1236 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
1236 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
19 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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WHICH WAY?
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1884
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I.
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There are two ways, -- the natural and the supernatural.
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One way is to live for the world we are in, to develop the
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brain by study and investigation, to take, by invention, advantage
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of the forces of nature, to the end that we may have good houses,
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raiment and food, to the end that the hunger of the mind may be fed
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through art and science.
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The other way is to live for another world that we expect, to
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sacrifice this life that we have for another that we know not of.
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The other way is by prayer and ceremony to obtain the assistance,
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the protection of some phantom above the clouds.
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One way is to think -- to investigate, to observe, and follow,
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the light, of reason. The other way is to believe, to accept, to
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follow, to deny the authority of your own senses, your own reason,
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and bow down to those who are impudent enough to declare that they
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know.
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One way is to live for the benefit of your fellowmen -- for
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your wife and children -- to make those you love happy and to
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shield them from the sorrows of life.
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The other way is to live for ghosts, goblins, phantoms and
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gods with the hope that they will reward you in another world.
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One way is to enthrone reason and rely on facts, the other to
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crown credulity and live on faith.
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One way is to walk by the light within -- by the flame that
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illumines the brain, verifying all by the senses -- by touch and
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sight and sound.
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The other way is to extinguish the sacred light and follow
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blindly the steps of another.
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One way is to be an honest man, giving to others your thought,
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standing erect, intrepid, careless of phantoms and hells.
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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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WHICH WAY?
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The other way is to cringe and crawl, to betray your nobler
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self and to deprive others of the liberty that you have not the
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courage to enjoy.
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Do not imagine that I hate the ones who have taken the wrong
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side and traveled the wrong road.
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Our fathers did the best they could. They believed in the
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Supernatural, and they thought that sacrifices and prayer, fasting
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and weeping, would induce the Supernatural to give them sunshine,
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rain and harvest -- long life in this world and eternal joy in
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another. To them, God was an absolute monarch, quick to take
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offence, sudden in anger, terrible in punishment, jealous, hateful
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to his enemies, generous to his favorites. They believed also in
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the existence of an evil God, almost the equal of the other God in
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strength, and a little superior in cunning. Between these two Gods
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was the soul of man like a mouse between two paws.
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Both of these Gods inspired fear. Our fathers did not quite
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love God, nor quite hate the Devil, but they were afraid of both.
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They really wished to enjoy themselves with God in the next world
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and with the Devil in this, they believed that the course of Nature
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was affected by their conduct; that floods and storms, diseases,
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earthquakes and tempests were sent as punishments, and that all
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good phenomena were rewards.
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Everything was under the direction and control of supernatural
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powers. The air, the darkness, were filled with angels and devils;
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witches and wizards planned and plotted against the pious --
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against the true believers. Eclipses were produced by the sins of
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the people, and the unusual was regarded as the miraculous in the
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good old times Christendom was an insane asylum, and insane priests
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and prelates were the keepers. There was no science. The people did
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not investigate -- did not think. They trembled and believed.
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Ignorance and superstition ruled the Christian world.
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At last a few began to observe, to make records, and to think.
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It was found that eclipses came at certain intervals, and that
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their coming could be foretold. This demonstrated that the actions
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of men had nothing to do with eclipses. A few began to suspect that
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earthquakes and storms had natural causes, and happened without the
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slightest reference to mankind.
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Some began to doubt the existence of evil spirits, or the
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interference of good ones in the affairs of the world. Finding out
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something about astronomy, the great number of the stars, the
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certain and continuous motions of the planets, and the fact that
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many of them were vastly larger than the earth; ascertaining
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something about the earth, the slow development of forms, the
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growth and distribution of plants, the formation of islands and
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continents, the parts played by fire, water and air through
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countless centuries; the kinship of all life; fixing the earth's
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place in the constellation of the sun; by experiment and research
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discovering a few secrets of chemistry; by the invention of
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printing, and the preservation and dissemination of facts, theories
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and thoughts, they were enabled to break a few chains of
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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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WHICH WAY?
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superstition, to free themselves a little from the dominion of the
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supernatural, and to set their faces toward the light. Slowly the
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number of investigators and thinkers increased, slowly the real
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facts were gathered, the sciences began to appear, the old beliefs
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grew a little absurd, the supernatural retreated and ceased to
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interfere in the ordinary affairs of men.
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Schools were founded, children were taught, books were printed
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and the thinkers increased. Day by day confidence lessened in the
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supernatural, and day by day men were more and more impressed with
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the idea that man must be his own protector, his own providence.
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From the mists and darkness of savagery and superstition emerged
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the dawn of the Natural. A sense of freedom took possession of the
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mind, and the soul began to dream of its power. On every side were
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invention and discovery, and bolder thought. The church began to
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regard the friends of science as its foes. Theologians resorted to
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chain and fagot -- to mutilation and torture.
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The thinkers were denounced as heretics and Atheists -- as the
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minions of Satan and the defamers of Christ. All the ignorance,
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prejudice and malice of superstition were aroused and all united
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for the destruction of investigation and thought. For centuries
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||
this conflict was waged. Every outrage was perpetrated, every crime
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committed by the believers in the supernatural. But, in spite of
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all, the disciples of the Natural increased, and the power of the
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church waned. Now the intelligence of the world is on the side of
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the Natural. Still the conflict goes on -- the supernatural
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constantly losing, and the Natural constantly gaining. In a few
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years the victory of science over superstition will be complete and
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universal.
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So, there have been for many centuries two philosophies of
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life; one in favor of the destruction of the passions -- the
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lessening of wants, -- and absolute reliance on some higher power;
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||
the other, in favor of the reasonable gratification of the
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passions, the increase of wants, and their supply by industry,
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ingenuity and invention, and the reliance of man on his own
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efforts. Diogenes, Eipictetus, Socrates to some extent, Buddha and
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Christ, all taught the first philosophy. All despised riches and
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luxury, all were the enemies of art and music, the despisers of
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good clothes and good food and good homes. They were the
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philosophers of poverty and rags, of huts and hovels, of ignorance
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and faith. They preached the glories of another world and the
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miseries of this. They derided the prosperous, the industrious,
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those who enjoyed life, and reserved heaven for beggars.
