied on the
|
||
supernatural; not on knowledge, but superstition. Her prayers were
|
||
never answered. The saints were dead. They could not help, and the
|
||
Blessed Virgin did not hear. Some countries were in the dawn of a
|
||
new day, but Spain gladly remained in the night. With fire and
|
||
sword she exterminated the men who thought. Her greatest festival
|
||
was the Auto da Fe. Other nations grew great while Spain grew
|
||
small. Day by day her power waned, but her faith increased. One by
|
||
one her colonies were lost, but she kept her creed. She gave her
|
||
gold to superstition, her brain to priests, but she faithfully
|
||
counted her beads. Only a few days ago, relying on her God and his
|
||
priests, on charms and amulets, on holy water and pieces of the
|
||
true cross, she waged war against the great Republic. Bishops
|
||
blessed her armies and sprinkled holy water on her ships, and yet
|
||
her armies were defeated and captured, her ships battered, beached
|
||
and burned, and in her helplessness she sued for peace. But she has
|
||
her creed; her superstition is not lost. Poor Spain, wrecked by
|
||
faith, the victim of religion.
|
||
|
||
Portugal, slowly dying, growing poorer every day still clings
|
||
to the faith. Her prayers are never answered, but she makes them
|
||
still. Austria is nearly gone, a victim of superstition. Germany is
|
||
traveling toward the night. God placed her Kaiser on the throne.
|
||
The people must obey. Philosophers and scientists fall upon their
|
||
knees and become the puppets of the divinely crowned.
|
||
|
||
VII
|
||
|
||
The believers in the supernatural, in a power superior to
|
||
nature, in God, have what they call "inspired books." These books
|
||
contain the absolute truth. They must be believed. He who denies
|
||
them will be punished with eternal pain. These books are not
|
||
addressed to human reason. They are above reason. They care nothing
|
||
for what a man calls "facts." Facts that do not agree with these
|
||
books are mistakes. These books are independent of human
|
||
experience, of human reason.
|
||
|
||
Our inspired books constitute what we call the "Bible." The
|
||
man who reads this inspired book, looking for contradictions,
|
||
mistakes and interpolations, imperils the salvation of his soul.
|
||
While he reads he has no right to think, no right to reason. To
|
||
believe is his only duty.
|
||
|
||
Millions of men have wasted their lives in the study of this
|
||
book -- in trying to harmonize contradictions and to explain the
|
||
obscure and seemingly absurd. In doing this they have justified
|
||
nearly every crime and every cruelty. In its follies they have
|
||
found the profoundest wisdom. Hundreds of creeds have been
|
||
constructed from its inspired passages. Probably no two of its
|
||
readers have agreed as to its meaning. Thousands have studied
|
||
Hebrew and Greek that they might read the Old and New Testament in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
the languages in which they were written. The more they studied,
|
||
the more they differed. By the same book they proved that nearly
|
||
everybody is to be lost, and that all are to be saved; that slavery
|
||
is a divine institution, and that all men should be free; that
|
||
polygamy is right, and that no man should have more than one wife;
|
||
that the powers that be are ordained of God, and that the people
|
||
have a right to overturn and destroy the powers that be; that all
|
||
the actions of men were predestined -- preordained from eternity,
|
||
and yet that man is free; that all the heathen will be lost; that
|
||
all the heathen will be saved; that all men who live according to
|
||
the light of nature will be damned for their pains; that you must
|
||
be baptized by sprinkling; that you must he baptized by immersion;
|
||
that there is no salvation without baptism that baptism is useless;
|
||
that you must believe in the Trinity; that it is sufficient to
|
||
believe in God. that you must believe that a Hebrew peasant was God
|
||
that at the same time he was half man, that he was of the blood of
|
||
David through his supposed father Joseph, who was not his father,
|
||
and that it is not necessary to believe that Christ was God; that
|
||
you must believe that the Holy Ghost proceeded; that it makes no
|
||