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This philosophy is losing authority, and now most people are
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anxious to be happy here in this life. Most people want food and
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roof and raiment -- books and pictures, luxury and leisure. They
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believe in developing the brain -- in making servants and slaves of
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the forces of Nature.
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Now the intelligent men of the world have cast aside the
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teachings, the philosophy of the ascetics. They no longer believe
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in the virtue of fasting and self-torture. They believe that
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happiness is the only good, and that the time to be happy is now --
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here, in this world. They no longer believe in the rewards and
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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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WHICH WAY?
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punishments of the supernatural. They believe in consequences, and
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that the consequences of bad actions are evil, and the consequences
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of good actions are good.
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They believe that man by investigation, by reason, should find
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out the conditions of happiness, and then live and act in
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||
accordance with such conditions. They do not believe that
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earthquakes, or tempests, or volcanoes, or eclipses, are caused by
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the conduct of men. They no longer believe in the supernatural.
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||
They do not regard themselves as the serfs, servants or favorites
|
||
of any celestial king. They feel that many evils can be avoided by
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knowledge, and for that reason they believe in the development of
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the brain. The schoolhouse is their church and the university their
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cathedral. So, there have been for some centuries two theories of
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government, -- one theological, the other secular.
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The king received his power directly from God. It was the
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business of the people to obey. The priests received their creeds
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from God and it was the duty of the people to believe.
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The theological government is growing somewhat unpopular. In
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England, Parliament has taken the place of God, and in the United
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States, government derives its powers from the consent of the
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governed, Probably Emperor William is the only man in Germany who
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||
really believes that God placed him on the throne and will keep him
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there whether the German people are satisfied or not. Italy has
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||
retired the Catholic God from politics, France belongs to and is
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||
governed by the French, and even in Russia there are millions who
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||
hold the Czar and all his divine pretensions in contempt.
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The theological governments are passing away and the secular
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are slowly taking their places. Man is growing greater and the Gods
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are becoming vague and indistinct. These "divine" governments rest
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on the fear and ignorance of the many, the cunning, the impudence
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and the mendacity of the few. A secular government is born of the
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intelligence, the honesty and the courage, not only of the few, but
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||
of the many.
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We have found that man can govern himself without the
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||
assistance of priest or pope, of ghost or God. We have found that
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religion is not self-evident, and that to believe without evidence
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is not a praiseworthy action. We know that the self-evident is the
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square and compass of the brain, the polar star in the firmament of
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||
mind. And we know that no one denies the self-evident. We also know
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that there is no particular goodness in believing when the evidence
|
||
is sufficient, and certainly there is none in saying that you
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believe when the evidence is insufficient.
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The believers have not all been good. Some of the worst people
|
||
in the whole world have been believers. The gentlemen who made
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||
Socrates drink hemlock were believers. The Jews who crucified
|
||
Christ were believers in and worshipers of God. The devil believes
|
||
in the Trinity, the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and yet it does not
|
||
seem to have affected his moral character. According to the Bible,
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||
he trembles, but he does not reform. At last we have concluded that
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||
we have a right to examine the religion of our fathers.
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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WHICH WAY?
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II
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All Christians know that all the gods, except Jehovah, were
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created by man; that they were, and are, false, foolish and
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monstrous; that all the heathen temples were built and all their
|
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altars erected in vain; that the sacrifices were wasted, that the
|
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priests were hypocrites, that their prayers were unanswered and
|
||
that the poor people were deceived, robbed and enslaved. But after
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||
all, is our God superior to the gods of the heathen?
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We can ask this question now because we are prosperous, and
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prosperity gives courage. If we should have a few earthquakes or a
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pestilence we might fall on our knees, shut our eyes and ask the
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forgiveness of God for ever having had a thought. We know that
|
||
famine is the friend of faith and that calamity is the sunshine of
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||
superstition. But as we have no pestilence or famine, and as the
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crust of the earth is reasonably quiet, we can afford to examine
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||
into the real character of our God.
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It must be admitted that the use of power is an excellent test
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of character.
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Would a good God appeal to prejudice, the armor, fortress,
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sword and shield of ignorance? to credulity, the ring in the
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priest-led nose of stupidity? to fear, the capital stock of
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imposture, the lever of hypocrisy? Would a good God frighten or
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enlighten his children? Would a good God appeal to reason or
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ignorance, to justice or selfishness, to liberty or the lash?
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||
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To our first parents in the Garden of Eden, our God said
|
||
nothing about the sacredness of love, nothing about children,
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nothing about education, about justice or liberty.
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After they had violated his command he became ferocious as a
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wild beast. He cursed the earth and to Eve he said: -- "I will
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greatly multiply thy sorrow. In sorrow shalt thou bring forth
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children. Thy husband shall rule over thee."
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Our God made love the slave of pain, made wives serfs, and
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brutalized the firesides of the world.
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Our God drowned the whole world, with the exception of eight
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people; made the earth one vast and shoreless sea covered with
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corpses.
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Why did he cover the world with men, women and children
|
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knowing that he would destroy them? "Why did he not try to reform
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them? Why would he create people, knowing that they could not be
|
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reformed?
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Is it possible that our God was intelligent and good?
|
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After the flood our God selected the Jews and abandoned the
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rest of his children. He paid no attention to the Hindoos,
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||
neglected the Egyptians, ignored the Persians, forgot the Assyrians
|
||
and failed to remember the Greeks. And yet he was the father of
|
||
them all. For many centuries he was only a tribal God, protecting
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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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WHICH WAY?
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the few and despising the many. Our God was ignorant, knew nothing
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of astronomy or geology. He did not even know the shape of the
|
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earth, and thought the stars were only specks.
|
||
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He knew nothing of disease. He thought that the blood of a
|
||
bird that had been killed over running water was good medicine. He
|
||
was revengeful and cruel, and assisted some of his children to
|
||
butcher and destroy others. He commanded them to murder men, wives
|
||
and children, and to keep alive the maidens and distribute them
|
||
among his soldiers.
|
||
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Our God established slavery -- commanded men to buy their
|
||
fellow-men, to make merchandise of wives and babes. Our God
|
||
sanctioned polygamy and made wives the property of their husbands.
|
||
Our God murdered the people for the crimes of kings.
|
||
|
||
No man of intelligence, no one whose brain has not been
|
||
poisoned by superstition, paralyzed by fear, can read the Old
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||
Testament without being forced to the conclusion that our God was
|
||
a wild beast.
|
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||
If we must have a god, let him be merciful. Let us remember
|
||
that "the quality of mercy is not strained." Let us remember that
|
||
when the sword of Justice becomes a staff to support the weak, it
|
||
bursts into blossom, and that the perfume of that flower is the
|
||
only incense, the only offering, the only sacrifice that mercy will
|
||
accept.
|
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So, there have been two theories about the cause and cure of
|
||
disease. One is the theological, the other the scientific.
|
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III
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According to the theological idea, diseases were produced by
|
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evil spirits, by devils who entered into the bodies of people.
|
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These devils could be cast out by prophets, inspired men and
|
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priests.
|
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While Christ was upon earth his principal business was to cast
|
||
out evil spirits.
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For many centuries the priests followed his example, and
|
||
during the Middle Ages millions of devils were driven from the
|
||
bodies of men. Diseases were cured with little images of
|
||
consecrated pewter, with pieces of paper, with crosses worn about
|
||
the neck -- by having plaster of Paris Virgins and clay Christs at
|
||
the head of the bed, by touching the bones of dead saints, or
|
||
pieces of the true cross, or one of the nails that was driven
|
||
through the flesh of Christ, or a garment that had been worn by the
|
||
Virgin Mary, or by sprinkling the breast with holy water, or saying
|
||
prayers, or counting beads, or making the stations of the cross, or
|
||
by going without meat, or wearing haircloth, or in some way
|
||
torturing the body. All diseases were supposed to be of
|
||
supernatural origin and all cures were of the same nature.
|
||
Pestilences were stopped by processions, led by priests carrying
|
||
the Host. Nothing was known of natural causes and effects.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
Everything was miraculous and mysterious. The priests were
|
||
cunning and the people credulous.
|
||
|
||
Slowly another theory as to the cause and cure of disease took
|
||
possession of the mind. A few discarded the idea of devils, and
|
||
took the ground that diseases were naturally produced, and that
|
||
many of them could be cured by natural means.
|
||
|
||
At first the physician was exceedingly ignorant, but he knew
|
||
more than the priest. Slowly but surely he pushed the priest from
|
||
the bedside. Some people finally became intelligent enough to trust
|
||
their bodies to the doctors, and remained ignorant enough to leave
|
||
the care of their souls with the priests. Among civilized people
|
||
the theological theory has been cast aside, and the miraculous, the
|
||
supernatural, no longer has a place in medicine. In Catholic
|
||
countries the peasants are still cured by images, prayers, holy
|
||
water and the bones of saints, but when the priests are sick they
|
||
send for a physician, and now even the Pope, God's agent, gives his
|
||
sacred body to the care of a doctor.
|
||
|
||
The scientific has triumphed to a great extent over the
|
||
theological.
|
||
|
||
No intelligent person now believes that devils inhabit the
|
||
bodies of men. No intelligent person now believes that devils are
|
||
trying to control the actions of men. No intelligent person now
|
||
believes that devils exist.
|
||
|
||
And yet, at the present time, in the city of New York,
|
||
Catholic priests are exhibiting a piece of one of the bones of
|
||
Saint Anne, the supposed mother of the Virgin Mary. Some of these
|
||
priests may be credulous imbeciles and some may be pious rogues. If
|
||
they have any real intelligence they must know that there is no
|
||
possible way of proving that the piece of bone ever belonged to
|
||
Saint Anne. And if they have any real intelligence they must know
|
||
that even the bones of Saint Anne were substantially like the bones
|
||
of other people, made of substantially the same material, and that
|
||
the medical and miraculous qualities of all human bones must be
|
||
substantially the same. And yet these priests are obtaining from
|
||
their credulous dupes thousands and thousands of dollars for the
|
||
privilege of seeing this bone and kissing the box that contains the
|
||
"sacred relic."
|
||
|
||
Archbishop Corrigan knows that no one knows who the mother of
|
||
the Virgin Mary was, that no one knows about any of the bones of
|
||
this unknown mother, knows that the whole thing is a theological
|
||
fraud, knows that his priests, or priests under his jurisdiction,
|
||
are obtaining money under false pretenses. Cardinal Gibbons knows
|
||
the same, but neither of these pious gentlemen has one word to say
|
||
against this shameless crime. They are willing that priests for the
|
||
benefit of the church should make merchandise of the hopes and
|
||
fears of ignorant believers; willing that fraud that produces
|
||
revenue should live and thrive.
|
||
|
||
This is the honesty of the theologian. If these gentlemen
|
||
should be taken sick they would not touch the relic. They would
|
||
send for a physician.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
Let me tell you a Japanese story that is exactly in point;
|
||
|
||
An old monk was in charge of a monastery that had been built
|
||
above the bones of a saint. These bones had the power to cure
|
||
diseases and they were so placed that by thrusting the arm through
|
||
an orifice they could be touched by the hand of the pilgrim. Many
|
||
people, afflicted in many ways, came and touched these bones. Many
|
||
thought they had been benefitted or cured, and many in gratitude
|
||
left large sums of money with the monk. One day the old monk
|
||
addressed his assistant as follows: "My dear son, business has
|
||
fallen off, and I can easily attend to all who come. You will have
|
||
to find another place. I will give you the white donkey, a little
|
||
money, and my blessing."
|
||
|
||
So the young man mounted upon the beast and went his way. In
|
||
a few days his money was gone and the white donkey died. An idea
|
||
took possession of the young man's mind. By the side of the road he
|
||
buried the donkey, and then to every passer-by held out his hands
|
||
and said in solemn tones: "I pray thee give me a little money to
|
||
build a temple above the bones of the sinless one."
|
||
|
||
Such was his success that he built the temple, and then
|
||
thousands came to touch the bones of the sinless one. The young man
|
||
became rich, gave employment; to many assistants and lived in the
|
||
greatest luxury.
|
||
|
||
One day he made up his mind to visit his old master. Taking
|
||
with him a large retinue of servants he started for the old home.
|
||
When he reached the place the old monk was seated by the doorway.