difference whether you do or not; that you must keep the Sabbath
|
||
holy; that Christ taught nothing of the kind; that Christ
|
||
established a church; that he established no church; that the dead
|
||
are to he raised; that there is to be no resurrection; that Christ
|
||
is coming again; that he has made his last visit; that Christ went
|
||
to hell and preached to the spirits in prison; that he did nothing
|
||
of the kind; that all the Jews are going to perdition; that they
|
||
are all going to heaven; that all the miracles described in the
|
||
Bible were performed, that some of them were not, because they are
|
||
foolish, childish and idiotic; that all the Bible is inspired; that
|
||
some of the books are not inspired; that there is to be a general
|
||
judgment, when the sheep and goats are to be divided; that there
|
||
never will be any general judgment; that the sacramental bread and
|
||
wine are changed into the flesh and blood of God and the Trinity;
|
||
that they are not changed; that God has no flesh or blood; that
|
||
there is a place called "purgatory;" that there is no such place;
|
||
that unbaptized infants will be lost; that they will be saved; that
|
||
we must believe the Apostles' Creed; that the apostles made no
|
||
creed; that the Holy Ghost was the father of Christ; that Joseph
|
||
was his father; that the Holy Ghost had the form of a dove; that
|
||
there is no Holy Ghost; that heretics should be killed; that you
|
||
must not resist evil; that you should murder unbelievers that you
|
||
must love your enemies; that you should take no thought for the
|
||
morrow, but should be diligent in business; that you should lend to
|
||
all who ask, and that one who does not provide for his own
|
||
household is worse than an infidel.
|
||
|
||
In defence of all these creeds, all these contradictions,
|
||
thousands of volumes have been written, millions of sermons have
|
||
been preached, countless swords reddened with blood, and thousands
|
||
and thousands of nights made lurid with the faggot's flames.
|
||
|
||
Hundreds and hundreds of commentators have obscured and
|
||
darkened the meaning of the plainest texts, spiritualized dates,
|
||
names, numbers and even genealogies. They have degraded the poetic,
|
||
changed parables to history, and imagery to stupid and impossible
|
||
facts. They have wrestled with rhapsody and prophecy, with visions
|
||
and dreams, with illusions and delusions, with myths and miracles,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
with the blunders of ignorance, the ravings of insanity and the
|
||
ecstasy of hysterics. Millions of priests and preachers have added
|
||
to the mysteries of the inspired book by explanation, by showing
|
||
the wisdom of foolishness, the foolishness of wisdom, the mercy of
|
||
cruelty and the probability of the impossible.
|
||
|
||
The theologians made the Bible a master and the people its
|
||
slaves. With this book they destroyed intellectual veracity, the
|
||
natural manliness of man. With this book they banished pity from
|
||
the heart, subverted all ideas of justice and fairness, imprisoned
|
||
the soul in the dungeon of fear and made honest doubt a crime.
|
||
|
||
Think of what the world has suffered from fear. Think of the
|
||
millions who were driven to insanity. Think of the fearful nights
|
||
-- nights filled with phantoms, with flying, crawling monsters,
|
||
with hissing serpents that slowly uncoiled, with vague and formless
|
||
horrors, with burning and malicious eyes.
|
||
|
||
Think of the fear of death, of infinite wrath, of everlasting
|
||
revenge in the prisons of fire, of an eternity, of thirst, of
|
||
endless regret, of the sobs and sighs, the shrieks and groans of
|
||
eternal pain.
|
||
|
||
Think of the hearts hardened, of the hearts broken, of the
|
||
cruelties inflicted, of the agonies endured, of the lives darkened.
|
||
|
||
The inspired Bible has been and is the greatest curse of
|
||
Christendom, and will so remain as long as it is held to be
|
||
inspired.
|
||
|
||
VIII
|
||
|
||
Our God was made by men, sculptured by savages who did the
|
||
best they could. They made our God somewhat like themselves, and
|
||
gave to him their passions, their ideas of right and wrong.
|
||
|
||
As man advanced he slowly changed his God -- took a little
|
||
ferocity from his heart, and put the light of kindness in his eyes.