|
||
With great astonishment he looked at the young man and his retinue.
|
||
The young man dismounted and made himself known, and the old monk
|
||
cried;
|
||
|
||
"Where hast thou been? Tell me, I pray thee, the story of thy
|
||
success." "Ah," the young man replied, "old age is stupid, but
|
||
youth has thoughts. Wait until we are alone and I will tell you
|
||
all."
|
||
|
||
So that night the young man told his story, told about the
|
||
death and burial of the donkey, the begging of money to build a
|
||
temple over the bones of the sinless one, and of the sums of money
|
||
he had received for the cures the bones had wrought.
|
||
|
||
When he finished a satisfied smile crept over his pious face
|
||
as he added. "Old age is stupid, but youth has thoughts."
|
||
|
||
"Be not so fast," said the old monk, as he placed his
|
||
trembling hand on the head of his visitor,
|
||
|
||
"Young man" this monastery in which your youth was passed, in
|
||
which you have seen so many miracles performed, so many diseases
|
||
cured, was built above the sacred bones of the mother of your
|
||
little jackass."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
IV
|
||
|
||
There are two ways of accounting for the sacred books and
|
||
religions of the world.
|
||
|
||
One is to say that the sacred hooks were written by inspired
|
||
men, and that our religion was revealed to us by God.
|
||
|
||
The other is to say that all books have been written by men,
|
||
without any aid from supernatural powers, and that all religions
|
||
have been naturally produced.
|
||
|
||
We find that other races and peoples have sacred books and
|
||
prophets, priests and Christs; we find too that their sacred books
|
||
were written by men who had the prejudices and peculiarities of the
|
||
race to which they belonged, and that they contain the mistakes and
|
||
absurdities peculiar to the people who produced them.
|
||
|
||
Christians are perfectly satisfied that all the so-called
|
||
sacred books, with the exception of the Old and New Testaments,
|
||
were written by men, and that the claim of inspiration is perfectly
|
||
absurd. So they believe that all religions, except Judaism and
|
||
Christianity, were invented by men. The believers in other
|
||
religions take the ground that their religion was revealed by God,
|
||
and that all others, including Judaism and Christianity, were made
|
||
by men. All are right and all are wrong. When they say that "other"
|
||
religions were produced by men, they are right; when they say that
|
||
their religion was revealed by God, they are wrong.
|
||
|
||
Now we know that all tribes and nations have had some kind of
|
||
religion; that they have believed in the existence of good and evil
|
||
beings, spirits or powers, that could be softened by gifts or
|
||
prayer. Now we know that at the foundation of every religion, of
|
||
all worship, is the pale and bloodless face of fear. Now we know
|
||
that all religions and all sacred books have been naturally
|
||
produced -- all born of ignorance, fear and cunning.
|
||
|
||
Now we know that the gifts, sacrifices and prayers were all in
|
||
vain; that no god received and that no god heard or answered.
|
||
|
||
A few years ago prayers decided the issue of battle, and
|
||
priests, through their influence with God, could give the victory.
|
||
Now no intelligent man expects any answer to prayer. He knows that
|
||
nature pursues her course without reference to the wishes of men,
|
||
that the clouds float, the winds blow, the rain falls and the sun
|
||
shines without regard to the human race. Yet millions are still
|
||
praying, still hoping that they can gain the protection of some
|
||
god, that some being will guard them from accident and disease.
|
||
Year after year the ministers make the same petitions, pray for the
|
||
same things, and keep on in spite of the fact that nothing is
|
||
accomplished.
|
||
|
||
Whenever good men do some noble thing the clergy give their
|
||
God the credit, and when evil things are done they hold the men who
|
||
did the evil responsible, and forget to blame their God.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
Praying has become a business, a profession, a trade. A
|
||
minister is never happier than when praying in public. Most of them
|
||
are exceedingly familiar with their God. Knowing that he knows
|
||
everything, they tell him the needs of the nation and the desires
|
||
of the people, they advise him what to do and when to do it. They
|
||
appeal to his pride, asking him to do certain things for his own
|
||
glory. They often pray for the impossible. In the House of
|
||
Representatives in Washington I once heard a chaplain pray for what
|
||
he must have known was impossible. Without a change of countenance,
|
||
without a smile, with a face solemn as a sepulchre, he said: "I
|
||
pray thee, O God, to give Congress wisdom." It may be that
|
||
ministers really think that their prayers do good and it may be
|
||
that frogs imagine that their croaking brings spring.
|
||
|
||
The men of thought now know that all religions and all sacred
|
||
books have been made by men; that no revelation has come from any
|
||
being superior to nature; that all the prophecies were either false
|
||
or made after the event; that no miracle ever was or ever will be
|
||
performed; that no God wants the worship or the assistance of man;
|
||
that no prayer has ever coaxed one drop of rain from the sky, one
|
||
ray of light from the sun; that no prayer has stayed the flood, or
|
||
the tides of the sea, or folded the wings of the storm; that no
|
||
prayer has given water to the cracked and bleeding lips of thirst,
|
||
or food to the famishing; that no prayer has stopped the
|
||
pestilence, stilled the earthquake or quieted the volcano; that no
|
||
prayer has shielded the innocent, succored the oppressed, unlocked
|
||
the dungeon's door, broke the chains of slaves, rescued the good
|
||
and noble from the scaffold, or extinguished the fagot's flame.
|
||
|
||
The intelligent man now knows that we live in a natural world,
|
||
that gods and devils and the sons of God are all phantoms, that our
|
||
religion and our Deity are much like the religion and deities of
|
||
other nations, and that the stone god of a savage answers prayer
|
||
and protects his worshipers precisely the same, and to just the
|
||
same extent, as the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
|
||
|
||
V
|
||
|
||
There are two theories about morals. One theory is that the
|
||
moral man obeys the commands of a supposed God, without stopping to
|
||
think whether the commands are right or wrong. He believes that the
|
||
will of the God is the source and fountain of right. He thinks a
|
||
thing is wrong because the God prohibits it, not that the God
|
||
prohibits it because it is wrong. This theory calls not for
|
||
thought, but for obedience. It does not appeal to reason, but to
|
||
the fear of punishment, the hope of reward. God is a king whose
|
||
will is law, and men are serfs and slaves.
|
||
|
||
Many contend that without a belief in the existence of God
|
||
morality is impossible and that virtue would perish from the earth.
|
||
|
||
This absurd theory, with its "Thus saith the Lord" has been
|
||
claimed to be independent of and superior to reason.
|
||
|
||
The other theory is that right and wrong exist in the nature
|
||
of things; that certain actions preserve or increase the happiness
|
||
of man, and that other actions cause sorrow and misery; that all
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
those actions that cause happiness are moral, and that all others
|
||
are evil, or indifferent. Right and wrong are not revelations from
|
||
some supposed god, but have been discovered through the experience
|
||
and intelligence of man. There is nothing miraculous or
|
||
supernatural about morality. Neither has morality anything to do
|
||
with another world, or with, an infinite being. It applies to
|
||
conduct here, and the effect of that conduct on ourselves and
|
||
others determines its nature.
|
||
|
||
In this world people are obliged to supply their wants by
|
||
labor. Industry is a necessity, and those who work are the natural
|
||
enemies of those who steal.
|
||
|
||
It required no revelation from God to make larceny unpopular.
|
||
Human beings naturally object to being injured, maimed, or killed,
|
||
and so everywhere, and at all times, they have tried to protect
|
||
themselves.
|
||
|
||
Men did not require a revelation from God to put in their
|
||
minds the thought of self-preservation. To defend yourself when
|
||
attacked is as natural as to eat when you are hungry.
|
||
|
||
To determine the quality of an action by showing that it is in
|
||
accordance with, or contrary to the command of some supposed God,
|
||
is superstition pure and simple. To test all actions by their
|
||
consequences is scientific and in accord with reason.
|
||
|
||
According to the supernatural theory, natural consequences are
|
||
not taken into consideration. Actions are wrong because they have
|
||
been prohibited and right because they have been commanded.
|
||
According to the Catholic Church, eating meat on Friday is a sin
|
||
that deserves eternal punishment. And yet, in the nature of things,
|
||
the consequences of eating meat on that day must be exactly the
|
||
same as eating meat on any other. So, all the churches teach that
|
||
unbelief is a crime, not in the nature of things, but by reason of
|
||
the will of God.
|
||
|
||
Of course this is absurd and idiotic. If there be an infinite
|
||
God he cannot make that wrong which in the nature of things is
|
||
right. Neither can he make an action good the natural consequences
|
||
of which are evil. Even an infinite God cannot change a fact. In
|
||
spite of him the relation between the diameter and circumference of
|
||
a circle would remain the same.
|
||
|
||
All the relations of things to things, of forces to forces, of
|
||
acts to acts, of causes to effects in the domain of what is called
|
||
matter, and in the realm of what is called mind, are just as
|
||
certain, just as unchangeable as the relation between the diameter
|
||
and circumference of a circle.
|
||
|
||
An infinite God could not make ingratitude a virtue any easier
|
||
than he could make a square triangle.
|
||
|
||
So, the foundations of the moral and the immoral are in the
|
||
nature of things -- in the necessary relation between conduct and
|
||
well-being, and an infinite God cannot change these foundations,
|
||
and cannot increase or diminish the natural consequences of
|
||
actions.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
In this world there is neither chance nor caprice, neither
|
||
magic nor miracle. Behind every event, every thought and dream, is
|
||
the efficient, the natural and necessary cause.
|
||
|
||
The effort to make the will of a supposed God the foundation
|
||
of morality, has filled the world with misery and crime,
|
||
extinguished in millions of minds the light of reason, and in
|
||
countless ways hindered and delayed the progress of our race.
|
||
|
||
Intelligent men now know, that if there he an infinite God,
|
||
man cannot in any way increase or decrease the happiness of such a
|
||
being. They know that man can only commit crimes against sentient
|
||
beings who, to some extent at least, are within his power, and that
|
||
a crime by a finite being against an infinite being is an infinite
|
||
impossibility.
|
||
|
||
VI
|
||
|
||
For many thousands of years man has believed in and sought for
|
||
the impossible. In chemistry he has searched for a universal
|
||
solvent, for some way in which to change the baser metals into
|
||
gold. Even Lord Bacon was a believer in this absurdity. Thousands
|
||
of men, during many centuries, in thousands of ways, sought to
|
||
change the nature of lead and iron so that they might be
|
||
transformed to gold. They had no conception of the real nature of
|
||
things. They supposed that they had originally been created by a
|
||
kind of magic, and could by the same kind of magic he changed into
|
||
something else. They were all believers in the supernatural. So, in
|
||
mechanics, men sought for the impossible. They were believers in
|
||
perpetual motion and they tried to make machines that would through
|
||
a combination of levers furnish the force that propelled them.
|
||
|
||
Thousands of ingenious men wasted their lives in the vain
|
||
effort to produce machines that would in some wonderful way create
|
||
a force. They did not know that force is eternal, that it can
|
||
neither be created nor destroyed. They did not know that a machine
|
||
having perpetual motion would necessarily be a universe within
|
||
itself, or independent of this, and in which the force called
|
||
friction would be necessarily changed, without loss, into the force
|
||
that propelled, -- the machine itself causing or creating the
|
||
original force that put it in motion. And yet in spite of all the
|
||
absurdities involved, for many centuries men, regarded by their
|
||
fellows as intelligent and learned, tried to discover the great
|
||
principle of "perpetual motion."
|
||
|
||
Our ancestors studied the stars because in them they thought
|
||
it possible to learn the fate of nations, the life and destiny of
|
||
the individual. Eclipses, wandering comets, the relations of
|
||
certain stars were the forerunners or causes of prosperity or
|
||
disaster, of the downfall or upbuilding of kingdoms. Astrology was
|
||
believed to be a science, and those who studied the stars were
|
||
consulted by warriors. statesmen and kings. The account of the star
|
||
that led the wise men of the East to the infant Christ was written
|
||
by a believer in astrology. It would be hard to overstate the time
|
||
and talent wasted in the study of this so-called science. The men
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
who believed in astrology thought that they lived in a supernatural
|
||
world -- a world in which causes and effects had no necessary
|
||
connection with each other -- in which all events were the result
|
||
of magic and necromancy.