|
||
As man progressed he obtained a wider view, extended the
|
||
intellectual horizon and again he changed his God, making him as
|
||
nearly perfect as he could, and yet this God was patterned after
|
||
those who made him. As man became civilized, as he became merciful,
|
||
he began to love justice, and as his mind expanded his ideal became
|
||
purer, nobler, and so his God became more merciful, more loving.
|
||
|
||
In our day Jehovah has been outgrown. He is no longer the
|
||
perfect. Now theologians talk, not about Jehovah, but about a God
|
||
of love, call him the Eternal father and the perpetual friend and
|
||
providence of man. But, while they talk about this God of love,
|
||
cyclones wreck and rend, the earthquake devours, the flood
|
||
destroys, the red bolt leaping from the cloud still crashes the
|
||
life out of men, and plague and fever still are tireless reapers in
|
||
the harvest fields of death.
|
||
|
||
They tell us now that all is good; that evil is but blessing
|
||
in disguise, that pain makes strong and virtuous men -- makes
|
||
character -- while pleasure enfeebles and degrades. If this be so,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
the souls in hell should grow to greatness, while those in heaven
|
||
should shrink and shrivel.
|
||
|
||
But we know that good is good. We know that good is not evil,
|
||
and that evil is not good. We know that light is not darkness, and
|
||
that darkness is not light. But we do not feel that good and evil
|
||
were planned and caused by a supernatural God. We regard them both
|
||
as necessities. We neither thank nor curse. We know that some evil
|
||
can be avoided and that the good can be increased. We know that
|
||
this can be done by increasing knowledge, by developing the brain.
|
||
|
||
As Christians have changed their God, so they have accordingly
|
||
changed their Bible. The impossible and absurd, the cruel and the
|
||
infamous, have been mostly thrown aside, and thousands are now
|
||
engaged in trying to save the inspired word. Of course, the
|
||
orthodox still cling to every word, and still insist that every
|
||
line is true. They are literalists. To them the Bible means exactly
|
||
what it says. They want no explanation. They care nothing for
|
||
commentators. Contradictions cannot disturb the faith. They deny
|
||
that any contradictions exist. They loyally stand by the sacred
|
||
text, and they give it the narrowest possible interpretation. They
|
||
are like the janitor of an apartment house who refused to rent a
|
||
flat to a gentleman because he said he had children. "But," said
|
||
the gentleman, "my children are both married and live in Iowa."
|
||
"That makes no difference," said the janitor, "I am not allowed to
|
||
rent a flat to any man who has children."
|
||
|
||
All the orthodox churches are obstructions on the highway of
|
||
progress. Every orthodox creed is a chain, a dungeon. Every
|
||
believer in the "inspired book" is a slave who drives reason from
|
||
her throne, and in her stead crowns fear.
|
||
|
||
Reason is the light, the sun of the brain. It is the compass
|
||
of the mind, the ever-constant Northern Star, the mountain peak
|
||
that lifts itself above all clouds.
|
||
|
||
There were centuries of darkness when religion had control of
|
||
Christendom. Superstition was almost universal. Not one in twenty
|
||
thousand could read or write. During these centuries the people
|
||
lived with their back to the sunrise, and pursued their way toward
|
||
the dens of ignorance and faith. There was no progress, no
|
||
invention, no discovery. On every hand cruelty and worship,
|
||
persecution and prayer. The priests were the enemies of thought, of
|
||
investigation. They were the shepherds, and the people were their
|
||
sheep and it was their business to guard the flock from the wolves
|
||
of thought and doubt. This world was of no importance compared with
|
||
the next. This life was to be spent in preparing for the life to
|
||
come. The gold and labor of men were wasted in building cathedrals
|
||
and in supporting the pious and the useless. During these Dark Ages
|
||
of Christianity, as I said before, nothing was invented, nothing
|
||
was discovered, calculated to increase the well-being of men. The
|
||
energies of Christendom were wasted in the vain effort to obtain
|
||
assistance from the supernatural.