|
||
|
||
Even now, at the close of the nineteenth century, there are
|
||
hundreds and hundreds of men who make their living by casting the
|
||
horoscopes of idiots and imbeciles.
|
||
|
||
The "perpetual motion" of the mechanic, the universal solvent
|
||
of the chemist, the changing of lead into gold, the foretelling
|
||
events by the relations of stars were all born of the same
|
||
ignorance of nature that caused the theologian to imagine an
|
||
uncaused cause as the cause of all causes and effects.
|
||
|
||
The theologian insisted that there was something superior to
|
||
nature, and that that something was the creator and preserver of
|
||
nature.
|
||
|
||
Of course there is no more evidence of the existence of that
|
||
"something" than there is of the philosopher's stone.
|
||
|
||
The mechanics who now believe in perpetual motion are insane,
|
||
so are the chemists who seek to change one metal into another, so
|
||
are the honest astrologers, and in a few more years the same can
|
||
truthfully be said of the honest theologians.
|
||
|
||
Many of our ancestors believed in the existence of and sought
|
||
for the Fountain of Perpetual Youth. They believed that an old man
|
||
could stoop and drink from this fountain and that while he drank
|
||
his gray hairs would slowly change, that the wrinkles would
|
||
disappear, that his dim eyes would brighten and grow clear, his
|
||
heart throb with manhood's force and rhythm, while in his pallid
|
||
cheeks would burst into blossom the roses of health.
|
||
|
||
They were believers in the supernatural, the miraculous, and
|
||
nothing seemed more probable than the impossible.
|
||
|
||
VII
|
||
|
||
Most people use names in place of arguments. They are
|
||
satisfied to be disciples, followers of the illustrious dead. Each
|
||
church, each party has a list of "great men," and they throw the
|
||
names of these men at each other when discussing their dogmas and
|
||
creeds.
|
||
|
||
Men prove the inspiration of the Bible, the divinity of Christ
|
||
by the admissions of soldiers, statesmen and kings. And in the same
|
||
way they establish the existence of heaven and hell. Dispute one of
|
||
their dogmas and you will instantly be told that Isaac Newton or
|
||
Matthew Hale was on the other side, and you will be asked whether
|
||
you claim to be superior to Newton or Hale. In our own country the
|
||
ministers, to establish their absurdities, quote the opinions of
|
||
Webster and of other successful politicians as though such opinions
|
||
were demonstrations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
Most Protestants will cheerfully admit that they are inferior
|
||
in brain and genius to some men who have lived and died in the
|
||
Catholic faith; that in the matter of preaching funeral sermons
|
||
they are not equal to Bossuet; that their letters are not as
|
||
interesting and polished as those written by Pascal; that
|
||
Torquemada excelled them in the genius of organization, and that
|
||
for planning a massacre they would not for a moment claim the palm
|
||
from Catherine de Medici, and yet after these admissions, these
|
||
same Protestants would insist that the Pope is an unblushing
|
||
impostor, and the Catholic Church a vampire.
|
||
|
||
The so-called "great men" of the world have been mistaken in
|
||
many things. Lord Bacon denied the Copernican system of astronomy
|
||
and believed to the day of his death that the sun and stars
|
||
journeyed about this little earth. Matthew Hale was a firm believer
|
||
in the existence of witches and wizards. John Wesley believed that
|
||
earthquakes were caused by sin and that they could be prevented by
|
||
believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. John Calvin regarded murder as
|
||
one of the means to preserve the purity of the gospel. Martin
|
||
Luther denounced Galileo as a fool because he was opposed to the
|
||
astronomy of Moses. Webster was in favor of the Fugitive Slave Law
|
||
and held the book of Job in high esteem. He wanted votes and he
|
||
knelt to the South. He wanted votes and he flattered the church.
|
||
|
||
VIII
|
||
|
||
Volumes might be written on the follies and imbecilities of
|
||
"great" men.
|
||
|
||
Only a few years ago the really great men were persecuted,
|
||
imprisoned or burned. In this way the church was enabled to keep
|
||
the "great" men on her side.
|
||
|
||
As a matter of fact it is impossible to tell what the "great"
|
||
men really thought. We only know what they said. These "great" men
|
||
had families to support, they had a prejudice against prisons and
|
||
objected to being burned, and it may be that they thought one way
|
||
and talked another.
|
||
|
||
The priests said to these men; "Agree with the creed" talk on
|
||
our side, or you will be persecuted to the death." Then the priests
|
||
turned to the people and cried: "Hear what the great men say."
|
||
|
||
For a few years we have had something like liberty of speech
|
||
and many men have told their thoughts. Now the theologians are not
|
||
quite so apt to appeal to names as formerly. The really great are
|
||
not on their side. The leaders of modern thought are not
|
||
Christians. Now the unbelievers can repeat names -- names that
|
||
stand for intellectual triumphs. Humboldt, Helmholtz, Haeckel and
|
||
Huxley, Darwin, Spencer and Tyndall and many others, stand for
|
||
investigation, discovery, for vast achievements in the world of
|
||
thought. These men were and are thinkers and they had and have the
|
||
courage to express their thoughts. They were not and are not
|
||
puppets of priests, or the trembling worshipers of ghosts.
|
||
|
||
For many years, most of the presidents of American colleges
|
||
have been engaged in the pious work of trying to prevent the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
intellectual advancement of the race. To such an extent have they
|
||
succeeded that none of their students have been or are great
|
||
scientists.
|
||
|
||
For the purpose of bolstering their creed the orthodox do not
|
||
now repeat the names of the living, their witnesses are in the
|
||
cemetery. All the "great" Christians are dead.
|
||
|
||
To-day we want arguments, not names, reasons, not opinions. It
|
||
is degrading to blindly follow a man, or a church. Nothing is
|
||
nobler than to be governed by reason. To be vanquished by the truth
|
||
is to be a victor. The man who follows is a slave. The man who
|
||
thinks is free.
|
||
|
||
We must remember that most men have been controlled by their
|
||
surroundings. Most of the intelligent men in Turkey are followers
|
||
of Mahomet. They were rocked in the cradle of the Koran, they
|
||
received their religious opinions as they did their features --
|
||
from their parents. Their opinion on the subject of religion is of
|
||
no possible value. The same may be said of the Christians of our
|
||
country. Their belief is the result, not of thought, of
|
||
investigation, but of surroundings.