|
||
|
||
For centuries the business of Christians was to wrest from the
|
||
followers of Mohammed the empty sepulcher of Christ. Upon the altar
|
||
of this folly millions of lives were sacrificed, and yet the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
soldiers of the impostor were victorious, and the wretches who
|
||
carried the banner of Christ were scattered like leaves before the
|
||
storm.
|
||
|
||
There was, I believe, one invention during these ages. It is
|
||
said that, in the thirteenth century, Roger Bacon, a Franciscan
|
||
monk, invented gunpowder, but this invention was without a fellow.
|
||
Yet we cannot give Christianity the credit, because Bacon was an
|
||
infidel, and was great enough to say that in all things reason must
|
||
be the standard. He was persecuted and imprisoned, as most sensible
|
||
men were in those blessed days. The church was triumphant. The
|
||
scepter and maitre were in her hand and yet her success was the
|
||
result of force and fraud, and it carried within itself the seeds
|
||
of its defeat. The church attempted the impossible, it endeavored
|
||
to make the world of one belief; to force all minds to a common
|
||
form, and utterly destroy the individuality of man. To accomplish
|
||
this it employed every art and artifice that cunning could suggest.
|
||
It inflicted every cruelty by every means that malice could invent.
|
||
|
||
But, in spite of all, a few men began to think. They became
|
||
interested in the affairs of this world -- in the great panorama of
|
||
nature. They began to seek for causes, for the explanations of
|
||
phenomena. They were not satisfied with the assertions of the
|
||
church. These thinkers withdrew their gaze from the skies and
|
||
looked at their own surroundings. They were unspiritual enough to
|
||
desire comfort here. They became sensible and secular, worldly and
|
||
wise.
|
||
|
||
What was the result? They began to invent, to discover, to
|
||
find the relation between facts, the conditions of happiness and
|
||
the means that would increase the well-being of their fellow-men.
|
||
|
||
Movable types were invented, paper was borrowed from the
|
||
Moors, books appeared, and it became possible to save the
|
||
intellectual wealth so that each generation could hand it to the
|
||
next. History began to take the place of legend and rumor. The
|
||
telescope was invented. The orbits of the stars were traced, and
|
||
men became citizens of the universe. The steam engine was
|
||
constructed, and now steam, the great slave, does the work of
|
||
hundreds of millions of men. The Black Art, the impossible, was
|
||
abandoned, and chemistry, the useful, took its place. Astrology
|
||
became astronomy. Kepler discovered the three great laws, one of
|
||
the greatest triumphs of human genius, and our constellation became
|
||
a poem, a symphony. Newton gave us the mathematical expression of
|
||
the attraction of gravitation. Harvey discovered the circulation of
|
||
the blood. He gave us the fact, and Draper gave us the reason.
|
||
Steamships conquered the seas and railways covered the land. Houses
|
||
and streets were lighted with gas. Through the invention of matches
|
||
fire became the companion of man. The art of photography became
|
||
known; the sun became an artist. Telegraphs and cables were
|
||
invented. The lightning became a carrier of thought, and the
|
||
nations became neighbors. Anaesthetic were discovered and pain was
|
||
lost in sleep. Surgery became a science. The telephone was invented
|
||
-- the telephone that carries and deposits in listening ears the
|
||
waves of words. The phonograph, that catches and retains in marks
|
||
and dots and gives again the echoes of our speech.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
Then came electric light that fills the night with day, and
|
||
all the wonderful machines that use the subtle force -- the same
|
||
force that leaps from the summer cloud to ravage and destroy.
|
||
|
||
The Spectrum Analysis that tells us of the substance of the
|
||
sun; the Roentgen rays that change the opaque to the transparent.
|
||
The great thinkers demonstrated the indestructibility of force and
|
||
matter -- demonstrated that the indestructible could not have been
|
||
created. The geologist, in rocks and deposits and mountains and
|
||
continents, read a little of the story of the world -- of its
|
||
changes, of the glacial epoch -- the story of vegetable and animal
|
||
life.
|
||
|
||
The biologists, through the fossil forms of life, established
|
||
the antiquity of man and demonstrated the worthlessness of Holy
|
||
Writ. Then came evolution, the survival of the fittest and natural
|
||
selection. Thousands of mysteries were explained and science
|
||
wrested the scepter from superstition. The cell theory was
|
||
advanced, and embryology was studied; the microscope discovered
|
||
germs of disease and taught us how to stay the plague. These great
|
||
theories and discoveries, together with countless inventions, are
|
||
the children of intellectual liberty.
|
||
|
||
X
|
||
|
||
After all we know but little. In the darkness of life there
|
||
are a few gleams of light. Possibly the dropping of a dishcloth
|
||
prophesies the coming of company, but we have no evidence. Possibly
|
||
it is dangerous for thirteen to dine together, but we have no
|
||
evidence. Possibly a maiden's matrimonial chances are determined by
|
||
the number of seeds in an apple, or by the number of leaves on a
|
||
flower, but we have no evidence. Possibly certain stones give good
|
||
luck to the wearer, while the wearing of others brings loss and
|
||
death. Possibly a glimpse of the new moon over the left shoulder
|
||
brings misfortune. Possibly there are curative virtues in old
|
||
bones, in sacred rags and holy hairs, in images and bits of wood,
|
||
in rusty nails and dried blood, but the trouble is we have no
|
||
evidence. Possibly comets, eclipses and shooting stars foretell the
|
||
death of kings, the destruction of nations or the coming of plague.
|
||
Possibly devils take possession of the bodies and minds of men.
|
||
Possibly witches, with the Devil's help, control the winds, breed
|
||
storms on sea and land, fill summer's lap with frosts and snow, and
|
||
work with charm and spell against the public weal, but of this we
|
||
have no evidence. It may be that all the miracles described in the
|
||
Old and New Testament were performed; that the pallid flesh of the
|
||
dead felt once more the thrill of life; that the corpse arose and
|
||
felt upon his smiling lips the kiss of wife and child. Possibly
|
||
water was turned into wine, loaves and fishes increased, and
|
||
possibly devils were expelled from men and women; possibly fishes
|
||
were found with money in their mouths; possibly clay and spittle
|
||
brought back the light to sightless eyes, and possibly words cured
|
||
disease and made the leper clean, but of this we have no evidence.
|
||
|
||
Possibly iron floated, rivers divided, waters burst from dry
|
||
bones, birds carried food to prophets and angels flourished drawn
|
||
swords, but of this we have no evidence.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
Possibly Jehovah employed lying spirits to deceive a king, and
|
||
all the wonders of the savage world may have happened, but the
|
||
trouble is there is no proof.
|
||
|
||
So there may be a Devil, almost infinite in cunning and power,
|
||
and he may have a countless number of imps whose only business is
|
||
to sow the seeds of evil and to vex, mislead, capture and imprison
|
||
in eternal flames the souls of men. All this, so far as we know, is
|
||
possible. All we know is that we have no evidence except the
|
||
assertions of ignorant priests.
|
||
|
||
Possibly there is a place called "hell," where all the devils
|
||
live -- a hell whose flames are waiting for all the men who think
|
||
and have the courage to express their thoughts, for all who fail to
|
||
credit priests and sacred books, for all who walk the path that
|
||
reason lights, for all the good and brave who lack credulity and
|
||
faith -- but of this, I am happy to say, there is no proof.
|
||
|
||
And so there may be a place called "heaven," the home of God,
|
||
where angels float and fly and play on harps and hear with joy the
|
||
groans and shrieks of the lost in hell, but of this there is no
|
||
evidence.
|
||
|
||
It all rests on dreams and visions of the insane.
|
||
|
||
There may be a power superior to nature, a power that governs
|
||
and directs all things, but the existence of this power has not
|
||
been established.
|
||
|
||
In the presence of the mysteries of life and thought, of force
|
||
and substance, of growth and decay, of birth and death, of joy and
|
||
pain, of the sufferings of the good, the triumphs of wrong, the
|
||
intelligent honest man is compelled to say: "I do not know."