|
||
|
||
All religions have been the result of ignorance, and the seeds
|
||
were sown and planted in the long night of savagery.
|
||
|
||
In the decline of the Roman power, in the times when
|
||
prosperity died, when commerce almost ceased, when the scepter of
|
||
authority fell from weak and nerveless hands, when arts were lost
|
||
and the achievements of the past forgotten or unknown, then
|
||
Christians came, and holding in contempt all earthly things, told
|
||
their fellows of another world of joy eternal beyond the clouds. If
|
||
learning had not been lost, if the people had been educated, if
|
||
they had known the literature of Greece and Rome, if they had been
|
||
familiar with the tragedies of AEschylus, Sophocles and Euripides,
|
||
with the philosophy of Zeno and Epicurus, with the orations of
|
||
Demosthenes; if they had known the works of art, the miracles of
|
||
genius, the passions in marble, the dreams in stone; if they had
|
||
known the history of Rome; if they had understood Lucretius, Cicero
|
||
and Caesar; if they had studied the laws, the decisions of the
|
||
Praetors; if they had known the thoughts of all the mighty dead,
|
||
there would have been no soil on which the seeds of Christian
|
||
superstition could have taken root and grown.
|
||
|
||
But the early Christians hated art, and song, and joy. They
|
||
slandered and maligned the human race, insisted that the world had
|
||
been blighted by the curse of God, that this life should be used
|
||
only in making preparation for the next, that education filled the
|
||
mind with doubt, and science led the soul from God.
|
||
|
||
IX
|
||
|
||
There are two ways. One is to live for God. That has been
|
||
tried, and the result has always been the same. It was tried in
|
||
Palestine many years ago and the people who tried it were not
|
||
protected by their God. They were conquered, overwhelmed and
|
||
exiled. They lost their country and were scattered over the earth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
For many centuries they expected assistance from their God. They
|
||
believed that they would be gathered together again, that their
|
||
cities and temples and altars would be rebuilt, that they would
|
||
again be the favorites of Jehovah, that with his help they would
|
||
overcome their enemies and rule the world. Century by century the
|
||
hope has grown weaker and weaker, until now it is regarded by the
|
||
intelligent as a foolish dream.
|
||
|
||
Living for God was tried in Switzerland and it ended in
|
||
slavery and torture. Every avenue that led to improvement, to
|
||
progress, was closed. Only those in authority were allowed to
|
||
express their thoughts. No one tried to increase the happiness of
|
||
people in this world. Innocent pleasure was regarded as sin,
|
||
laughter was suppressed, all natural joy despised, and love itself
|
||
denounced as sin.
|
||
|
||
They amused themselves with fasting and prayer, hearing
|
||
sermons, talking about endless pain, committing to memory the
|
||
genealogies in the Old Testament, and now and then burning one of
|
||
their fellow-men.
|
||
|
||
Living for God was tried in Scotland. The people became the
|
||
serfs and slaves of the blessed Kirk. The ministers became petty
|
||
tyrants. They poisoned the very springs of life. They interfered
|
||
with every family, invaded the privacy of every home, sowed the
|
||
seeds of superstition and fear, and filled the darkness with
|
||
devils. They claimed to be divinely inspired, that they delivered
|
||
the messages of God, that to deny their authority was blasphemy,
|
||
and that all who refused to do their bidding would suffer eternal
|
||
pain. Under their government Scotland was a land of sighing and
|
||
sorrow, of grief and pain. The people were slaves.
|
||
|
||
Living for God was tried in New England. A government was
|
||
formed in accordance with the Old Testament. The laws, for the most
|
||
part, were petty and absurd, the penalties cruel and bloody to the
|
||
last degree. Religious liberty was regarded as a crime, as an
|
||
insult to God. Persons differing in belief from those in power,
|
||
were persecuted, whipped, maimed and exiled. People supposed to be
|
||
in league with the devil were imprisoned or killed. A theological
|
||
government was established, ministers were the agents of God, they
|
||
dictated the laws and fixed the penalties. Everything was under the
|
||
supervision of the clergy. They had no pity, no mercy. With all
|
||
their hearts they hated the natural. They promised happiness in
|
||
another world, and did all they could to destroy the pleasures of
|
||
this.
|
||
|
||
Their greatest consolation, their purest Joy was found in
|
||
their belief that all who failed to obey their words, to wear their
|
||
yoke, would suffer infinite torture in the eternal dungeons of
|
||
hell.
|
||
|
||
Living for God was tried in the Dark Ages. Thousands of
|
||
scaffolds were wet with blood, countless swords were thrust through
|
||
human hearts. The flames of fagots consumed the flesh of men,
|
||
dungeons became the homes of those who thought. In the name of God
|
||
every cruelty was practiced, every crime committed, and liberty
|
||
perished from the earth. Everywhere the result has been the same.
|
||
Living for God has filled the world with blood and flame.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
There is another way, Let us live for man, for this world. Let
|
||
us develop the brain and civilize the heart. Let us ascertain the
|
||
conditions of happiness and live in accordance with them. Let us do
|
||
what we can for the destruction of ignorance, poverty and crime.
|
||
Let us do our best to supply the wants of the body, to satisfy the
|
||
hunger of the mind, to ascertain the secrets of nature, to the end
|
||
that we may make the invisible forces the tireless servants of the
|
||
human race, and fill the world with happy homes.
|
||
|
||
Let the gods take care of themselves. Let us live for man. Let
|
||
us remember that those who have sought for the truths of nature
|
||
have never persecuted their fellow-men. The astronomers and
|
||
chemists have forged no chains, built no dungeons. The geologists
|
||
have invented no instrument of torture. The philosophers have not
|
||
demonstrated the truth of their theories by burning their
|
||
neighbors. The great infidels, the thinkers, have lived for the
|
||
good of man.
|
||
|
||
It is noble to seek for truth, to be intellectually honest, to
|
||
give to others a true transcript of your mind, a photograph of your
|
||
thoughts in honest words.
|
||
|
||
X
|
||
|
||
There are two ways: The narrow way along which the selfish go
|
||
in single file, not wide enough for husband and wife to walk side
|
||
by side while children clasp their hands. The narrow road over the
|
||
desert of superstition "with here and there a traveler." The narrow
|
||
grass-grown path, filled with flints and broken glass, bordered by
|
||
thistles and thorns, where the twice-born limping walk with
|
||
bleeding feet. If by this path you see a flower, do not pick it. It
|
||
is a temptation. Beneath its leaves a serpent lies. Keep your eyes
|
||
on the New Jerusalem. Do not look back for wife or child or friend.
|
||
Think only of saving your own soul. You will be just as happy in
|
||
heaven with all you love in hell. Believe, have faith, and you will
|
||
be rewarded for the goodness of another. Look neither to the right
|
||
nor left. Keep on, straight on, and you will save your worthless,
|
||
withered, selfish soul.
|
||
|
||
This is the narrow road that leads from earth to the
|
||
Christian's heartless heaven.
|
||
|
||
There is another way -- the broad road. Give me the wide and
|
||
ample way, the way broad enough for us all to go together. The
|
||
broad way where the birds sing, where the sun shines and the
|
||
streams murmur. The broad way, through the fields where the flowers
|
||
grow, over the daisied slopes where sunlight, lingering, seems to
|
||
sleep and dream.
|
||
|
||
Let us go the broad way with the great world, with science and
|
||
art, with music and the drama, with all that gladdens, thrills,
|
||
refines and calms.
|
||
|
||
Let us go the wide road with husband and wife, with children
|
||
and friends and with all there is of joy and love between the dawn
|
||
and dusk of life's strange day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
This world is a great orange tree filled with blossoms, with
|
||
ripening and ripened fruit, while, underneath the bending boughs,
|
||
the fallen slowly turn to dust.
|
||
|
||
Each orange is a life. Let us squeeze it dry, get all the
|
||
juice there is, so that when death comes we can say; "There is
|
||
nothing left but withered peel,"
|
||
|
||
Let us travel the broad and natural way. Let us live for man.
|
||
|
||
To think of what the world has suffered from superstition,
|
||
from religion, from the worship of beast and stone and god, is
|
||
almost enough to make one insane. Think of the long, long night of
|
||
ignorance and fear! Think of the agony, the sufferings of the past,
|
||
of the days that are dead!
|
||
|
||
I look. In gloomy caves I see the sacred serpents coiled,
|
||
waiting for their sacrificial prey. I see their open jaws, their
|
||
restless tongues, their glittering eyes, their cruel fangs. I see
|
||
them seize and crush in many horrid folds the helpless children
|
||
given by fathers and mothers to appease the Serpent-God. I look
|
||
again. I see temples wrought of stone and gilded with barbaric
|
||
gold. I see altars red with human blood. I see the solemn priests
|
||
thrust knives in the white breasts of girls. I look again. I see
|
||
other temples and other altars, where greedy flames devour the
|
||
flesh and blood of babes. I see other temples and other priests and
|
||
other altars dripping with the blood of oxen, lambs and doves.
|
||
|
||
I look again. I see other temples and other priests and other
|
||
altars on which are sacrificed the liberties of man. I look. I see
|
||
the cathedrals of God, the huts of peasants, the robes of priests
|
||
and kings, the rags of honest men. I look again. The lovers of God
|
||
are the murderers of men. I see dungeons filled with the noblest
|
||
and the best. I see exiles, wanderers, outcasts, millions of
|
||
martyrs, widows and orphans. I see the cunning instruments of
|
||
torture and hear the shrieks and sobs and moans of millions dead.
|
||
|
||
I see the dungeon's gloom, I hear the clank of chains. I see
|
||
the fagot's flames, the scorched and blackened face, the writhing
|
||
limbs. I hear the jeers and scoffs of pious fiends. I see the
|
||
victim on the rack, I hear the tendons as they break. I see a world
|
||
beneath the feet of priests, liberty in chains, every virtue a
|
||
crime, every crime a virtue, intelligence despised, stupidity
|
||
sainted, hypocrisy crowned and the white forehead of honor wearing
|
||
the brand of shame. This was.
|
||
|
||
I look again, and in the East of hope's fair sky the first
|
||
pale light shed by the herald star gives promise of another dawn.
|
||
I look, and from the ashes, blood and tears the heroes leap to
|
||
bless the future and avenge the past. I see a world at war, and in
|
||
the storm and chaos of the deadly strife thrones crumble, altars
|
||
fall, chains break, creeds change.
|
||
|
||
The highest peaks are touched with holy light. The dawn has
|
||
blossomed. I look again. I see discoverers sailing across
|
||
mysterious seas. I see inventors cunningly enslave the forces of
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
WHICH WAY?
|
||
|
||
the world. I see the houses being built for schools. Teachers,
|
||
interpreters of nature, slowly take the place of priests.
|
||
Philosophers arise, thinkers give the world their wealth of brain,
|
||
and lips grow rich with words of truth. This is.
|
||
|
||
I look again, but toward the future now. The popes and priests
|
||
and kings are gone, -- the altars and the thrones have mingled with
|
||
the dust, -- the aristocracy of land and cloud have perished from
|
||
the earth and air, and all the gods are dead. A new religion sheds
|
||
its glory on mankind. It is the gospel of this world, the religion
|
||
of the body, of the heart and brain, the evangel of health and joy.
|
||
I see a world at peace, where labor reaps its true reward, a world
|
||
without prisons, without workhouses, without asylums for the
|
||
insane, a world on which the gibbet's shadow does not fall, a world
|
||
where the poor girl, trying to win bread with the needle, the
|
||
needle that has been called "the asp for the breast of the poor,"
|
||
is not driven to the desperate choice of crime or death, of suicide
|
||
or shame. I see a world without the beggar's outstretched palm, the
|
||
miser's heartless, stony stare, the piteous wail of want, the
|
||
pallid face of crime, the livid lips of lies, the cruel eyes of
|
||
scorn. I see a race without disease of flesh or brain, shapely and
|
||
fair, the married harmony of form and use, and as I look life
|
||
lengthens, fear dies, joy deepens, love intensifies. The world is
|
||
free. This shall be.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom Inc. 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
|
||
19
|
||
|