|
||
|
||
But we do know how gods and devils, heavens and hells, have
|
||
been made. We know the history of inspired books -- the origin of
|
||
religions. We know how the seeds of superstition were planted and
|
||
what made them grow. We know that all superstitions, all creeds,
|
||
all follies and mistakes, all crimes and cruelties, all virtues,
|
||
vices, hopes and fears, all discoveries and inventions, have been
|
||
naturally produced. By the light of reason we divide the useful
|
||
from the hurtful, the false from the true.
|
||
|
||
We know the past -- the paths that man has traveled -- his
|
||
mistakes, his triumphs. We know a few facts, a few fragments, and
|
||
the imagination, the artist of the mind, with these facts, these
|
||
fragments, rebuilds the past, and on the canvas of the future
|
||
deftly paints the things to be.
|
||
|
||
We believe in the natural, in the unbroken and unbreakable
|
||
succession of causes and effects. We deny the existence of the
|
||
supernatural. We do not believe in any God who can be pleased with
|
||
incense, with kneeling, with bell-ringing, psalm-singing, bead-
|
||
counting, fasting or prayer -- in any God who can be flattered by
|
||
words of faith or fear.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
SUPERSTITION.
|
||
|
||
We believe in the natural. We have no fear of devils, ghosts
|
||
or hells. We believe that Mahatmas, astral bodies, materializations
|
||
of spirits, crystal gazing, seeing the future, telepathy, mind
|
||
reading and Christian Science are only cunning frauds, the
|
||
genuineness of which is established by the testimony of
|
||
incompetent, honest witnesses. We believe that Cunning plates fraud
|
||
with the gold of honesty, and veneers vice with virtue.
|
||
|
||
We know that millions are seeking the impossible -- trying to
|
||
secure the aid of the supernatural -- to solve the problem of life
|
||
-- to guess the riddle of destiny, and to pluck from the future its
|
||
secret. We know that all their efforts are in vain.
|
||
|
||
We believe in the natural. We believe in home and fireside --
|
||
in wife and child and friend -- in the realities of this world. We
|
||
have faith in facts -- in knowledge -- in the development of the
|
||
brain. We throw away superstition and welcome science. We banish
|
||
the phantoms, the mistakes and lies and cling to the truth. We do
|
||
not enthrone the unknown and crown our ignorance. We do not stand
|
||
with our backs to the sun and mistake our shadow for God.
|
||
|
||
We do not create a master and thankfully wear his chains. We
|
||
do not enslave ourselves. We want no leaders -- no followers. Our
|
||
desire is that every human being shall be true to himself, to his
|
||
ideal, unbribed by promises, careless of threats. We want no tyrant
|
||
on the earth or in the air.
|
||
|
||
We know that superstition has given us delusions and
|
||
illusions, dreams and visions, ceremonies and cruelties, faith and
|
||
fanaticism, beggars and bigots, persecutions and prayers, theology
|
||
and torture, piety and poverty, saints and slaves, miracles and
|
||
mummeries, disease and death.
|
||
|
||
We know that science has given us all we have of value.
|
||
Science is the only civilizer. It has freed the slave, clothed the
|
||
naked, fed the hungry, lengthened life, given us homes and hearths,
|
||
pictures and books, ships and railways, telegraphs and cables,
|
||
engines that tirelessly turn the countless wheels, and it has
|
||
destroyed the monsters, the phantoms, the winged horrors that
|
||
filled the savage brain.
|
||
|
||
Science is the real redeemer. It will put honesty above
|
||
hypocrisy; mental veracity above all belief. It will teach the
|
||
religion of usefulness. It will destroy bigotry in all its forms.
|
||
It will put thoughtful doubt above thoughtless faith. It will give
|
||
us philosophers, thinkers and savants, instead of priests,
|
||
theologians and saints. It will abolish poverty and crime, and
|
||
greater, grander, nobler than all else, it will make the whole
|
||
world free.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
22
|
||
|